“On Garbage” by John Scanlan,
2005
A philosophical and sociological book, with a
very original examination of our culture’s
wastes.
For John Scanlan, ‘garbage’ represents more than
material waste or the effects of environmental
degradation; it is understood also as ‘broken’
knowledge, useless concepts, and the remainders
of systems of intellectual thought.
In this book we see why ‘garbage’ – the detached
leftover of our progress - is, the source of all
that is valuable. By gaining insight into the
nature and extent of the wastes we have created,
we can gain insight into the accepted truths of
Western culture, and understand the condition of
contemporary life only by examining what we have
thrown away.
The book will interest readers in cultural
studies and social theory, philosophy, public
health and the environment, and the aesthetics
of contemporary art. |
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“Spirit & Place:
healing our environment, healing environment” by
Christopher Day, 2002
A book that will lead you into the simple path
of how to make the world a better place, through
better buildings…. . It tells you and me how we
can use the elements of light, water, earth,
warmth and air to create beautiful buildings.
The book shows how to reconcile the apparently
incompatible demands of environmental, economic
and social sustainability; how to moderate
climate to make places of delight and realign
social pressures so places both support society
and maximize economic viability.
Will interest architects, environmentalists,
psychologists, healers, and everybody who wants
to live in a better world. |
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“Beyond Malthus:
nineteen dimensions of the population challenge”
by Lester R. Brown, Gary Gardner, Brian Halweil,
2000
The book examines the impacts of population
growth on nineteen global resources and
services, including food, fresh water, housing,
jobs, education, income, health and climate
change.
‘Beyond Malthus’ states that there are limits to
the demands that an ever-expanding,
ever-consuming global population can make of the
earth’s resources – and that among the poorest,
most vulnerable societies we can, even now,
observe the disastrous consequences.
The sole, rational solution to this ‘demographic
dark hole’ involves the expansion of
international cooperation on debt relief, family
planning assistance to the millions who lack
access and new investment in educating young
people in situations of poverty on the benefits
of smaller, more sustainable family units. |
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“A Will of Their
Own: cross-cultural perspectives on working
children”
by Mandfred Liebel, 2004
An exciting book which marks a new way of
thinking about children’s work in contemporary
societies.
A controversial and thought-provoking book which
prioritizes working children’s own views on
their work situation. Liebel articulates
children’s attitudes to and experiences of work
in a diverse range of settings. He places the
issue in both its political and theoretical
contexts. By adopting a global focus that links
children from countries in the North and South,
Liebel challenges us to re-examine common
taken-for-granted assumptions about children’s
work and the concept of childhood itself.
The book will interest academics, activists,
policy makers and all of us. |
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