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Dangerous Years

Climate Change, the Long Emergency, and the Way Forward

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A leading environmental thinker takes a hard look at the obstacles and possibilities on the long road to sustainability

This gripping, deeply thoughtful book considers future of civilization in the light of what we know about climate change and related threats. David Orr, an award-winning, internationally recognized leader in the field of sustainability and environmental education, pulls no punches: even with the Paris Agreement of 2015, Earth systems will not reach a new equilibrium for centuries. Earth is becoming a different planet—more threadbare and less biologically diverse, with more acidic oceans and a hotter, more capricious climate. Furthermore, technology will not solve complex problems of sustainability.

Yet we are not fated to destroy the Earth, Orr insists. He imagines sustainability as a quest and a transition built upon robust and durable democratic and economic institutions, as well as changes in heart and mindset. The transition, he writes, is beginning from the bottom up in communities and neighborhoods. He lays out specific principles and priorities to guide us toward enduring harmony between human and natural systems.

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    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2016
      Farewell, beloved planet.In this laundry list of the worlds many maladies, Orr (Emeritus, Environmental Studies and Politics/Oberlin Coll.; Down to the Wire: Confronting Climate Collapse, 2009, etc.) observes that were almost certainly heading for a time of woe thanks to climate destabilization, projecting 50-50 odds that well somehow figure out a way around the worst of the physical and social effects. For perspective, he writes, no sane person would get in a car with those odds of a fatal accident. Yet were all riding on the same planet, and theres work to do. The authors prescriptions are seemingly scattershot, but its perfectly in keeping for a professor at a small liberal arts college to wish for a curriculum more oriented toward describing the world as a system and that prepares the rising generation for a rapidly destabilizing ecosphere for which we have no precedent. Talk about a trigger warning. A little Consciousness III stuff goes a long way, and theres a lot of it here. Occasionally, it works, as when Orr ponders why we might feel some duty to coming generations on the unverifiable grounds of my own feelings and experiences such as they arei.e., we know that we enjoy the feel of a cool breeze and the sight of flowing water, so why should we not protect them on the off chance that future people will enjoy them, too? Alas, thats not the way of our time. As the author notes, though throughout most of history, each generation left things more or less as they found them, we live in a more fraught time of uncreative destruction. Scientists are rushing to document the extent of our damage, and while humanities scholars ought to have something to say about this, it seems a touch unhelpful to suggest wistfully that we need to be more thoughtful citizens who broaden and deepen the local conversation on sustainability. A well-meaning but diffident treatise. Read Lewis Dartnells The Knowledge (2014) for a more useful take on what comes next.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

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