TY - BOOK AU - Woodwell,G.M. TI - A world to live in: an ecologist's vision for a plundered planet SN - 9780262333689 AV - QH541.15.R45 W65 2015eb U1 - 577.27 23 PY - 2016///] CY - Cambridge, MA PB - The MIT Press KW - Restoration ecology KW - Global environmental change KW - Global warming KW - Environmental degradation KW - Pollution KW - Air KW - Radioactive pollution of the atmosphere KW - NATURE KW - Ecology KW - bisacsh KW - Ecosystems & Habitats KW - Wilderness KW - SCIENCE KW - Environmental Science KW - Life Sciences KW - fast KW - Umweltpolitik KW - gnd KW - Umwelt KW - Zukunft KW - ENVIRONMENT/General KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Life on the skin of the earth. In the beginning ; Nuclear energy : the commons redefined ; DDT drives a geochemical tempest ; Carbon and the climatic disruption -- Environment is political : climate heats up. The global commons : a corporate feedlot ; Climate in the tides of politics ; The adaptation myth : an attractive conceit threatens all ; The limits of biodiversity -- Which world?. Governments : whither in the storm? ; A new departure ; Sic utere : a world to live in N2 - A century of industrial development is the briefest of moments in the half billion years of the earth's evolution. And yet our current era has brought greater changes to the earth than any period in human history. The biosphere, the globe's life-giving envelope of air and climate, has been changed irreparably. In A World to Live In, the distinguished ecologist George Woodwell shows that the biosphere is now a global human protectorate and that its integrity of structure and function are tied closely to the human future. The earth is a living system, Woodwell explains, and its stability is threatened by human disruption. Industry dumps its waste globally and makes a profit from it, invading the global commons; corporate interests overpower weak or nonexistent governmental protection to plunder the planet. The fossil fuels industry offers the most dramatic example of environmental destruction, disseminating the heat-trapping gases that are now warming the earth and changing the climate forever. The assumption that we can continue to use fossil fuels and "adapt" to climate disruption, Woodwell argues, is a ticket to catastrophe. But Woodwell points the way toward a solution. We must respect the full range of life on earth -- not species alone, but their natural communities of plant and animal life that have built, and still maintain, the biosphere. We must recognize that the earth's living systems are our heritage and that the preservation of the integrity of a finite biosphere is a necessity and an inviolable human right. -- Provided by publisher UR - https://libproxy.firstcity.edu.my:8443/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1193317 ER -