This book explores the issues of resource use and depletion as well as the topic of population growth and contraction. The key interest is the impact that developments in one part of the world have upon people's lifestyles and the forms of inequality inscribed in the connections between rich and poor countries. The study of wilderness and the notion of empty space are used to introduce questions of national resources, sustainability, and ecology. Sustainability provides the framework for discussion of population change, mortality and fertility and the questions of energy resources and environmental degradation. The issue of whether or not there is a global problem of resources is addressed head on.
The book is the third in a series of five books which offers a comprehensive, broad-based introduction to human geography. The building blocks of a `geographical imagination' are presented through some of the principal forces that are shaping the world as it approaches the twentieth-first century. Each book develops different aspects of the geographical imagination, using a mixture of text and readings. The issues which are explored are at the forefront of global and economic change and are used to teach what it is to think geographically. In so doing they trace the impact of shifts in cultural and political geography.
PREFACE; INTRODUCTIONPhilip Sarre and John Blunden; 1. Paradise lost, or the conquest of the wilderness, Philip Sarre; 2. Population and environmental change: the case of Africa, Matthew Lockwood; 3. Stabilizing population growth: the European experience, Ray Hall; 4. Sustainable resources?, John Blunden; 5. Trade globally, pollute locally, John Blunden; 6. Uneven development and sustainability, Philip Sarre; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; INDEX
`Eminently suitable for sixth-form studies. The layout of text, numerous tables, diagrams and half-tones (with the luxury of eleven colour plates) are admirably clear. Every school ought to have a copy and hopefully a cheaper paperback edition will encourage them to buy one.'
Geography |d 27/06/1996