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Planetary Overload : Global Environmental Change and the Health of the Human Species / A.J. McMichael.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge [England] ; New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press, 1993Description: xvi, 352 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0521441382
  • 9780521441384
  • 0521457599
  • 9780521457590
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 304.28 20
LOC classification:
  • RA565 .M384 1993
Online resources:
Partial contents:
First things -- The ecological framework -- The health of populations -- System overload : ancient and modern -- Population increase, poverty and health -- Greenhouse warming and climate change -- The thinning ozone layer -- Soil and water : loaves and fishes -- Biodiversity, forests, food and pharmaceuticals -- The growth of cities -- Impediments 1 : conceptual blocks -- Impediments 2 : relationships -- The way ahead.
Summary: "The human species faces a new threat to its health - perhaps to its survival. Our burgeoning numbers, the spread of technology, and our conspicuous consumption are overloading Earth's capacity to replenish and repair itself. Taking a unique perspective, Planetary Overload forcefully points out the consequences to human health of ongoing degradation of Earth's ecosystems. In a broad-based, accessible analysis, A. J. McMichael examines current ecological disruptions - land degradation, ozone depletion, temperature increases, and loss of genetic diversity through the extinction of species, among others - and compellingly demonstrates their potentially disastrous results, including food shortages, new and intensified disease patterns, rising seas, mass refugee problems, and cancers, blindness, and immune suppression from increased ultraviolet radiation. While other books on the subject analyse only the environmental impact of these problems, McMichael takes his analysis to an entirely new and disturbing extreme: he relates each of these insidious processes back to its ultimate impact on human health. He thoroughly considers these problems - and their scientific uncertainties - within a broad evolutionary, biological, social, and economic context. He also explores the underlying problems contributing to environmental breakdown, especially the relations between the world's rich and poor. This eloquent and alarming book will be of intense interest to environmentalists, public health professionals, policy makers, environmental studies and human ecology scholars, and anyone wishing a lucid, rational assessment of today's pressing ecological concerns."--Publisher description.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book North Campus North Campus Main Collection 304.28 MCM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A405908B

Includes bibliographical references and index.

First things -- The ecological framework -- The health of populations -- System overload : ancient and modern -- Population increase, poverty and health -- Greenhouse warming and climate change -- The thinning ozone layer -- Soil and water : loaves and fishes -- Biodiversity, forests, food and pharmaceuticals -- The growth of cities -- Impediments 1 : conceptual blocks -- Impediments 2 : relationships -- The way ahead.

"The human species faces a new threat to its health - perhaps to its survival. Our burgeoning numbers, the spread of technology, and our conspicuous consumption are overloading Earth's capacity to replenish and repair itself. Taking a unique perspective, Planetary Overload forcefully points out the consequences to human health of ongoing degradation of Earth's ecosystems. In a broad-based, accessible analysis, A. J. McMichael examines current ecological disruptions - land degradation, ozone depletion, temperature increases, and loss of genetic diversity through the extinction of species, among others - and compellingly demonstrates their potentially disastrous results, including food shortages, new and intensified disease patterns, rising seas, mass refugee problems, and cancers, blindness, and immune suppression from increased ultraviolet radiation. While other books on the subject analyse only the environmental impact of these problems, McMichael takes his analysis to an entirely new and disturbing extreme: he relates each of these insidious processes back to its ultimate impact on human health. He thoroughly considers these problems - and their scientific uncertainties - within a broad evolutionary, biological, social, and economic context. He also explores the underlying problems contributing to environmental breakdown, especially the relations between the world's rich and poor. This eloquent and alarming book will be of intense interest to environmentalists, public health professionals, policy makers, environmental studies and human ecology scholars, and anyone wishing a lucid, rational assessment of today's pressing ecological concerns."--Publisher description.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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