Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 5 OF 9

Main Title Living within limits : ecology, economics, and population taboos /
Author Hardin, Garrett, ; Hardin, Garrett James,
Publisher Oxford University Press,
Year Published 1993
OCLC Number 26586955
ISBN 019507811X; 9780195078114; 0195093852; 9780195093858
Subjects Birth control ; Population ; Bevolkingsgroei ; Ecologie ; Anticonceptie ; Bevèolkerungsentwicklung ; Bevèolkerungspolitik ; Geburtenregelung ; Grenzen des Wachstums ; èUbervèolkerung ; Bevèolkerungswachstum ; Weltbevèolkerung ; Wirtschaftspolitik ; èOkologie ; Family Planning Services ; Population Control
Internet Access
Description Access URL
Contributor biographical information http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0725/92024250-b.html
Publisher description http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0639/92024250-d.html
Inhaltsverzeichnis http://digitool.hbz-nrw.de:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1188472&custom%5Fatt%5F2=simple%5Fviewer
Table of contents http://digitool.hbz-nrw.de:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1188472&custom_att_2=simple_viewer
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
EJBM  HQ766.7.H35 1993 Headquarters Library/Washington,DC 12/29/2014
Collation x, 339 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (pages 313-332) and index.
Contents Notes
Part One: Entangling Alliances -- 1. The challenge of limits -- 2. Overpopulation: Escape to the stars? -- 3. Uneasy litter-mates: Population and progress -- 4. Population theory: Academia's stepchild -- -- 5. Default status: Making sense of the world -- 6. The ambivalent triumph of optimism -- 7. Cowboy economics vs. spaceship ecology -- 8. Growth: Real and spurious -- 9. Exponential growth of populations -- 10. What Malthus missed -- 11. The demostat -- 12. Generating the future -- 13. Limits: A constrained view -- 14. From Jevons's coal to Hubbert's pimple -- Part Two: Looking for the Bluebird -- 15. Nuclear power: A non-solution -- 16. Trying to escape Malthus -- 17. The benign demographic transition -- Part Three: Biting the Bullet -- 18. Making room for human will -- 19. Major default positions of human biology -- 20. Carrying capacity -- 21. The global pillage: Consequences of unmanaged commons -- 22. Discriminating altruisms -- 23. The double C -- Double P game -- 24. Birth control vs. population control -- 25. Population control: Natural vs. human -- 26. The necessity of immigration control -- 27. Recapitulation: And a look ahead -- Notes and references -- Index. We fail to mandate economic sanity," writes Garrett Hardin, "because our brains are addled by ... compassion." With such startling assertions, Hardin has cut a swathe through the field of ecology for decades, winning a reputation as a fearless and original thinker. A prominent biologist, ecological philosopher, and keen student of human population control, Hardin now offers the finest summation of his work to date, with an eloquent argument for accepting the limits of the earth's resources - and the hard choices we must make to live within them. In Living Within Limits, Hardin focuses on the neglected problem of overpopulation, making a forceful case for dramatically changing the way we live in and manage our world. Our world itself, he writes, is in the dilemma of the lifeboat: it can only hold a certain number of people before it sinks - not everyone can be saved. The old idea of progress and limitless growth misses the point that the earth (and each part of it) has a limited carrying capacity; sentimentality should not cloud our ability to take necessary steps to limit population. But Hardin refutes the notion that goodwill and voluntary restraints will be enough. Instead, nations where population is growing must suffer the consequences alone. Too often, he writes, we operate on the faulty principle of shared costs matched with private profits. In Hardin's famous essay, "The Tragedy of the Commons," he showed how a village common pasture suffers from overgrazing because each villager puts as many cattle on it as possible - since the costs of grazing are shared by everyone, but the profits go to the individual. The metaphor applies to global ecology, he argues, making a powerful case for closed borders and an end to immigration from poor nations to rich ones. "The production of human beings is the result of very localized human actions; corrective action must be local ... Globalizing the 'population problem' would only ensure that it would never be solved." Hardin does not shrink from the startling implications of his argument, as he criticizes the shipment of food to overpopulated regions and asserts that coercion in population control is inevitable. But he also proposes a free flow of information across boundaries, to allow each state to help itself. "The time-honored practice of pollute and move on is no longer acceptable," Hardin tells us. We now fill the globe, and we have nowhere else to go. In this powerful book, one of our leading ecological philosophers points out the hard choices we must make - and the solutions we have been afraid to consider.