Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 555 OF 1107

Main Title Mortgaging the Earth The World Bank, Environmental Impoverishment, and the Crisis of Development / [electronic resource] :
Type EBOOK
Author Rich, Bruce.
Publisher Island Press/Center for Resource Economics : Imprint: Island Press,
Year Published 2013
Call Number GE196
ISBN 9781610915151
Subjects Environmental sciences ; Environmental law ; Sustainable development
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-515-1
Collation XIV, 378 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Preface -- 1. The Dwelling Place of the Angels -- 2. Decade of Debacles -- 3. Brave New World at Bretton Woods -- 4. The Faustian Paradox of Robert McNamara -- 5. Greens Lay Siege to the Crystal Palace -- 6. The Emperor's New Clothes -- 7. The Castle of Contradictions -- 8. From Descartes to Chico Mendes: A Brief History of Modernity as Development -- 9. Who Shall Rule the World and How? -- 10. What on Earth Is to Be Done? -- Notes -- Index. The 1992 Rio Earth Summit was supposed to be a turning point for the World Bank. Environmental concerns would now play a major role in its lending-programs and projects would go beyond economic development to "sustainable development." More than two decades later, efforts to green the bank seem pallid. Bruce Rich argues that the Bank's current institutional problems are extensions of flaws that had been present since its founding. His new book, Foreclosing the Future, tells the story of the Bank from the Rio Earth Summit to today. For readers who want the full history of the Bank's environmental record, Rich's acclaimed 1994 critique, Mortgaging the Earth, is an essential companion. Called a "detailed and thought-provoking look at an important subject" by The New York Times, Mortgaging the Earth analyzes the twenty year period leading up the Rio Summit. Rich offers not only an important history but critical insights about economic development that are ever-more relevant today.