Concern about the rapid disappearance of wild species led, in 1973, to the signing of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES) which responded with a series of bans and regulations. However CITES failed to halt the decline of wild species and it became c
Fate of the Wild: The Endangered Species Act and the Future of Biodiversity
โ Scribed by Bonnie B. Burgess
- Publisher
- University of Georgia Press
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 232
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Burgess's meticulous and exhaustive research makes Fate of the Wild a valuable resource for professionals in conservation biology, public policy, environmental law, and environmental organizations, while the narrative clarity of the book will appeal to anyone interested in the fate of nonhuman species.
Burgess explains how wilderness has been consumed by concrete and asphalt, the effects of toxins on plants and animals, strip mine tailings, oil slicks, and smog. She exposes, as well, the "invisible" damage that manifests itself in the subtle degradation of natural systems and in the increased incidence and number of diseases, the rise in human infertility, and the drastic alteration of weather patterns and landscapes.
Fate of the Wild presents a factual and balanced discussion of the various sides of the contemporary debate over the Endangered Species Act, alongside the author's clearly stated position: We are overpopulating, polluting, and overdeveloping our environment, and as a species we have embarked on a crash course toward a sixth great extinction event on this Earth.
โฆ Subjects
Economics;Banks & Banking;Commerce;Commercial Policy;Comparative;Development & Growth;Digital Currencies;Econometrics;Economic Conditions;Economic History;Economic Policy & Development;Environmental Economics;Free Enterprise;Income Inequality;Inflation;Interest;Labor & Industrial Relations;Macroeconomics;Microeconomics;Money & Monetary Policy;Public Finance;Sustainable Development;Theory;Unemployment;Urban & Regional;Business & Money;Environmental & Natural Resources Law;Law;Animal Rights;Nature
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