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Contents
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Biography
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About this book
Surveys native peoples from Argentina to Zimbabwe, examining their life-and-death struggles against oil spills, explosions, toxic chemicals, and other pollutants.
Contents
Argentina; Australian Aborigines; Bangladesh; Belize; biodiversity and indigenous environmentalism; Bolivia; Botswana; Brazil; Burma (Myanmar); Cambodia; Cameroon; Canada; Chad; Chile; climate change and indigenous environmentalism; Columbia; Congo Basin; Congo Republic; Costa Rica; dam sites and indigenous peoples; Ecuador; Eritrea; Fiji; Forest Stewardship Council; French Polynesia; Ghana; Guam; Guatemala; Guyana; Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) environmental philosophy; Honduras; India; indigenous environmentalism and economic development; Indonesia; Iraq; Irian Jaya/Papua New Guinea; Kenya; Malaysia; Marianas Islands - PCB contamination; The Marshall Islands - nuclear testing; Mexico; Mother Earth, as ecological metaphor; Native American conceptions of ecology; New Zealand; Nicaragua; Nigeria; noble savage, "the ecological Indian"; Pakistan; Panama; Peru; Philippines; Russia (Siberia); The South Pacific; Sri Lanka; Suriname; Thanksgiving cycles of Native Americans - ecological perspectives; Thailand; Tibet; Turkey; United States of America; Venezuela; Yemen; Zambia; Zimbabwe and Botswana.
Customer Reviews
Biography
BRUCE E. JOHANSEN is Professor of Communication and Native American Studies at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.
By: Bruce E Johansen
560 pages
?While the reference literature of human ecology is well established, this timely work is the first volume in this field to focus specifically on the complex political and social interactions of indigenous populations with outside threats of development, whether corporate or governmental in nature....Given the highly scattered nature of much of the primary documentation on this issue, this moderately-priced resource belongs in the science collections of all large public libraries as well as college and university libraries supporting undergraduate and graduate programs in anthropology, geography, environmental management, political science and history. Law libraries wishing to have a review of the major locations and conflicts to supplement the coverage of specific cases and points of domestic or international law will also find it of value.?-E-Streams