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    Invention of Sustainability: Nature and Destiny, c.1500-1870

    £42.30
    £47.00
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9781107151147
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    AuthorWarde, Paul
    Pub Date12/07/2018
    BindingHardback
    Pages416
    Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRES
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    This ground breaking study of one of the defining political problems of our era traces the development of ideas about sustainability from the sixteenth century, showing how it became a social and political problem, and addressing questions of how we should think about sustainability today.

    The issue of sustainability, and the idea that economic growth and development might destroy its own foundations, is one of the defining political problems of our era. This ground breaking study traces the emergence of this idea, and demonstrates how sustainability was closely linked to hopes for growth, and the destiny of expanding European states, from the sixteenth century. Weaving together aspirations for power, for economic development and agricultural improvement, and ideas about forestry, climate, the sciences of the soil and of life itself, this book sets out how new knowledge and metrics led people to imagine both new horizons for progress, but also the possibility of collapse. In the nineteenth century, anxieties about sustainability, often driven by science, proliferated in debates about contemporary and historical empires and the American frontier. The fear of progress undoing itself confronted society with finding ways to live with and manage nature.