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Ignoring the Apocalypse Why Planning to Prevent Environmental Catastrophe Goes Astray
Book Code: C9663
ISBN: 0-275-99663-8
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-99663-5
248 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 6/30/2007
List Price: $49.95 (UK Sterling Price: £27.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • Davis provides a critical assessment of how Americans go about understanding environmental catastrophes, including the formulation of plans for averting or mitigating the expected outcomes. He examines the reason why Americans often ignore impending dangers, even apocalyptic ones based on rigorous scientific and mathematical analysis, and why government solutions and policies often fail to deal realistically with their potential consequences for future generations of people and ecosystems....This is an important book to read in order to learn how people, Americans in particular, go about framing or avoiding issues that have dire consequences for the quality of human life. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate through professional collections.
    —Choice
    August 2008
  • Davis has served in the US government and as a consultant on energy and environmental issues for some three decades. Picking up on America's love affair with apocalypse, inherited from the Puritans, he discusses four threats that could destroy the world as we know it: global climate change, nuclear war, over-population, and the energy crisis.
    —Reference & Research Book News
    August 2007
  • Endorsement From Mary M. Timney
    Professor of Public Administration, Pace University
    author of Power for the People: Protecting States' Energy Policy Interests in an Era of Deregulation:
    David Davis, long one of our leading scholars in energy politics and policy, has produced a remarkable analysis of the history and politics of the four apocalyptic problems facing the US and the world today. This book brings together comprehensive overviews of the history and politics of four different problems that could precipitate a planetary apocalypse. Davis analyzes the difficulties of developing policy in each issue area and provides important insights into the politics of apocalyptic problems.
  • Endorsement From Robeert F. Durant
    Professor of Public Administration and Policy, American University
    author of The Greening of the U.S. Military and Environmental Governance Reconsidered:
    What could be more timely in an era when claims of crises of biblical proportion are de rigueur in environmental policy debates than David Davis's Ignoring the Apocalypse? His book offers substantive depth, historical and political perspective, and rhetorical context as Davis traces the evolution of contemporary debates over population control, global warming, nuclear war, and energy. Apocalypse is an erudite and accessible tale of how competing views of science, statistics, and strategic advantage have driven, and continue to drive, environmental debates.
  • Endorsement From Rosemary O'Leary
    Distinguished Professor and Co-Director
    The Maxwell School of Syracuse University:
    David Davis has written a fascinating book on an important topic. Given the sweeping environmental degradation around the world, Davis' book could not be more timely.
Description: Environmentalists often predict an Apocalypse is coming: The earth will heat up like a greenhouse. We will run out of energy. Overpopulation will lead to starvation and war. Nuclear winter will kill all plants and animals. During the past fifty to one hundred years, Americans have heard many prophecies of doom, such as the Club of Rome report predicting the world economy would "crash" about the year 2020. These do not come as complete surprises without any warnings. Sometimes the United States simply ignores the threats, but other times it makes plans to prevent them. This provocative book begins by asking whether American planning is different for dangers that are truly apocalyptic--ones that could end life on the planet or at least modern economic prosperity. It goes on to ask why Americans ignore so many problems like the greenhouse effect or an oil shortage or nuclear war, problems that have been forecast many times. Then when the United States does plan, why do those plans often go astray?
LC Card Number: 2007008640
LCC Class: GE140
Dewey Class: 363
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