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Shoulder to Shoulder

Working Together for a Sustainable Future

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Our current moment is filled with despair about climate crises and the possibility of coming to any kind of agreement that might change the dire outcomes. In this important antidote to the paralysis of hopelessness, Shoulder to Shoulder offers hope and a path forward in telling the stories of communities in Western North America who learned to talk to each other and to solve the conflicts between stakeholders. Loggers, cattle ranchers, river keepers, corporate developers, tree huggers, and indigenous peoples from many tribes are just a few of the real people in these stories of hope for our climate.

This book is for anyone wanting to make a difference, anyone looking for camaraderie with others of like mind, anyone believing that democracy requires engaged citizenship, anyone looking for hope. The message throughout is that progress can be made when large numbers of caring, involved, thinking, co-operative people come together to protect both democracy and a livable planet. By working shoulder to shoulder, we can make positive change happen.

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    • Booklist

      June 1, 2021
      In 1992, Hess gave up her mainstream lifestyle and academic career in Eugene, Oregon, and moved to the woods--not to a picturesque retirement cottage, but to a sustainability-level existence in a beat-up trailer with no electricity or running water. Hess and her husband originally made this move out of economic necessity, but soon came to appreciate their new surroundings due to environmental advantages and social benefits. Nearly 30 years and two books later (To the Woods, 2010; Building a Better Nest, 2015), Hess gathers instances of individuals and local grassroots organizations that have come together to effect positive ecological change through education, legislation, and solidarity, and other activism. Engaging accounts document how these people found common ground, whether lumber companies and conservationists, energy executives and farmers, Indigenous groups fighting the installation of a natural-gas pipeline, or young activists who founded the Kids vs. Global Warming nonprofit. The final chapter talks about global concerns (equitable access to resources, just carbon consumption), and an appendix lists more than 50 environmental organizations. Hopefully, readers will be inspired to act.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

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