book

Editorial: A Sudbury-Style Attitude

I’ve been  thinking a lot about Sudbury these days. Long the butt of moonscape jokes and widely recognized as one of the world’s “best” examples of industrial pollution, this Northern Ontario town has much to teach us about hope and moving ahead.

By the 1970s, after decades of exposure to sulphur-laden clouds emanating from open-air nickel and copper smelters, an immense blackened area encompassing Sudbury grew nothing but an occasional stunted birch tree. For Sudbury, environmental devastation was considered the cost of high-paying jobs.

Brain Mulch: Green Enough?

Robyn Harding (Mom, Will this Chicken Give me Man Boobs?) is not the only person with angst around how green her behaviour is when compared to her "pinnacle-of-greenness neighbours."

In Review: Still to Come

Carbon Shift: How the Twin Crises of Oil Depletion and Climate Change Will Define the Future, Thomas Homer-Dixon, ed., Toronto: Random House Canada, 2009, 224 pages. Reviewed by Peter Robinson.

Reviews

Reconciliation: First Nations Treaty Making in British Columbia by Tony Penikett

The Opposable Mind: How Successful Leaders Win Through Integrative Thinking by Roger Martin ...

Review: Fleeting Opportunity

Cimate change, climate forcing, global warming – all these terms frame a collective public debate about the future of the world as we know it. Since that “world” is dynamic and geographically diverse, it is not surprising that political responses range widely from hand-wringing to commitment and resignation, to disbelief and reticence, or even outright denial.

Reviews: Planet U & Gaining Ground

Planet U: Sustaining the World, Reinventing the University by Michael M'Gonigle and Justine Starke

Gaining Ground: In Pursuit of Ecological Sustainability by David M. Lavigne

Review: Culture of More

Deep Economy, Bill McKibben, New York: Times Books, 2007.

Bill McKibben’s writing is like brain candy for the environmentally aware. Always concise and candid, he manages to say all the right things at just the right time. In Deep Economy, McKibben once again tackles a vast topic – this time the persistent paradigm of “endless economic growth” – only to distill it down to polite conversation full of anecdotal nuggets. He argues that the “culture of More” is the root cause of our current environmental crises. ...

Living Classics: The Symbiotic Vision

A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold

Symbiotic Planet: A New Look at Evolution by Lynn Margulis

The Revenge of Gaia: Why the Earth is Fighting Back — and How We Can Still Save Humanity by James Lovelock

Review: Cancer: 101 Solutions to a Preventable Epidemic

When I first started to research and write about chemicals in Canada’s food supply, no one close to me had had cancer. Now, dozens of years later, several friends have died from the disease (two of them environmental leaders, one pictured in this book) and my partner and others near me are survivors. That doesn’t prove there’s a cancer epidemic, only that I’m older and have known more people.

An Enduring Legacy

It has been 20 years since the World Commission on Environment and Development issued its ground-breaking report on sustainable development. Convened by the United Nations in 1983 and chaired by the former Norwegian prime minister Gro Harlem Brundtland, this independent commission was born of the international community’s frustration with the world’s inability to deal effectively with the vital global issues of the day.

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