Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 1. Ecological Degradation over World History Chapter 3 2. Third Millenium Bronze Age World System: Mesopotamia and Harappa Chapter 4 3. Second Millennium Bronze Age World System: Crete and Mycenaean Greece Chapter 5 4. The Age of City States: Classical Greece Chapter 6 5. The Age of Empire: Rome Chapter 7 6. The Sun Rises and Sets in the East Chapter 8 7. The Emerging Economies Chapter 9 8. Europe at the Helm Chapter 10 9. Ecological Consciousness and Social Movements among les ancients et les modernes Chapter 11 Bibliography Chapter 12 Index
Sing C. Chew is professor and chairperson of the Department of Sociology at Humboldt State University, in Arcata, California. Prior to his current appointment, he was the Associate Director in the Office of Vice-President (Resources), International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, Canada. He has been a Research Fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS) in Singapore, and recently, Guest Researcher at the Human Ecology Division, Lund University, Lund, Sweden, where this book was completed. His most recent book is a co-edited volume: The Underdevelopment of Development: Essays in Honor of Andre Gunder Frank.
Sing Chew's book is an outstanding contribution to environmental
history. By utilizing world systems theory and presenting the
pattern of overuse of resources by many different civilizations as
they attempted to grow their empires over the past five thousand
years, he demonstrates that our current ecological crisis is larger
in scale but not different in fundamental form from historical
patterns of resource exploitation. This book should be on the 'must
read' list for all students of environmental history, environmental
studies, and environmental philosophy.
*Bill Devall, (Director, Deep Ecology Resource Center)*
Where there has been surplus accumulation there has been an abuse
of nature, argues Chew. It happens throughout history. It isn't
new. That's his argument and it's a good one.
*Albert Bergesen, University of Arizona*
Sing C. Chew suggests that ecological degradation due to economic
(over)exploitation was a major historical force in world history
since the 3rd millennium B.C. and he has assembled an impressive
collection of evidence from archaeology, ancient history and
historical ecology to underpin his case. The book adds an important
new perspective to world system theory, especially centre-periphery
dynamics, and to explaining 'Dark Ages.' World Ecological
Degradation continues in the tradition of the grand historical
narrative from Eric Wolf, Alfred Crosby, William McNeill and Gunder
Frank. As such it will be of great interest to social and economic
history as well as ancient history and archaeology.
*Kristian Kristiansen, (University of Gothenburg)*
Chew demonstrates that ecological crises caused by accumulation,
urbanization, and deforestation inevitably have caused the collapse
of many ancient civilizations and more recent socioeconomic
transformations... His ecocentric, or 'ecology in command'
approach, rather than the traditional anthropocentric, or 'economy
in command' approach, opens a new dimension in studying human
history at a broader temporal scale.
*CHOICE*
Chew offers a cogent overview of deforestation over the past five
thousand years. In so doing, not only does he link his work to the
recent studies in world system theory, but he also dispels much of
the romanticism that often lurks in environmental studies by
showing that forest loss was widespread even among nonmodern
societies. Such factors should make World Ecological Degradation a
provocative read for upper-level students in history and
environmental studies.
*History*
The degradation of nature especially through deforesting is 'as old
as the hills.' Chew masterfully demonstrates the conflict between
culture/society/economy in command and its environmental
destruction that in turn imposes limits through ecology in command.
He reviews these over 5,000 years around the globe from ancient
Mesopotamia and India, Greece and Rome, South, East and Southeast
Asia to the European and North American age in this first ever
ecocentric instead of only humanocentric book that weds ecological
with world system analysis. He also traces responses in ecological
consciousness and through environmental movements from the 2700 BC
Epic of Gilgamesh in Mesopotamia, Vedas and Buddhism in India,
Confucians in China, Pythagoras and others in Greece, Cicero and
Pliny in Rome, Spinoza in Europe and Thoreau in the United States,
and to contemporary ones like the Sierra Club, Greenpeace and Green
parties like Nader's 2000 presidential candidacy today.
*Andre Gunder Frank*
Of the attempts in the past fifteen years to offer a synthetic,
global history of environmental degradation, Sing C. Chew's book is
not only the most ambitious but also perhaps the most successful to
date.... It is a pleasure to note that despite his concise format,
Chew's work may be the first to satisfy the demands for
documentation that historians typically make of the books they
use.
*Environmental History*
In this brief by biting analysis of world environmental history
from the appearance of the first cities to the present, Sing Chew
states his thesis and follows it with admirable directness.... I
think this book wil prove stimulating for teachers of courses in
World History; there are issues raised by Chew that most texts
avoid.
*J Donald Hughes*
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