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Aberley, Doug (ed.). 1993. Boundaries of Home: Mapping for Local Empowerment. Gabriola Island, BC: New Society Publishers. {Cartography; Environmental mapping; Human ecology; Landscape changes - Maps. DOH GF23.C35B68 1993}
Alexander, Donald. 1990. "Bioregionalism: Science Or Sensibility?" Environmental Ethics, v12n2 (Summer 1990): 161-173.
Atkinson, A. 1992. "The Urban Bioregion As Sustainable Development Paradigm," Third World Planning Review, v14n4 (Nov, 1992): 327-354. {This paper analyses the implications of the 'bioregional paradigm' for urban regions in the Third World. Bioregionalism has emerged from the ecocentric' wing of the environmental movement, contending that the 'environmental crisis' cannot be solved by technical and administrative measures alone, but requires a more thoroughgoing reappraisal of attitudes, lifestyles and social structures. Following discussion of conventional analytical approaches to the city and its region, the paper assesses the degree to which new approaches to Third World development, and especially new ideas concerning regional development, already prefigure the bioregional paradigm. Whilst many quasi-bioregional ideas are already entering into the debate on appropriate development approaches, as yet the fully stated bioregional paradigm has not come under consideration, The second half of the paper therefore considers salient issues that will need to be researched if bioregionalism is to become a serious option for Third World urban regions. Finally, the paper discusses possible routes to implementation.}
Bache, Christopher M. 2000. Dark Night, Early Dawn: Steps To A Deep Ecology of Mind. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press.
Baker, Susan (ed.). 1997. The Politics of Sustainable Development: Theory, Policy and Practice Within the European Union. London; New York: Routledge.
Barnhill, David L. & Roger S. Gottlieb (eds.). 2001. Deep Ecology and World Religions: New Essays On Sacred Grounds. Albany: State University of New York Press. {"This book grew out of a session on deep ecology and world religions at the 1997 National Meeting of the American Academy of Religion."}
Berg, Peter (ed.). 1978. Reinhabiting A Separate Country : A Bioregional Anthology of Northern California. San Francisco: Planet Drum Foundation.
Berry, Thomas. 1999. The Great Work: Our Way Into the Future. New York: Bell Tower.
Bowers, C. A. 1993. Critical Essays On Education, Modernity, and the Recovery of the Ecological Imperative. New York: Teachers College Press. {Education--Social aspects; Educational anthropology.; Deep ecology; Computers--Social aspects; Intercultural education; Education--Philosophy. DOH: LC191.B6736 1993}
Branch, Michael P. et al. (eds.). 1998. Reading the Earth: New Directions In the Study of Literature and Environment. Moscow, IO: University of Idaho Press. {Essays based on lectures and papers delivered at the first conference of the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment, 1995: Fort Collins, CO}
Brownson, Jamil. 1993. "Bioregional Landscapes and Ethnos of the North Pacific Rim," Chicago Review, v39n3-4 (Summer-Fall 1993): 180(4). {An analysis of the cold waters of the Northern Pacific region reveals that surrounded by rugged and mountainous landscapes, these water support the growth and existence of humanity and diverse marine life. Underground extractions for resources may affect land and marine life in this region. Gradual industrialization of these places may result in the abolition of the natives and their culture.}
Brunckhorst, David J. 2000. Bioregional Planning: Resource Management Beyond the New Millennium. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic.
Cheney, Jim. 1989. "Postmodern Environmental Ethics: Ethics As Bioregional Narrative," Environmental Ethics, v11n2 (Summer 1989): 117(18).
Cramer, Phillip F. 1998. Deep Environmental Politics: The Role of Radical Environmentalism In Crafting American Environmental Policy. Westport, CT: Praeger.
Devall, Bill. 1993. Living Richly In An Age of Limits. Salt Lake City, UT: Gibbs Smith Publisher. {Environmental protection--Citizen participation; Human ecology; Deep ecology; Quality of life. DOH: TD171.7.D48 1993}
di Zerega, Gus. 1991. Social Ecology, Deep Ecology, and Liberalism : A Constructive Exploration of Murray Bookchin's Confusions. Berkeley, CA: Institute of Governmental Studies, University of California at Berkeley. {VKC JK8701.W6 no.91-13}
Dudley, J.P. 1995. "Bioregional Parochialism and Global Activism," Conservation Biology, v9n5 (Oct 1995): 1332-1334.
Ernst, W.G. (ed.). 2000. Earth Systems: Processes and Issues. New York: Cambridge University Press. {Incomplete Contents: The interface between the geosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, and biosphere / Mark J. Johnsson -- Hydrologic cycle / Patricia A. Maurice -- Atmosphere-ocean coupling and surface circulation of the ocean ; Deep-sea and global ocean circulation / James C. Ingle, Jr. -- Chemical oceanography / Peter G. Brewer -- Atmosphere composition, mixing, and ozone destruction ; Atmosphere motions and the greenhouse effect / Robert Chatfield -- Can we forecast climate future without knowing climate past? ; Can we predict climate change accurately? / Stephen H. Schneider -- Biodiversity: result of speciation and extinction ; Evolution: adaptation and environmental change / Carol L. Boggs and Joan Roughgarden -- Global biogeochemical cycles: cardon, sulfur, and nitrogen / Isaac R. Kaplan and Julie K. Bartley -- Global change and the terrestrial carbon cycle: the Jasper Ridge CO^[b2^[s experiment / Christopher B. Field and Nona Chiariello -- Ecology: possible consequences of rapid global change / Terry L. Root -- Population and the environment / Susan E. Alexander and Paul R. Ehrlich. [Mineral resources: assets and liabilities / Marco T. Einaudi -- Energy resources and the environment / Jane Woodward, Christopher Place, and Kathryn Arbeit -- Natural hazards: prediction and risk / W.G. Ernst -- Steps from environmental science to effective policy ; Confronting the prospect of global climate change : carbon taxes and other domestic policy options / Lawrence H. Goulder -- Land use: global effects and local changes / Edward A.G. Schuur and Pamela A. Matson -- Agriculture and global change / Rosamond L. Naylor -- Water allocation and protection: a United States case study / Barton H. Thompson, Jr. -- Valuing nature / Lawrence H. Goulder and Donald Kennedy -- Life support system-- toward Earth sense / W.S. Fyfe -- Synthesis of Earth systems and global change / W.G. Ernst; Earth sciences. Ernst, W. G.}
Feldman, David L. (ed.). 1994. Global Climate Change and Pubic Policy. Chicago: Nelson-Hall. {Published in conjunction with the Policy Studies Organization.}
Ferry, Luc. 1995. The New Ecological Order; translated by Carol Volk. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. {Human ecology--Political aspects; Human ecology--Philosophy; Deep ecology--Philosophy; Ecofeminism; Animal rights--Philosophy.}
Forsey, Helen (ed.). 1993. Circles of Strength : Community Alternatives To Alienation. Gabriola Island, BC: New Society Publishers. {Alienation (Social psychology); Community; Social networks. DOH.LEA HM131.C57 1993}
Foster, Charles H. W. 1984. Experiments In Bioregionalism: The New England River Basins Story. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England.
Frenkel, Stephen. 1994. "Old Theories In New Places? Environmental Determinism and Bioregionalism," Professional Geographer, v46n3 (Aug 1994): 289-295.
Gallagher, Winifred. 1993. The Power of Place: How Our Surroundings Shape Our Thoughts, Emotions, and Actions. New York: Poseidon Press.
Goble, Dale D. & Paul W. Hirt (eds.). 1999. Northwest Lands, Northwest Peoples: Readings In Environmental History. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
Gottlieb, Roger S. (ed.). 1996. This Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature, Environment. New York: Routledge.
Grumbine, R. Edward (ed.). 1994. Environmental Policy and Biodiversity. Washington, DC: Island Press. {Biological diversity -- United States; Environmental law; Environmental policy. Incomplete contents: The preservation of natural biotic communities / Victor E. Shelford -- What is conservation biology? / Michael Soule -- What do genetics and ecology tell us about the design of nature reserves? / Michael Soule and Daniel Simberloff -- The landscape ecology of large disturbances in the design and management of nature reserves / William L. Baker -- Conservation biology in context: an interview with Michael Soule -- Taking account of the ecosystem on the public domain: law and ecology in the Greater Yellowstone Region / Robert B. Keiter -- Six biological reasons why the Endangered Species Act doesn't work--and what to do about it / Daniel J. Rohlf -- Response to: "Six biological reasons why the Endangered Species Act doesn't work--and what to do about it" / Michael O'Connell -- Defining the role of conservation biology in the law of protecting ecosystems / Walter Kuhlmann -- An ecologist's view of biodiversity law: an interview with David Wilcove -- The Wildlands Project: land conservation strategy / Reed F. Noss -- Science, values, and uncertainty: a critique of the Wildlands Project / Lynn A. Maguire -- Conservation through coordination: California's experiment in bioregional councils / Deborah B. Jensen -- The Natural Community Conservation Planning Program and the coastal sage scrub ecosystem of southern California / John McCaull -- Great Lakes intergovernmental cooperation: a framework for endangered species conservation / Susan MacKenzie -- Forging an ecosystem ma. VKC GE180.G78 1994}
Holmes, Hannah & Gary Lawless & Kirkpatrick Sale. 1992. "Being Bioregional; The Environmental Wisdom of Getting To Know Your Place In the World," GARBAGE The Practical Journal for the Environment, v4n2 (March-April 1992): 32(6). {Bioregionalists are environmentalists trying to live in harmony with the earth. They study species and help to repair habitats. The movement seeks a simpler way of life in small communities and a knowledge of the local area and past lifestyles.}
Hoy, Terry. 2000. Toward A Naturalistic Political Theory: Aristotle, Hume, Dewey, Evolutionary Biology, and Deep Ecology. Westport, CT: Praeger. {Political science--Philosophy; Naturalism; Evolution (Biology). Deep ecology.}
Johnson, K. Norman et al. (eds.). 1999. Bioregional Assessments: Science At the Crossroads of Management and Policy. Washington, D.C.: Island Press.
Kahn, C. 1993. "The Bioregional Paradigm - Applications To STS Education," Bulletin of Science Technology & Society, v13n3 (1993): 125-127.
Katz, Eric & Andrew Light & David Rothenberg. 2000. Beneath the Surface: Critical Essays In the Philosophy of Deep Ecology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Keulartz, Jozef. 1998. Struggle for Nature: A Critique of Radical Ecology. London ; New York: Routledge.
Kidner, David W. 2001. Nature and Psyche: Radical Environmentalism and the Politics of Subjectivity. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press.
Kowalewski, David. 2000. Deep Power: The Political Ecology of Wilderness and Civilization. Commack, NY: Nova Science Publishers.
Lee, Martha F. 1995. Earth First!: Environmental Apocalypse. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press.
Marinelli, Janet. 1992. "Bringing Biodiversity Into Your Own Backyard (Going Native)," The Amicus Journal, v14n3 (Fall 1992): 28(2). {There is an increasing clamor for environmentally oriented gardens that emphasize biodiversity and bioregional style. Bioregions of gardens are analyzed so that entire or significant parts of plant communities can be recreated. The ecological role of gardeners in the preservation of species is presently underestimated, but in the future, they are destined to become more significant, with the continued diminishing of wild forests and the occurence of global warming.}
McGinnis, Michael V. (ed.). 1999. Bioregionalism. London ; New York: Routledge.
McLaughlin, Andrew. 1993. Regarding Nature: Industrialism and Deep Ecology. Albany : State University of New York Press. {Green movement; Environmental policy; Deep ecology; Consumption (Economics); Radical economics; Comparative economics. DOH: )JA75.8.M35 1993}
McTaggart, W. Donald. 1993. "Bioregionalism and Regional Geography: Place, People, and Networks," Canadian Geographer, v37n4 (Winter 1993): 307-319. {'Bioregionalism' is a term referring to an action-oriented movement based on ecological principles. It has not been strong in academic geography, though it clearly has space and place as its concerns. From a merging of classical regional geography and general systems one might have expected a bioregional synthesis to emerge. The bioregional ideal can be given rigorous expression in a regional system comprising three sub-systems - a biophysical sub-system, an inhabiting sub-system, and a network sub-system.
Meyer-Abich, Klaus Michael. 1993. Revolution for Nature: From the Environment To the Connatural World; translated by Matthew Armstrong. Cambridge, UK: White Horse Press. {Human ecology; Deep ecology. DOH: GF75.M4613 1993}
Miller, Kenton. 1996. Balancing the Scales: Guidelines for Increasing Biodiversity's Chances Through Bioregional Management. Washington, DC: World Resources Institute.
Moran, Edward (ed.). 1999. The Global Ecology. New York: H.W. Wilson. {Partial contents: Historical roots of our ecologic crisis / Lynn White -- 2000: Planet Earth at the crossroads / Jim Motavalli -- The great environmentalists: cultural stereotypes and the environmental movement / Gordon Straw -- Race, poverty, and the environment: the disadvantaged face greater risks / B. Bryant, P. Mohai -- Overview of social ecology / Janet Biehl -- Comments on the international social ecology network gathering and the "Deep Social Ecology" of John Clark / Murray Bookchin -- Empire and the ecological apocalypse: the historiography of the imperial environment / John M. MacKenzie -- The carbon cycle, climate, and the long-term effects of fossil fuel burning / James F. Kasting -- Global warming: the origin and nature of the alleged scientific consensus / Richard S. Lindzen -- A dying planet? How the media have scared the public / Julian Simon -- Impacts of a projected depletion of the ozone layer / Frank R. DeGrujil -- Do we still need nature? The importance of biological diversity / Anthony C. Janetos -- There's no going back to nature / Walter Truett Anderson -- The making of a dissident / John Terborgh -- Conversations: Paul and Anne Ehrlich / Jim Motavalli -- From a carbon economy to a mixed economy: global opportunity / Richard C. Rockwell -- Five hundred year plan / Randy Hayes -- Incentive systems that support sustainability: a First Nations example / Ronald L. Trosper; Pollution; Human ecology. Moran, Edward.}
Moyle, P.B. & R.M. Yoshiyama. 1994. "Protection of Aquatic Biodiversity In California: A 5-Tiered Approach," Fisheries, v19n2 (Feb, 1994): 6-18. {Aquatic biodiversity is being lost at an even more rapid rate than terrestrial biodiversity, especially in arid regions such as California. In the United States, it is increasingly obvious that the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA) cannot adequately deal with this loss. To help solve this problem, we have developed a five-tiered approach for aquatic conservation in California that should be applicable to other regions as well: (1) immediate ESA listing of species likely to be extirpated in the next 20 years; (2) implementation of restoration-oriented management strategies for clusters of declining species that inhabit the same habitats or drainages; (3) creation of a system of drainages and habitats called Aquatic Diversity Management Areas that provides systematic, statewide protection of aquatic biodiversity; (4) designation of a system of key watersheds, starting with seven pilot watershed projects that represent a diversity of challenges; and (5) development of schemes for bioregional landscape management. if this approach, or one like it, is not adopted soon, extinction rates of aquatic organisms in California most likely will accelerate. The hierarchical approach to conservation proposed here, with its focus on watersheds as the most practical unit of aquatic conservation, should have widespread applicability.
Murphy, Raymond. 1994. Rationality and Nature : A Sociological Inquiry Into A Changing Relationship. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. {Environmentalism; Social ecology; Deep ecology; Ecofeminism; Environmental degradation. DOH: GE195.M87 1994}
Palmer, Clare. 1998. Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking. New York: Oxford University Press. {Environmental ethics; Deep ecology; Thought and thinking. DOH: GE42.P36 1998}
Pepper, David. 1993. Eco-socialism: From Deep Ecology To Social Justice. London; New York: Routledge. {Human ecology--Political aspects; Social ecology; Deep ecology; Green movement. DOH: GF21.P4 1993}
Plant, Christopher & Judith Plant (eds.). 1993. Putting Power In Its Place: Create Community Control! Philadelphia, PA: New Society Publishers. {Community organization; Community power; Decentralization in government. LEA HN49.P6P87 1992}
Polk, D.W. 1994. "Marcel, Gabriel - Kinship To Ecophilosophy," Environmental Ethics, v16n2, (Summer, 1994): 173-186. {Gabriel Marcel spent most of his life developing a phenomenology of human intersubjectivity. While doing so he discovered the extent to which an authentic human community depends upon the relationship it has to nonhuman nature. By exploring Marcel's critique of technology, as well as his religious phenomenology, I show the proximity to which Marcel's philosophy approaches the current egalitarian response of the radical ecology movement. Even though the bulk of Marcel's work is concerned with human intersubjectivity, his writings advocate a transcendence of anthropocentricism to what Marcel calls ''cosmocentricism,'' an existential attitude toward the world which submits to the sacredness of all beings, as well as to the bioregions within which all earthly creatures share the sacraments of life.}
Popper, D.E. & F.J. Popper. 1994. "The Buffalo-Commons, A Bioregional Vision of the Great-Plains," Landscape Architecture, v84n4 (Apr, 1994): 144-144.
Reed, Peter & David Rothenberg. 1993. Wisdom In the Open Air : The Norwegian Roots of Deep Ecology. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. {Deep ecology - Norway; Human ecology - Philosophy; Philosophy of nature. DOH GF50.W57 1993}
Rothenberg, David & Marta Ulvaeus (eds.). 1999. The New Earth Reader: The Best of Terra Nova. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Russel, Dick. 1993. "The Wildest Bill On the Hill. (proposed bill that would turn the Northern Rocky Mountains into a bioregion) (News and Comment)," The Amicus Journal, v14, n4 (Wntr 1993): p14(2). {The Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act, a bill that would make the Northern Rockies the property of the entire nation, is under consideration by Congress. The bill was introduced by Rep Peter Kostmayer of Pennsylvania in an attempt to protect the public lands from state political infighting through a bioregional strategy. It covers portions of five states with 2.4 million acres as wildlife corridors and 1,300 miles of rivers. Also included in the 14-million acre wilderness preserve is a new national park.}
Sale, Kirkpatrick. 1985. Dwellers In The Land : The Bioregional Vision. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. {Ecology -- Philosophy; Human ecology; Science -- Social aspects; Technology and civilization. DOH QH540.5.S25 1985}
Schoonmaker, Peter K. & Bettina von Hagen & Edward C. Wolf (eds.). 1997. The Rain Forests of Home: Profile of A North American Bioregion. Washington, D.C.: Island Press. {Developed from a conference held at the Whistler Resort near Vancouver, B.C. in late Aug. 1994.}
Sessions, George (ed.). 1995. Deep Ecology for the Twenty-First Century. Boston: Shambhala. Distributed in the United States by Random House. {Incomplete contents: What is deep ecology? -- Historical roots of deep ecology -- Arne Naess on deep ecology and ecosophy -- Deep ecology and ecofeminism, social ecology, the greens, and the new age -- Wilderness, the wild, and conservation biology -- Toward the twenty-first century and beyond: social and political implications. Deep ecology. DOH: GE195.D44 1995}
Shepard, Paul. 1996. Traces of An Omnivore. Washington, DC: Island Press; Covelo, CA: Shearwater Books. {Human ecology; Human evolution; Deep ecology. DOH: GF49 .S54 1996}
Smith, Gregory. 1993. "Shaping Bioregional Schools (educational changes as economics decentralizes)," Whole Earth Review, n81 (Winter 1993): 70(5). {Economic, political and educational institutions must focus on regional structures and become more community-oriented in the future. Children must be taught to think of their roles as community members as ecology becomes a big concern.
Smith, Mick. 2001. An Ethics of Place: Radical Ecology, Postmodernity, and Social Theory. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Taylor, Bron Raymond (ed.). 1995. Ecological Resistance Movements : The Global Emergence of Radical and Popular Environmentalism. Albany: State University of New York Press. {Contents: Earth first! and global narratives of popular ecological resistance -- With liberty and environmental justice for all: the emergence and challenge of grassroots environmentalism in the United States -- Bread and soil of our dreams: women the environment, and sustainable development--case studies from Central America -- Profits, parrots, peons: ethical perplexities in the Amazon -- International native resistance to the new resource wars -- Visitors to the commons: approaching Thailand's "environmental" struggles from a Western starting point -- Grassroots environmental resistance in India -- Popular environmentalists in the Philippines: people's claims to natural resources -- Grassroots resistance to dominant land-use patterns in Southern Africa -- Luta, livelihood, and lifeworld in contemporary Africa -- Have a friend for lunch: Norwegian radical ecology versus tradition -- Between moderation and marginalization: environmental radicalism in Britain -- Popular resistance and the emergence of radical environmentalism in Scotland -- Postmodern environmentalism: a critique of deep ecology -- In search of Gaian politics: Earth religion's challenge to modern Western civilization -- In defense of banner hangers: the dark green politics of Greenpeace -- The effectiveness of radical environmentalists -- Popular ecological resistance and radical environmentalism. DOH: GE140.E26 1995}
Teresa deGroh and Edward Valauskas. 1987. Deep Ecology and Environmental Ethics : A Selected and Annotated Bibliography of Materials Published Since 1980. Chicago, IL: Council of Planning Librarians. {Environmental protection -- Bibliography. VKC Z5942.C7 no.185}
Tucker, Mary Evelyn & John A. Grim (eds.). 1993. Worldviews and Ecology. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press. {Incomplete contents: Beyond the enlightenment mentality / Tu Wei-ming -- Toward a global environmental ethic / J. Baird Callicott -- Native North American worldviews and ecology / John A. Grim -- Judaism and the ecological crisis / Eric Katz -- The Garden of Eden, the fall, and life in Christ: A Christian approach to ecology / Jay McDaniel -- The ecological fallout of Islamic creation theology / Roger E. Timm -- A Baha'i perspective on an ecologically sustainable society / Robert A. White -- Hindu environmentalism: traditional and contemporary resources / Christopher Kay Chapple -- Toward a Buddhist ecological cosmology / Brian Brown -- Jainism and ecology: views of nature, nonviolence, and vegetarianism / Michael Tobias -- Ecological themes in Taoism and Confucianism / Mary Evelyn Tucker -- The emerging ecological worldview / Ralph Metzner -- Cosmology and ethics / Larry L. Rasmussen -- Critical and constructive contributions of ecofeminism / Charlene Spretnak -- Whitehead's deeply ecological worldview / David Ray Griffin -- Deep ecology as worldview / George Sessions -- Ecological geography / Thomas Berry -- Cosmogenesis / DOH AP2.B887 v.37 no.2}
United States. Congress. 1998. Acts of Ecoterrorism By Radical Environmental Organizations: hearing before the Subcommittee on Crime of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fifth Congress, second session, June 9, 1998. Washington, DC: U.S. G.P.O.. {Deep ecology--United States; Terrorism--United States; Sabotage--United States; Environmentalism--United States.}
Van Andruss, et al (eds.). 1990. Home!: A Bioregional Reader. Philadelphia, PA: New Society Publishers. {Ecology; Environmental policy; Green movement; North America -- Social conditions; Regionalism. DOH/LEA GF51.H66 1990}
Van Wyck, Peter C. 1997. Primitives In the Wilderness: Deep Ecology and the Missing Human Subject. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Warren, Karen J. (ed.). 1996. Ecological Feminist Philosophies. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. {When lives become logic problems: nuclear deterrence, and ecological feminist critique / Victoria Davion -- Women and language in Susan Griffin's Woman and nature: the roaring inside her / Carol H. Cantrell -- Feminism and ecology: on the domination of nature / Patricia Jagentowicz Mills -- Ground, pivot, motion: ecofeminist theory, dialogics, and literary practice / Patrick D. Murphy -- Ecological feminism and ecosystem ecology / Karen J. Warren and Jim Cheney.}
Wilson, B.C. 1995. "The Mianus-Watershed Bioregional Planning Project," Places-A Quarterly Journal Of Environmental Design, v9n3 (Win, 1995): 18-21.
Witoszek, Nina & Andrew Brennan (eds.). 1999. Philosophical Dialogues: Arne Naess and the Progress of Ecophilosophy. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. {Deep ecology--Philosophy; Environmental ethics.}
Zimmerman, Michael E. 1994. Contesting Earth's Future : Radical Ecology and Postmodernity. Berkeley: University of California Press. {Environmentalism; Deep ecology; Social ecology; Ecofeminism. DOH: GE195.Z56 1994}
Ashwani Vasishth ashwani@csun.edu &nbs p; [Last Update: February 24, 2002]