tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:/xml/book_reviews1book reviews news from mongabay.com2012-02-14T13:26:35Ztag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/91062012-02-14T13:25:00Z2012-02-14T13:26:35ZWe Were an Island: The Maine Life of Art & Nan Kellam – Book ReviewWe dream to make a difference yet how many of us can say we are the difference that impact others, much less we are the difference that impacts others while accompanied by our life’s partner, our loved one, our soul mate, our spouse?Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90762012-02-07T21:26:00Z2012-02-07T21:26:57ZTeaching Sustainability/Teaching Sustainably: Book ReviewIn Teaching Sustainability/Teaching Sustainably, Danielle Lake writes the best sentence I have ever read summarizing sustainability: "Understanding sustainability as a wicked problem, and recognizing how an egoist ethic otherizes the environment and is thus in large part responsible for the abuses that have led to a number of current environmental and social problems, are central to the resolution of this pressing situation."Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90162012-01-26T16:06:00Z2012-01-26T16:07:57ZSustainable Materials With Both Eyes Open: A book reviewSustainable Materials With Both Eyes Open: Future Buildings, vehicles, products and equipment – made efficiently and made with less new material is a remarkable popular impartial well-written engineering book that addresses sustainable production of cement, plastic, paper, aluminum and
steel and their long-term impacts on the environment. The authors provide a comprehensive background regarding the uses of said materials. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/89932012-01-23T21:51:00Z2012-01-23T21:54:30ZThe Cryosphere-Princeton primers in climate: A Book ReviewThe Cryosphere by Dr. Shawn J. Marshall, Canada Research Chair in Climate Change, University of Calgary, is an excellent book because it summarizes leading scientific
research into easily accessible chapters each one on a different component of the cryosphere. The cryosphere, which incorporates the Earth's snow and
ice mass including seasonal snow, permafrost (both land-based permafrost and below water permafrost), river and lake ice, sea ice, glaciers, ice
sheets, and ice shelves, is intrinsically related to global climate change. Hence, understanding how the cryosphere interacts with and is at risk
because of climate change and its greenhouse gases is fundamental to developing effective policy mechanisms that mitigate climate change.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88552011-12-14T19:09:00Z2011-12-14T19:09:12ZIssues of the Day: 100 Commentaries on Climate, Energy, the Environment, Transportation, and Public Health Policy: Book Review Issues of the Day: 100 Commentaries on Climate, Energy, the Environment, Transportation, and Public Health Policy is a wonderful overview of 100 different issues presented in two-page briefs by teams of expert individuals. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88432011-12-13T21:17:00Z2011-12-13T21:21:30ZCarbon Coalitions: Business, Climate Politics, and the Rise of Emissions Trading: Book ReviewJonas Meckling, PhD., writes the first critical analysis demonstrating how various types of not-for-profit, governmental and for-profit coalitions over
the past couple of decades have led to the development of the global carbon market, valued in 2010 at US$ 142 billion.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88342011-12-12T03:32:00Z2011-12-12T03:37:07ZThe Atlas of Climate Change: Mapping the World’s Greatest Challenge – a book reviewThe Atlas of Climate Change: Mapping the World’s Greatest Challenge presents in clear and concise visual form the impacts and effects, solutions and mitigation actions surrounding climate change - which is our greatest global challenge. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/84082011-09-19T17:16:00Z2011-09-19T17:24:41ZFrom Red to Green? How the Financial Credit Crunch Could Bankrupt the Environment - a book reviewPaul Donovan and Julie Hudson, CFA argue in From Red to Green? How the Financial Credit Crunch Could Bankrupt the Environment that twin credit crunches – both environment and financial – have been underway for some time. With chapters on food, water, energy, infrastructure, housing, consumer durables, health, education, work and leisure accompanied by a thorough economic analysis regarding both credit and environmental debts driving supply and demand of these goods and services, the authors discuss at length how global economics may be impacted in an environmentally constrained future.
Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/84072011-09-19T17:12:00Z2011-09-23T18:32:48ZThe Global Carbon Cycle: a book reviewThe Global Carbon Cycle, by Dr. David Archer, is an excellent primer on the global carbon cycle. An easily readable format, this lightweight book is an excellent companion to those who need a quick on-the-go reference or for those who need a compendium for their office or lab. With chapters on the basic carbon cycle, geologic carbon cycle, unstable ice age carbon cycle, present and future carbon cycle, and methane, The Global Carbon Cycle</a> is an authoritative book with numerous examples explaining scientific phenomena associated the global carbon cycle.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/84042011-09-18T15:43:00Z2011-09-18T15:51:57ZMeasuring Livelihoods and Environmental Dependence: Methods for Research and Fieldwork - Book Revieweveloping a systematic approach applicable globally to measuring the environmental impacts associated with rural economic development in the developing world, as measured through landscape-level carbon accounting, is critically important as these communities begin to implement land-based carbon projects. To be able to successfully compare carbon sequestration activities between communities, we need to develop quantitatively robust methodologies to measure rural livelihoods' environmental impacts. With these methodologies in place it is possible to begin to measure financial effectiveness and equitable distribution of revenue associated with these land-based carbon projects.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/84032011-09-18T14:39:00Z2011-09-18T14:49:20ZBiodiversity and Social Carbon: Sustainable Development and the Carbon Market - Book ReviewOur 21<sup>st</sup> century economy faces to twin challenges - biodiversity loss and climate change - and in Biodiversity and Social Carbon</b></a>, authors Divaldo Rezende and Stefano Merlin, describe the Social Carbon methodology</a> and its approach to protecting and enhancing biodiversity while mitigating climate change. Moreover, the authors also provide numerous case studies on how the Social Carbon methodology functions.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/84002011-09-15T20:51:00Z2011-09-18T14:38:52ZTropical Ecology: A Book ReviewDr. Kricher's full-color textbook is a great introductory textbook for tropical ecology courses. With increased interest globally in forest carbon and the underlying tropical forest ecological fundamentals that forest carbon offsets are manufactured from allowing climate change mitigation, this book provides a one-stop tropical forest ecology resource for those who work in the forest carbon field in the tropics. Key topics addressed, through a pan-tropical lens, include evolution, tropical rain forest structure and biodiversity, carbon flux and climate change, forest fragmentation, nutrient cycling, species richness, and flora and fauna relationships.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/83832011-09-11T20:02:00Z2011-09-11T20:03:12ZConserving and Valuing Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity: Economic, Institutional and Social ChallengesConserving and Valuing Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity: Economic, Institutional and Social Challenges provides a much needed survey reflecting upon recent institutional experience yielding analysis that concludes that there exists financially rigorous rationale to justify conservation of biodiversity for economic reasons, above and beyond the usual rationale of conservation only for biodiversity, spiritual or ethical reasons. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/83582011-09-02T16:40:00Z2011-09-06T13:39:10ZEcoCommerce 101: adding an ecological dimension to the economyEcoCommerce 101: Adding an Ecological Dimension to the Economy</a> provides a foundation for an analysis of environmental economics from the perspective of a theorist and a practitioner. The author, a fifth-generation farmer living in the USA with a background in economics, separates his book into three easy-to-read sections.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/83402011-08-30T00:46:00Z2011-09-06T13:20:40ZWorld on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse clearly describes in terms of national and social security how the looming current threat to our collective global future is not from catastrophic war as many describe in hindsight the 20th Century, rather from cataclysmic climate change, biodiversity loss, and water degradation. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/79792011-06-06T18:31:00Z2011-09-06T13:39:58ZEcosystem Goods and Services from Plantation ForestsGiven that plantations cover 140 million hectares, or 4% of the global forested area, and are a growing source of round wood and pulp, Ecosystem Goods and Services from Plantation Forests is very well timed edited value that can add value to the discussion and implementation of sustainable forest management within a carbon constrained and biodiversity depleted global economic system.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/79092011-05-23T19:43:00Z2011-09-06T13:41:02ZProsperity without Growth: Economics for a Finite PlanetProsperity without Growth: Economics for a Finite Planet challenges us to imaging a world where growth and unmitigated consumption do not equal development. In fact, as clearly described throughout, countries with unmitigated consumption are the underdeveloped countries of the 21st Century expanding our global ecological debt at the expense of countries who are more sophisticated in their development practices with similar prosperity levels while incurring less "national" ecological debt.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/78682011-05-16T15:25:00Z2011-05-16T15:28:58ZValuing Ecosystem Services: The Case of Multi-functional WetlandsValuing Ecosystem Services: The Case of Multi-functional Wetlands provides the clearest guide yet to describing and implementing in a systematic fashion payments for ecosystems services (PES) strategies for wetland protection mechanisms. By focusing initially on frameworks and obstacles to implementation of wetland protection strategies such as property rights, measuring and monitoring, behavior and compensation, cultural barriers and external factors, the authors posit that is possible to effectively value multi-functional wetlands. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/78202011-05-03T00:43:00Z2011-09-06T13:41:37ZCommunity Forest Monitoring for the Carbon Market: Opportunities Under REDDWith over 200 million forested hectares in 60 countries transferred to community forest management over the past 20 years, this much needed book edited by Margaret Skutsch funded through the Kyoto: Think Global Act Local program (K:TGAL), provides not only various insights into how local communities and indigenous stakeholders can be engaged in community forest carbon project development and monitoring, it furthermore provides a valuable framework and models from which to discuss and analyze successful implementation of community forest carbon projects. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/77612011-04-19T18:40:00Z2011-09-06T13:41:52ZForest Governance Measuring Tools within Collaborative Governance of Tropical Landscapes: Book ReviewConservation projects at the landscape level in the tropics often require collaborative governance because there are many factors that may be involved with conserving and enhancing the ecosystem services with a landscape-based project. Yet as eloquently described in Collaborative Governance of Tropical Landscapes, significant issues remain in designing and implementing effective collaborative governance models for tropical landscapes. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/77422011-04-14T18:16:00Z2011-09-06T13:42:07ZWorld Atlas of Mangroves: A Book ReviewBecause recent research has shown that it is often the case that mangroves store more carbon than tropical forests--from 90 tons to 588 tons carbon from above-ground and below-ground biomass combined with net primary productivity of 7 to 25 tons carbon annually--while providing an estimated ecosystem services value of up to US$ 9270 per hectare per year, the timely publication of the World Atlas of Mangroves is an excellent reference for those of us working to protect mangroves globally. With information sourced from 1400 literature references, the atlas gives the reader the information they need so as to further understand mangrove ecosystems, and the opportunities to develop mangrove ecosystem conservation and carbon projects. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/76632011-03-30T17:44:00Z2011-09-06T13:42:40ZSustainability takes only centsReal economic global results from decoupling economic growth from unsustainable natural resource management and inefficient industrial processes are the central themes of <i>Cents and Sustainability</i>. Implementing wealth creation strategies at the local, national, and international level is the primary economic theme, or modus operandi, of the 21st Century, as opposed to 20th Century wealth appropriation strategies. This begets the question do concrete auditable examples of wealth creation while sustainably managing natural resources at the national level exist?Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/76542011-03-28T16:53:00Z2011-09-06T13:40:42ZEnvironmental sustainability—the new economic bottom lineThat’s the message in <i>Accounting for Sustainability: Practical Insights</i>. The book represents the compilation of a five-year project—nicknamed “A4S”—sponsored by Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, that examined the feasibility of factoring industries’ impact on the environment into their economic spread sheets. Using case studies and interviews with leaders at major accounting firms, Accounting For Sustainability documents the bond between capitalism and environmental capital. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/57472010-03-01T16:44:00Z2010-03-03T17:01:15ZWhy we are failing orangutans<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/10/0301Shawn150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>It is no secret that orangutans are threatened with extinction because their rain forests are being destroyed at an alarming rate. Ten years ago, Shawn Thompson, a writer, former journalist and university professor, set out to chronicle the threat to orangutans in a book released in March 2010. The book is called The Intimate Ape: Orangutans and the Secret Life of a Vanishing Species. The book spends most of the time talking about the nature of orangutans and the relationships between orangutans and people. But the ultimate underlying message is there about the source of the peril to orangutans and the solution. Thompson says that the problem of saving orangutans has to do with communications and human nature.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/32692008-08-04T14:30:39Z2008-12-16T10:15:07ZNew Costa Rica guide offers insight on responsible tourismCosta Rica is the world's most popular destination for rainforest tourism thanks to its spectacular biodiversity, relative ease-of-access and safety, and many natural attractions. In 2007 nearly 2 million tourists visited the country, generating almost 2 billion in revenue -- more than the combined income from bananas and coffee.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/30022008-05-09T14:30:39Z2008-12-16T10:14:14ZBook Review: State of the WildState of the Wild is a textbook sized collection of essays and conservation information from the Wildlife conservation Society. The book deals with myriad issues surrounding wildlife and ecosystem conservation, essentially exploring the current 'state of the wild' through various lenses. Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/20362007-06-12T14:30:39Z2008-12-29T06:45:46ZAn interview with author and eco-lodge pioneer Jack Ewing<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/07/0613Jack_CRCT_Bio1.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In 1970 a young man went to Costa Rica, a place he initially confused with Puerto Rico, on an assignment to accompany 150 head of cattle. 37 years and several lifetimes' worth of adventures later, Jack Ewing runs a eco-lodge that serves as a model for a country now considered the world leader in nature travel.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/20412007-06-11T14:30:39Z2008-12-29T06:45:47ZWorld's largest movement has no leader but 100M employeesThe world's largest movement has no name, no leader, and no ideology, but may directly involve more than 100 million people, said a green business pioneer.Rhett Butler