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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      22 June 2018
      12 July 2018
      ISBN:
      9781316584767
      9781107151147
      9781316601150
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.75kg, 416 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (229 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.45kg, 420 Pages
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  • Selected: Digital
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    Book description

    The issue of sustainability, and the idea that economic growth and development might destroy its own foundations, is one of the defining political problems of our era. This groundbreaking study traces the emergence of this idea, and demonstrates how sustainability was closely linked to hopes for growth, and the destiny of expanding European states, from the sixteenth century. Weaving together aspirations for power, for economic development and agricultural improvement, and ideas about forestry, climate, the sciences of the soil and of life itself, this book sets out how new knowledge and metrics led people to imagine both new horizons for progress, but also the possibility of collapse. In the nineteenth century, anxieties about sustainability, often driven by science, proliferated in debates about contemporary and historical empires and the American frontier. The fear of progress undoing itself confronted society with finding ways to live with and manage nature.

    Reviews

    ‘This is an important book. A history of ideas that ranges widely over political economy, the state and the environment, The Invention of Sustainability is a great example of how to present a compelling argument while respecting complexity. Paul Warde brings together wonderfully rich evidence and makes his case lucidly. The result is a bold and very satisfying work.'

    David Blackbourn - author of The Conquest of Nature

    ‘In this readable, erudite, and sophisticated book, Paul Warde persuasively argues that, although the current articulation of concerns about sustainability are relatively new, the concerns themselves have deep historical roots. He deftly combines environmental, economic, and intellectual history to show that analogous concerns with scarcity and depletion characterized the practices of pre-industrial farmers and foresters, as well as the policies of those responsible for the management of organic and mineral resources and the theories on which those policies were based.'

    Harriet Ritvo - Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    'Paul Warde’s impressive study of more than three centuries of ideas about economic growth and agricultural productivity draws out a more complex story. … scholarly and nuanced …'

    Clare Griffiths Source: Times Higher Education

    'Warde's book is perhaps the most important tract in the intellectual history of environmental ideas since Clarence Glacken's Traces on the Rhodian Shore … Historical geographers, environmental historians and historians more generally need to read this brilliant book.'

    Robert J. Mayhew Source: Journal of Historical Geography

    ‘… a beautifully written, deftly argued, and richly nuanced book … It is accessible for students, enlightening for scholars, and necessary reading for both.’

    Dagomar Degroot Source: Metascience

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    Contents

    • 1 - Living from the Land, c. 1500–1620
      pp 17-57

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