Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed by Jared Diamond

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  • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
  • Pub. Date: December 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780143036555
  • Sales Rank: 2,998
  • 592pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
  • Edition Number: 1
 
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Synopsis

Diamond (geography, UCLA) casts a wide net in the realms of history, geography, and science to address questions essential to humanity's continued survival. Forty-two b&w plates, grouped together, illustrate the scope and some of the examples of his narrative: the deforested landscapes of Easter Island, Chaco Canyon, and Haiti; the forests of Japan—preserved because of top-down management initiated four centuries ago; victims of the 1994 genocidal killings in Rwanda; air and water pollution in China; destruction of environment by sheep and rabbits in Australia; President John F. Kennedy and advisors deliberating during the Cuban Missile Crisis (evidence of group decision-making informed by past mistakes); oil and chemical disasters in the North Sea and in Bhopal; and a gated community, urban sprawl, and smog in Los Angeles. Concluding pages are devoted to reasons for hope. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

The Washington Post - Robert D. Kaplan

In a world that celebrates live journalism, we are increasingly in need of big-picture authors like Jared Diamond, who think historically and spatially -- across an array of disciplines -- to make sense of events that journalists may seem to be covering in depth, but in fact aren't. He did this so well in Guns, Germs, and Steel, which has been a huge bestseller since its publication in 1997, that one might think Diamond would have little more to say about the vast sweep of human history. Think again. In his extraordinarily panoramic Collapse, he moves his wide lens to yet another telling phenomenon: failed nations, of both the distant and the recent past.

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Biography

Jared Diamond is a professor of geography at the University of California, Los Angeles. The recipient of numerous awards, he has published more than two hundred articles in such prestigious magazines as Discover and Nature.

Customer Reviews

Well worth the read! It changed my every day life!by Anonymous

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October 26, 2007: Collapse is a book that has changed my every day life, with a greater focus & more frequent 'second-thoughts' regarding my actions & their affect to not only our economy but more so to our wordly environment. The book is compelling & creates an awareness well beyond what you'll find in any TV show or even documentary. Simply because of the broad range of topics covered & their relation to today & the future, does it really speak to the heart. The book includes so much information that it shouldn't be surprising if there are parts that speak more to the reader than others. However, cover to cover, it's full of critical information that, in my opinion, should be required knowledge of people all across the world.

Yeah. Long. But worth finishing...by Anonymous

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August 12, 2006: It would be easy to hammer this book for its sheer volume. I personally did the 'Okay, okay, I get it' speech more than once while reading it. As a writer and educator, though, something else occurred to me about halfway through this book. The redundancy of repeatedly mentioning poison in the soil (especially salt), cutting down all the trees, disrupting the balance in fisheries and coral reefs via dumping waste into rivers, overfarming, and hunting certain species to extinction all came into focus for me while reading about the doomed Viking settlements in Greenland and North America. Diamond repeatedly visits these topics for one reason--the reader will remember them and cite them the next time someone says something like 'The earth will take care of itself so stop whining.' The fact that I just delivered that laundry list from a book I finished a week ago shows that Diamond knows how to teach. While highlighting ruinous practices, however, Collapse also steps away from the doomed societies of the past to reveal some positive trends in both renewable and non-renewable resource extraction. Diamond points out--for instance--that certain entities from the oil and lumber industries are looking to minimize effects on the land they work and thus are doing business smarter. The wrap-up is just as useful: One need only look at places like Rwanda, Afghanistan, and Somalia as examples of extremely poor environmental management (i.e. sowing mines when the soil yields little else) and the horrendous social crises that have occurred since. Diamond makes a good case for tying social and economic collapse to over-mining, -hunting and -farming one's earth and waters. He also submits that in the modern world a societal collapse effects all of us.


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