Acts of Balance: Profits, People & Place (Community Works!)

Type
Book
Authors
ISBN 10
086571410X 
ISBN 13
9780865714106 
Category
Unknown  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2000 
Pages
176 
Description
Acts of Balance has been awarded the British Columbia 2000 Book Award."Grant Copeland is one of my eco-heroes. His call for an end to the perverse subsidies that are destroying the very things that give us life must be heard as we prepare to enter the Ecological Millennium."?David Suzuki, ecologist, author, and broadcasterCan profits, people and place co-exist in harmony? Does conservation of nature necessarily mean a loss of jobs? With globalization spreading relentlessly throughout the world, such questions become more and more urgent as ecosystems everywhere are stressed to the point of collapse. Acts of Balance deals head-on with this crisis by examining a number of case studies from different sectors of the Pacific Northwest and coming up with some surprising answers. For example, it explodes the 'spotted owl' myth - which predicted a massive loss of jobs following logging reductions designed to save the spotted owl - showing that employment and economic activity in fact increased. Similarly, the book shows that future job opportunities exist when local residents steward their resource base, not when non-locals have the power to plunder it. Acts of Balance concludes that community-based development - centered around smaller, ecologically-based economies - is more likely to ensure a high quality of life and environment, and calls for a concerted effort by government, industry and activists to redirect development accordingly.Table of ContentsForeword, by Michael M'GoniglePART 1: RETHINKING ECONOMY AND COMMUNITY1 Our Present Dilemma and Challenge2 The Economy of Place: It WorksPART 2: COMMUNITY-BASED ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTOverview3 Portage-at-Bay: A Community That Floats4 Slocan Valley: The People's Forest5 Retallack Resort: Developing with a Light TouchPART 3: QUALITY OF LIFE AND ECONOMIC DIVERSITYOverview6 Redmond: Planning for the Information Age7 Smithers: Wild and Diverse8 Nelson: A Town in Transition9 BC's Endangered Wilderness Project: An Ongoing Struggle10 Stikine Watershed Planning: Unfinished BusinessPART 4: PRESERVING CULTURAL DIVERSITY: THE ULTIMATE CHALLENGE< - from Amzon 
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