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The chapters are headed "Family", "Species", "Nation" and "Self", and each travels a fascinating path through past research, ideas and future predictions, made cohesive by the author's own passionate beliefs. Although its main pool of facts and figures source from the US, much of it is universal and McKinnen discusses global issues too.
Advocating one-child families is a difficult and controversial issue, as the author readily points out, and this is one of the sticking points that he wrestles with in the book. Instead of asking whether we should have just one child, he asks: what if we don't?
As the author himself says: This is the last chance to change the world. --Alison Jardine
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Book Description Condition: Bueno. Written in lucid, rational prose, the theme of this book is the threat that overpopulation poses to the world. But rather than pontificate and propose global solutions, McKibben contends that there is something average, well-off adults can decide to do about it- they can choose to have only one child. Knowing that he has taken a controversial slant on a delicate subject, McKibben is at pains to demonstrate his reasonableness. He abhors the idea of coerced family planning, for example. Nor is he saying that all parents should limit their families. He points out, however, that there could be 500 million people in the US by 2050 -- what if population declines rather than increases? What would an America with 150 million people -- the population after World War II -- look like? This book does not dodge difficult questions, it seeks them out. Would a generation of only children pose a problem for society? After all they are commonly considered more likely to be lonely, self-centred or incapable of forming healthy social relationships. What about the difficulty of financing social security in an ageing populace? What of the deep emotional satisfaction many receive Seguir leyendo BIOGRAFÍA DEL AUTORBill McKibben's books include The End of Nature, The Age of Missing Information and Hope, Human and Wild. A former staff writer for The New Yorker, he is a frequent contributor to a wide variety of publications. He lives with his wife and daughter in the Adirondack Mountains of New York. Seguir leyendo EAN: 9781862300040 Tipo: Libros Categoría: Título: Maybe OneEditorial: - Formato: Tapa dura. Seller Inventory # Happ-2024-02-20-c39a3c37