Selected Product: | Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water Hardcover Author: Maude Barlow Publisher: New Press Release Date: 2008-02-01 ISBN-10: 1595581863 ISBN-13: 9781595581860 List Price: $24.95 Average Customer Rating: | | When the Rivers Run Dry: Water--The Defining Crisis of the Twenty-first Century ISBN-10: 0807085731 ISBN-13: 9780807085738 List Price:$16.00 Water Wars: Privatization, Pollution, and Profit ISBN-10: 089608650X ISBN-13: 9780896086500 List Price:$14.00 Bottlemania: How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought It ISBN-10: 1596913711 ISBN-13: 9781596913714 List Price:$24.99 Blue Gold: The Fight to Stop the Corporate Theft of the World's Water ISBN-10: 1565848136 ISBN-13: 9781565848139 List Price:$18.95 Water: The Fate of Our Most Precious Resource ISBN-10: 0618127445 ISBN-13: 9780618127443 List Price:$16.00 Water: The Fate of Our Most Precious Resource ISBN-10: 0618127445 ISBN-13: 0046442127448 List Price:$16.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water by Maude Barlow (ISBN-10: 1595581863, ISBN-13: 9781595581860). At this time we have not yet written a review for Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water by Maude Barlow (ISBN-10: 1595581863, ISBN-13: 9781595581860). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com A passionate call to action from one of the leading voices in the global struggle for universal access to the earth's most vital element—a sequel to the acclaimed Blue Gold.
"Life requires access to clean water; to deny the right to water is to deny the right to life."—from the introduction to Blue Covenant
In their international bestseller Blue Gold, Maude Barlow and co-author Tony Clarke exposed how a handful of corporations are gaining ownership and control of the earth's dwindling water supply, depriving millions of people around the world of access to this most basic of resources and accelerating the onset of a global water crisis.
Blue Covenant, the sequel to Blue Gold, describes a powerful response to this trend: the emergence of an international, grassroots-led movement to have water declared a basic human right, something that can't be bought or sold for profit.
World-renowned activist Maude Barlow is at the center of this movement, which is gaining popular and political support across the globe, encompassing protests in India against U.S. bottling giant Coca-Cola; in Bolivia against the water privatization scheme of European water conglomerate Suez; against the use of water meters in South Africa; and over groundwater mining in Barrington, New Hampshire, and dozens of other communities in North America.
With great passion and clarity, Barlow traces the history of these international battles, documents the life-and-death stakes involved in the fight for the right to water, and lays out the actions that we as global citizens must take to secure a water—just world—a "blue covenant"—for all. A Must Read | Customer Rating: | | This is a must read for everyone on this planet! Filled with alarming facts and information. Most people are completely unaware of the water crisis, so read this book and tell everyone you know. | Great review of water policy | Customer Rating: | Maude Barlow has written a very readable review of water policy. At first this would not seem like a very exciting topic, but water policy will soon affect all of us as we deplete the supply of accessible clean water.
Ms. Barlow divides her book into five chapters. She starts by explaining the crisis. Basically, with so many humans on the planet, we are managing to deplete or pollute our finite resource of clean water. We are withdrawing water from aquifers at a rate faster than the aquifers can recharge. Through global warming, we are melting the glaciers that provide us with river water. Through carelessness in industry and agriculture, we are polluting the very same water that we drink.
In the second chapter, the author describes how a powerful water industry is forming to control these dwindling resources. She gives multiple examples of how the industry is not developing for the betterment of humanity or for fair distribution of water, but to reap profit from the increasingly scarce resource.
In the third chapter, she describes the problems with technological fixes such as desalination, water nanotechnology, and cloud seeding. She also emphasizes the ethical and practical problems with bottled water.
In the fourth chapter, she discusses some brave activists who are fighting back against the corporate control our water. She does a good job in covering the activities in multiple continents - the Americas, Asia, Australia, Europe, Africa - and giving concrete examples of activists who have pushed back and won against corporate water interests.
Ms. Barlow finishes with a chapter called "The Future of Water." Here she reviews potential sources of conflict over water. How will the water in the Colorado River be shared as the population in the US Southwest continues to grow? How will Israel, Jordan, and Palestine share the water of the Jordan River? How will Turkey and Syria resolve the conflict over the big dam project on the Euphrates? She finishes by speculating on potential alternatives to conflict. How do we encourage water conservation and fight for water justice?
There is also an appendix with "Sources and Further Reading" as well as a good index.
On the whole, this is an excellent book to review the upcoming water crisis. You will also understand more about the policies that are exacerbating the problems as well as some potential solutions. | Darn Hot! | Customer Rating: | A tremendous warning is the one Maude Marlow makes with this wonderful book... fascinating in essence, it lets us know why we must head towards a different kind of "growth"... simple: we are finishing even water supplies! the degree of detail she describes cannot be interpreted other than a last warning... either we rationalize our economies (world, national and even individual) or we are condemned to a next war: for water!
Referring to water, Ms. Barlow says: "...those areas of life thought to be common heritage of humanity for the benefit of the many, now coming under corporate control for the benefit of the few (rich)" is a phrase that resonates in my head as I drink water from my purchased bottle of water and wake up to conscience of this once simple act and its implications...
Worth reading document, rich (to say the least) in data, research material, etc.
¡Bravo Ms. Barlow! |
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