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Book Cover
Book
Author McDonald, Bernadette, 1951-

Title Whose water is it? : the unquenchable thirst of a water-hungry world / edited by Bernadette McDonald and Douglas Jehl
Published Washington, D.C. : National Geographic Society, 2003

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'BOOL  333.91 Mcd/Wwi  AVAILABLE
Description xx., 232 pages ; 23 cm
regular print
Contents Preface / Paul Simon -- Introduction / Douglas Jehl -- Ownership -- Bottling a Birthright? / Robert Glennon -- The World's Water: A Human Right or a Corporate Good? / Maude Barlow -- Three Rivers / Marq de Villiers -- Scarcity -- Working for Water / Margaret Catley-Carlson -- The Effect of Emerging Water Shortages on the World's Food / Lester R. Brown -- Mountain Wise and Water Smart / Hans Schreier -- Conflict -- "Water Wars" and Other Tales of Hydromythology / Aaron T. Wolf -- From the Forest to the Faucet / Mike Dombeck -- Accommodation Turns to Conflict: Lessons from the Colorado / David J. Hayes -- Prospects -- Mountain Water: Lifeblood of the Prairies / David Schindler -- A Child's Reminder / David Suzuki and Amanda McConnell -- A Soft Path: Conservation, Efficiency, and Easing Conflicts over Water / Peter H. Gleick -- Alchemy or Salvation? Desalting the Sea / Douglas Jehl -- Afterword / Bernadette McDonald
Summary "Mankind has always taken water for granted. For the first time, we must face a new reality: Not only is this precious resource not inexhaustible, it's already so scarce that great swaths of our planet are under serious threat. Asia's Aral Sea, once one of the largest inland bodies of water, is now a salty desert; 90 percent of California's wetlands have vanished; the once-mighty Nile, Ganges, and Colorado Rivers barely reach the sea in dry seasons."
"In this book, 14 prominent environmental writers address every aspect of the looming crisis. They explore the paradox that, on a blue planet like ours, little of that resource is actually available for use, and offer alarming and persuasive evidence that we are using what we have much faster than it can be replenished - a problem that will only grow worse as the global population grows and the rate of climate change and airborne pollution quickens. They show the dire consequences of current trends, from desertification to epidemic disease to increasingly bitter battles over who "owns" water and how to apportion our dwindling supply."--BOOK JACKET
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Subject Water-supply.
Water conservation.
Author McDonald, Bernadette, 1962-
Jehl, Douglas.
LC no. 2003056234
ISBN 0792262387
0792273753 paperback