"Global Issues is an accessible, wide-ranging introduction to the major environmental and development issues confronting the modern world. Spanning disciplines such as political science, economics, sociology, ecology, international relations, and development studies, this popular textbook enables students to develop a broad perspective on the relationships between nations, society, corporations, and the environment in various contexts. Exploring issues surrounding wealth, poverty, inequality, climate change, natural resources, pollution, technology, and others, the text illustrates the importance of global solutions to the issues facing increasingly interdependent nations around the world. This sixth edition has been extensively revised to ensure contemporary relevance, featuring updated case studies and compelling research on food security, poverty, and the impact of climate change on development. New discussions explore energy, the UN Sustainable Development Goals, differences in the social and economic conditions of rich and poor countries, and environmental trends. Providing an integrated, multidisciplinary perspective"--
This is something that should be read by any young person that cares about the planet and everything living on it, including its terribly numerous people. I deduct a star because it didn't tell me anything I didn't already know or change my opinions on these urgent terribly matters. But then I am a world watcher of many years and regard keeping track of broad brush global issues as a part of a comprehensive worldview.
So, the book says in the first few pages that the reader is about to find out what is really going on in the world. It then examines various issues as a general chapter heading; population, food, energy, global warming. Each discussion presents statistics in well digested ways, so the reader doesn't have to work too hard to comprehend the present situation and the rates of change that bought us here. Corresponding forecasts based on different assumptions are also presented. Data sources such as various UN departments, the World Bank and so on, are given which should enable anyone who wants to stay abreast of this stuff to do so. Each chapter breaks down into a composite of good new and bad news, progressive, adaptive trends versus the less optimistic ones. The bad news for me is that it didn't give enough good news to offset my dark suspicions that the world is heading towards a prolonged period of catastrophe. By catastrophe I mean a year, possibly in my lifetime, definitely in my children's, when the world's population begins to stall and decline as it bumps into the final limits of human ingenuity at extracting far more out of the Earth than it is able sustainably to give.
An essential read for the young, concerned global citizen.
Complex global issues explained in plain language. Good for those who want to update themselves on local issues without wading through a lot of technical jargon.