This is a well-organized book, clearly argued, and the writing is accessible. The central story line is leavened with interesting examples and anecdotes to light and lighten the path.

Population Studies: A Journal of Demography

In this important new book, Robert Clark shows that globalization is not a process that began twenty or even five hundred years ago, but rather has roots that are to be found thousands of years back into the human past. Moreover, it has been not just an economic process but a biological and demographic one as well. Those who wish to understand the current process of globalization in its proper historical context will do well to read this book....

- Stephen K. Sanderson, author of Social Transformations: A General Theory of Historical Development,

<p>In this important new book, Robert Clark shows that globalization is not a process that began twenty or even five hundred years ago, but rather has roots that are to be found thousands of years back into the human past. Moreover, it has been not just an economic process but a biological and demographic one as well. Those who wish to understand the current process<br />of globalization in its proper historical context will do well to read this book.</p>

- Stephen K. Sanderson, author of <I>Social Transformations: A General Theory of Historical Development<I>,

'Humans did not begin as a global species; we had to expand to become one. And we could not have done so without other living organisms becoming global along with us.' Robert P. Clark develops in this book a global life systems perspective that delineates how biological forces mutually reinforce one another—and what their globalization has meant for both human society and the biosphere. While he resists biological 'determinism,' Clark traces interconnected developments among population, disease, agriculture, trade, fuels, and other life systems to more thoroughly explore and elucidate the globalization of human endeavors within an ever evolving context of nature and environment. His lucid and richly documented book offers a fresh look at social evolution and a broader basis for understanding the contemporary context for global change.
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In this work, the author develops a global life systems perspective that delineates how biological forces mutually reinforce one another - and what their globalization has meant for both human society and the biosphere.
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Part 1 Global Life Systems
Chapter 2 Life Systems and Globalization
Chapter 3 Population
Chapter 4 Food
Chapter 5 Disease
Part 6 Case Studies
Chapter 7 Agriculture Comes to Europe
Chapter 8 The Biology of the Silk Road
Chapter 9 The Biological Impact of Europeans on Eastern North America, 1600-1800
Chapter 10 Feeding Industrial Cities
Part 11 Consequences
Chapter 12 Global Food Networks in the Information Age
Chapter 13 Emerging (and Re-emerging) Infectious Diseases
Chapter 14 The Loss of Biodiversity
Chapter 15 Where Do We Go from Here?: Biological Dimensions of Interplanetary and Interstellar Migration

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Product details

ISBN
9780742500754
Published
2001-01-22
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Weight
499 gr
Height
226 mm
Width
156 mm
Thickness
24 mm
Age
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
368

Biographical note

Robert P. Clark is professor of government at George Mason University.