From the early twentieth century, a big part of the world--the arid
tropics--began extracting, storing, and recycling vast quantities of
water to sustain population growth and economic development. These
regions worked on water to deal with seasonality, or the rotation
between extreme aridity for a part of the year and a concentrated
period of rain. The idea of storing water in the wet season to use it
in the dry season was not a new one in this geography. Indeed, it was
an intrinsic part of ancient culture, statecraft, and technology. Most
ancient projects, however, were local and small in scale. The
capability of water extraction on a scale large enough to transform
whole regions and create new cities improved in the early twentieth
century. The process gave rise to a sharp break in the long-term
population and economic growth pattern from the mid-twentieth
century.The world knows that rapid economic growth must take a toll on
the environment. The tropics were no exception. However, the economic
emergence of the arid tropics reinforces the message differently from
how climate activists imagine. The geography of the arid tropics makes
transforming landscapes to extract and recycle large quantities of
water damaging to the environment and disputatious. The book is about
that troubled history of economic emergence.
Les mer
The Troubled Economic History of the Arid Tropics
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197802403
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic US
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter