The Pursuit of Ecotopia: Lessons from Indigenous and Traditional Societies for the Human Ecology of Our Modern World

  • Steve Wolverton University of North Texas, Department of Geography

Abstract

Review of The Pursuit of Ecotopia: Lessons from Indigenous and Traditional Societies for the Human Ecology of Our Modern World. Eugene N. Anderson. 2010. Praeger Publishers, Santa Barbara. Pp. 251. $44.95 (Hardcover). ISBN 0313381305.

References

Callicott, J. B. 1989. In Defense of the Land Ethic: Essays in Environmental Philosophy. State University of New York Press, Albany.

Hunn, E. S. 1982. Mobility as a Factor Limiting Resource Use in the Columbia Plateau of North America. In Resource Managers: North American and Australian Hunter-Gatherers, eds. S. M. Williams and E. S. Hunn, pp. 17-43. American Association for the Advancement of Science Selected Symposium No. 67.

Lepofsky, D. 2009. The Past, Present, and Future of Traditional Resource and Environmental Management. Journal of Ethnobiology 29:161-166.

Norton, B. 1991. Towards Unity among Environmentalists. Oxford University Press, New York.

Rolston, H. III. 1988. Environmental Ethics: Duties to and Values in the Natural World. Temple University Press, Philadelphia.

Rozzi, R. 1999. The Reciprocal Links between Evolutionary-Ecological Sciences and Environmental Ethics. Bioscience 49:911-921.

Wyndham, F. S. 2009. Spheres of Relation, Lines of Interaction: Subtle Ecologies of the Rarámuri Landscape in Northern Mexico. Journal of Ethnobiology 29:271-295.

Published
2010-08-17
How to Cite
Wolverton, S. (2010). The Pursuit of Ecotopia: Lessons from Indigenous and Traditional Societies for the Human Ecology of Our Modern World. Ethnobiology Letters, 1, 22-25. https://doi.org/10.14237/ebl.1.2010.71
Section
Reviews

Most read articles by the same author(s)