ABSTRACT
The Routledge Handbook of the History of Sustainability is a far-reaching survey of the deep and contemporary history of sustainability. This innovative resource will help to define the history of sustainability as an identifiable field. It provides a unique resource for advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and scholars, and delivers essential context for understanding the current state and future path of the sustainability movement.
The history of sustainability is an increasingly important domain within the discipline of history, which draws on an interdisciplinary set of fields, ranging from energy studies, transportation, and urbanism to environmental history, economics, and philosophy. Key sections in this handbook cover the historiography of sustainability, resilience and collapse in historical societies, the deep roots of sustainability (seventeenth century to nineteenth century), the recent history of sustainability (twentieth century to present), and core issues and key debates in sustainability.
This handbook is an invaluable research and teaching tool for those interested in the history and development of sustainability and an essential resource for the many sustainability studies programs that now exist in the world's universities.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|6 pages
Introduction
part II|20 pages
Historiography of sustainability
part III|42 pages
Sustainability, resilience, and collapse in historical societies
part IV|66 pages
The roots of sustainability
chapter 6|25 pages
Sustaining What?
chapter 7|10 pages
Eternal forest, sustainable use
part V|168 pages
The recent history of sustainability
chapter 10|14 pages
The US environmental movement of the 1960s and 1970s
chapter 12|23 pages
The growth paradigm
part VI|115 pages
Core issues and key debates on sustainability