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Introduction; Part I. The Problem: 1. The tragedy of political failure; 2. Like it or not, politics is the solution; Part II. Getting the Questions Right: 3. Ten questions for conservation politics; 4. Adapting society to the wild; 5. Striking at the roots; 6. Domination and the intractability of energy problems; Part III. Taking the Offensive: 7. Turning the tide; 8. Lessons from large scale conservation; 9. Doing large-scale restoration; 10. The other connectivity; 11. The special challenge of marine conservation; 12. The biological sciences and conservation; Part IV. Culture Change: 13. Conservation, George Orwell and language; 14. Restoring story and myth; 15. Conservation's moral imperative; Conclusion.
Challenges conservationists to rethink protecting the natural world; making political strategies central to increase support and influence.
David Johns is both a conservation practitioner and Adjunct Professor of Political Science in the Hatfield School of Government at Portland State University, where he teaches courses on politics and the environment, US constitutional law, and politics. He has published extensively on science, politics, and conservation issues. He is cofounder of the Wildlands Network, Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative, and Conservation Biology Institute, and is currently Chair of the Marine Conservation Institute board which created the Global Ocean Refuge System Initiative. He has worked with NGOs on conservation projects in the Russian Far East, Australia, Europe, southern Africa and throughout the Americas. He is recipient of the Denver Zoological Foundation's Conservation Award, 2007.
'Bruce Babbit, when he was Secretary of the Interior, was fond of
saying to conservationists, 'Don't expect me to do the right thing,
make me do it'. Conservationists made impressive strides after
Rachel Carson's 'Silent Spring', by relying on passion and
persuasion, but little progress has been made since the 1970s, as
corporate opposition has coalesced into a powerful
counter-movement. Meanwhile, with shrinking opportunities for
habitat protection and the looming specter of climate change, the
need for further progress is greater than ever. David Johns, a
political scientist with a deep interest in popular movements,
makes the case that conservation will only return to the forefront
of the nation's agenda when citizens mobilize into a vigorous
movement with the energy to elect advocates to positions of
political power. His new book offers deep insights into how to
achieve this goal.' John W. Terborgh, Duke University, North
Carolina
'The scientific case has been made. Poets have spoken with deep
feeling. Now comes the hard part. In this well-written and very
timely book, David Johns lays out the practical, political steps
required to save the rest of life on Earth, and ultimately
ourselves.' Edward O. Wilson, Harvard University, Massachusetts
'We the people must accept that any conservation activity of worth
must be a political act. This is a simple but not a small
idea. The insults foisted upon Mother Earth are so pervasive,
that nothing less than the world's greatest collective action will
suffice as redress. Politics is the only scheme that can
organize and advance such action. David Johns writes clearly
to this end from the hard ground of history and science. His
book is a call to arms to use politics to promote peace,
prosperity, and justice for all life. Let's hope that we the people
heed the call. Every future depends on it.' Mike Phillips,
Turner Endangered Species Fund, US
'David Johns has done it again! The author of A New Conservation
Politics brings his wide knowledge of the conservation movement and
other social movements to provide practical insights on how to make
conservation more effective. This book fills a critical gap in the
conservation literature by explaining how to overcome the political
obstacles to conservation. For those who care about the extinction
crisis he offers a path to action beyond business-as-usual. In the
end, conservation is too complex to leave it to scientists, and
much too important to leave it to politicians. He combines both
worlds into a powerful mix.' Ignacio Jiménez Pérez, The
Conservation Land Trust, Argentina
'In the 30 years I've worked with Dave Johns for things wild and
free, I've seen him become a leading activist on the visionary
cutting edge of rewilding and also as our deepest thinker on
effective activism. Witness his latest book.' Dave Foreman,
Earth First!, US
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