Want cheap Books? Compare Book prices before you buy!   
Best Book Price - Cheap UK Books                       
 Enter your new search here:
     
Help FAQ Links
  Books     DVDs     CDs     Games    

Blessed Unrest: How the Largest Movement in the World Came into Being, and Why No One Saw It Coming

By: Paul Hawken
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Viking, U.S.
ISBN: 0670038520
ISBN-13: 9780670038527
Released: 24 Jan 2008
RRP: £17.99
Average Rating:


Comparing Prices...

Customer Reviews

Alarm-sounding environmentalist ambushed by about 1,000,000 blossoms of activist hope - By: Brian Griffith, 05 Sep 2007
As a speaker on environmental issues, Hawken always found it difficult to balance honesty about bleak realities with a need to inspire hope. But after each speech, he kept meeting groups of dedicated activists, till he had a small mountain of their business cards. Slowly it dawned on him that these organizations represented something enormous -- maybe greatest movement of hopein world history. And perhaps this mushrooming movement was gonna be the greatest story of his life. Though the well over 1,000,000 activist groups he found were focused on many different issues, there were some things tying them together:

"Just as ecology is the study of relationship between living beings & their environment, human ecology examines the relationship between human systems & their envoronmrnt. Concerns about worker health, living wages, equity, education & basic human rights are inseperable from concerns about water, climate, soil & biodiversity. The cri de coeur of environmentalistsin {Rachael} Carson's time was the same as that of the Lancashire weavers, the same asin the time of Emerson, the same asin the time of Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathi of Kenya. It can be summed upin a single word: life. Life is the most fundamental human right, & all of the movements within the movement are dedicated to creating the conditions for life, conditions that include livelihood, food, security, peace, a stable environmet, & freedom from external tyranny. Whenever & wherever that right is violated, human beings rise up. Today they are rising upin record numbers, &in a collective body that is often as not more sophisticated than the corporate & governmental bodies they address" (p 67-68)

According to Hawken, the first recorded organization devoted to the welfare of more than its own members was a small anti-slavery group which started meetingin London during the late 1700s. And from the Abolitionist movement he sketches a partial lineage of thinkers & leaders including Emerson, Thoreau, Gandhi, Rachael Carson, Chico Mendes, Vandana Shiva, Muhammad Yunus...

Keeping his balance, Hawken often writes most passionately about wrongs to be changed, such as Chevron's record of abuse for lands & native culturesin Ecuador. But later he gets lostin amazement at the magnitude & diversity of humanity's rising immune-system response: Keeper groups like the Waterkeeper Alliance, watch organizations like the Kurdish Human Rights Watch, Coalitions like the Coalition Against Traffikingin Women or the India Alliance for Child Rights, friends organizations like the Friends of North Kent Marshes:

"The incongruity of anarchists, billionaire funders, street clowns, scientists, youthful activists, indigenous & native people, diplomats, computer geeks, writers, strategists, peasants & students all working toward common goals is a testament to human impulses that are unstoppable & eternal." (p.163)

Capping his fragmentary account, Hawken gives a 102-page appendix as a mere introduction to the swelling database of activists & innovators, which he & his colleagues at the Natural Capital Institude have launched. Their Wikipedia-like database is called WiserEarth ( www.wiserearth.org , with "Wiser" standing for World Index of Social & Environmental Responsibility. It is arranged both alphabetically & by a taxonomy of services, which allows updating by user organizations, networking, collaborative fundraising, sharing of innovations or job searches. It is also multisectoral -- including far more than just non-government or non-profit efforts. To enable application of insightin every type of organization, the database has several linked URLs:
wiserearth.org
wiserbusiness.org
wisergovernment.org
naturalcapital.org

Maybe this is the real gift of Hawken's work, which could help you find the network or vocation of your dreams.

A Vision for Human Responsibility Countering the Risk of Disaster - By: Donald Mitchell, 14 Jun 2007
Blessed Unrest contains so many powerful new perspectives that it's all but impossible to identify even the most important onesin a review. Telling about this book is complicated by the fact that what is a powerful new perspective dependsin part on what you know already. The key point is that being concerned about the environment cannot be logically separated from being concerned about exploited people: The time has come to reflect & act on all of perspectives of where improvement is needed.

Here is the briefest possible overview:

Organizing to improve conditions for others is a relatively new phenomenon, dating back only to the anti-slavery movement. But despite that recent beginning, self-organized efforts are growing exponentially to improve conditions for the poor, indigenous people, & endangered people & species. These activities are likened to the massive, redundant, & intelligent responses involvedin the human immune system. The concepts behind these efforts link back to Emerson & Thoreau, Darwin, John Muir, Rachel Carson, Sir James Lovelock, & most recently Jared Diamond. The current exponents of those concepts are people who are scientifically & emotionally concerned by lasting damage that's occurring . . . & are well educated, responsible citizen advocates.

Contrast is drawn by describing the implications of the current momentum behind global free markets, reduced regulation of major companies, & the rapid extinction of common resources we all need. You'll find out about appalling examples of harm being created.

Paul Hawken has an impressive way of selecting his examples & drawing his points out of them. My favorite story involves running a workshop at a chemical company where Mr. Hawken challenged the leaders & engineers to design a long-term spaceship that would allow humans to survive. No one among those doing the project included a single one of the company's products for the spaceship. Why? The products are too toxic for a small environment. A number of the people later left their jobs.

What's the relevance of that story? Mr. Hawken uses the example to illustrate the concept of Earth as our spaceship for survival.

Everyone will learn something about so-called facts that are often cited, whether it be the motives of the Luddites or the actions of protestors at the World Trade Organization conferencein Seattle. I was particularly impressed with the book's perspective on how the indigenous civilizationsin the Americas werein many ways superior to the Western European one.

There are many parallelsin the book that would leave you laughing . . . if they weren't so sad. Perhaps the most powerful parallel is between the Spanish Conquistadors & the CEOs of global giant companies who want to increase profits at the expense of the poorest people.

For those who want to learn more, you'll find lots of great resourcesin the appendix, footnotes, & bibliography.

To me, one of the most chilling imagesin the book is about releasing vast quantities of stored methane gas (which is much worse for global warming than carbon dioxide is) as the polar ice caps melt.

Read this book, join or start an organization to do something, & take action!


A Vision for Human Responsibility Countering the Risk of Disaster - By: Donald Mitchell, 14 Jun 2007
Blessed Unrest contains so many powerful new perspectives that it's all but impossible to identify even the most important onesin a review. Telling about this book is complicated by the fact that what is a powerful new perspective dependsin part on what you know already. The key point is that being concerned about the environment cannot be logically separated from being concerned about exploited people: The time has come to reflect & act on all of perspectives of where improvement is needed.

Here is the briefest possible overview:

Organizing to improve conditions for others is a relatively new phenomenon, dating back only to the anti-slavery movement. But despite that recent beginning, self-organized efforts are growing exponentially to improve conditions for the poor, indigenous people, & endangered people & species. These activities are likened to the massive, redundant, & intelligent responses involvedin the human immune system. The concepts behind these efforts link back to Emerson & Thoreau, Darwin, John Muir, Rachel Carson, Sir James Lovelock, & most recently Jared Diamond. The current exponents of those concepts are people who are scientifically & emotionally concerned by lasting damage that's occurring . . . & are well educated, responsible citizen advocates.

Contrast is drawn by describing the implications of the current momentum behind global free markets, reduced regulation of major companies, & the rapid extinction of common resources we all need. You'll find out about appalling examples of harm being created.

Paul Hawken has an impressive way of selecting his examples & drawing his points out of them. My favorite story involves running a workshop at a chemical company where Mr. Hawken challenged the leaders & engineers to design a long-term spaceship that would allow humans to survive. No one among those doing the project included a single one of the company's products for the spaceship. Why? The products are too toxic for a small environment. A number of the people later left their jobs.

What's the relevance of that story? Mr. Hawken uses the example to illustrate the concept of Earth as our spaceship for survival.

Everyone will learn something about so-called facts that are often cited, whether it be the motives of the Luddites or the actions of protestors at the World Trade Organization conferencein Seattle. I was particularly impressed with the book's perspective on how the indigenous civilizationsin the Americas werein many ways superior to the Western European one.

There are many parallelsin the book that would leave you laughing . . . if they weren't so sad. Perhaps the most powerful parallel is between the Spanish Conquistadors & the CEOs of global giant companies who want to increase profits at the expense of the poorest people.

For those who want to learn more, you'll find lots of great resourcesin the appendix, footnotes, & bibliography.

To me, one of the most chilling imagesin the book is about releasing vast quantities of stored methane gas (which is much worse for global warming than carbon dioxide is) as the polar ice caps melt.

Read this book, join or start an organization to do something, & take action!


Book Categories

Browse through the categories below:
Antiquarian, Rare & Collectable
Art, Architecture & Photography
Audio CDs
Audio Cassettes
Biography
Business, Finance & Law
Calendars, Diaries, Annuals & More
Children's Books
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery
Fiction
Food & Drink
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Family & Lifestyle
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Humour
Languages
Mind, Body & Spirit
Music, Stage & Screen
Poetry, Drama & Criticism
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science & Nature
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Scientific, Technical & Medical
Society, Politics & Philosophy
Sports, Hobbies & Games
Study Books
Travel & Holiday
Young Adult
Copyright ©2003-2008 BestBookPrice.co.uk. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of BestBookPrice.co.uk is prohibited.
No warranty either express or implied is made about the accuracy of the information on this site