A Bicentennial Malthusian Essay: Conservation, Population and the Indifference to Limits
Editorial Reviews
Rupert Cutler, The Roanoke Times
"Parson Malthus was on the right track 200 years ago. Michigan lawyer and author, John Rohe, in his new book "A Bicentennial Malthusian Essay," states my concern succintly: 'If we remain indifferent to the limits of visual abuse on interior viewscapes, then we will sacrifice not only a prime natural resource, but we will also diminish ourselves in the process.' That visual abuse and the costly social problems that go with it are driven by population growth, a phenomenon that is within our power to manage in a rational, voluntary, democratic way."
William B. Conn, Michigan Lawyers Weekly
"Our perception of Malthusian principles underlie continued jurisprudential development in the field of individual liberties, citizenship and property. As the adaptation of laws enables us to perpetuate our civilization, it may come to pass that laws will provide us with our secular salvation."
A Bicentennial Malthusian Essay: Conservation, Population and the Indifference to Limits
A Bicentennial Malthusian Essay: Conservation, Population and the Indifference to Limits,John F. Rohe,Rhodes and Easton,1890394009,(Thomas Robert),,1766-1834,Demography,Economic Conditions,Environmental aspects,Human Geography,Literature: Classics,Malthus, T. R.,Population,Population policy,Social Science,Sociology,Statistical Methods In The Social Sciences,Business & Investing,Ecology and Conservation,Economics,History,Malthus, T. R,Nature and Ecology,Politics and current events,Science & Nature
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