In Reclaiming Nature, leading environmental thinkers from across the
globe explore the relationship between human activities and the natural
world. The authors draw inspiration and lessons from diverse experiences
ranging from community-based fishery and forestry management to
innovative strategies for combating global warming. They advance a
compelling new vision of environmentalism, founded on the link between
the struggle to reclaim nature and the struggle for social justice. This
book advances three core propositions: first, humans can and do have
positive as well as negative effects on the natural environment. By
restoring degraded ecosystems and engaging in co-evolutionary processes,
people can add value to nature's wealth. Second, every person has an
inalienable right to clean air, clean water, and a healthy environment.
These are not privileges to be awarded on the basis of political power,
nor commodities to be allocated on the basis of purchasing power -- they
are fundamental human rights. Third, low-income communities are not the
root of the problem. Rather they are the heart of the solution. In
cities and the countryside across the world, ordinary people are forging
a vibrant new environmentalism that is rooted in the defense of their
lives and livelihoods.