Sociopolitical Ecology introduces the concept of `ecological field'
to replace that of `ecosystem' and extends the boundaries of
self-referential systems to a new, more complex level of analysis.
Ecological field refers to an overarching system that contains many
self-referential (or autopoietic) systems that interact in a common
space, with human beings placed squarely in the middle of all natural
ecological networks. The focus of this fascinating study is the
interlocking pattern of relations among human beings within an
ecological field - what the author designates as `sociopolitical
ecology'. The book argues that most societies are not self-contained
systems, but rather ecological fields, that is complexes of several
interacting systems.