Pollution is the single largest cause of death in the developing world.
One in seven people in low- and middle-income countries die as a result
of it. Simply put, pollution is now the world's most prevalent health
risk.
And yet, while most everyone has heard about "going green," few are
aware of the more dire and sinister "brown" pollution--places where
man-made toxic pollutants have taken root and spread. Brown sites poison
millions of people every year, causing needless suffering and death.
After witnessing several brown sites firsthand and meeting families
trapped by poverty in these toxic hot spots, environmentalist Richard
Fuller founded the Blacksmith Institute, now renamed Pure Earth, a
global nonprofit that initiates large-scale cleanups of some of the most
polluted places on earth.
The Brown Agenda details Fuller's inspirational journey--from his
dangerous yet ultimately successful fight to save hundreds of thousands
of acres in the Amazon rain forest to his creation of Pure Earth.
In this vivid account of his perilous travels to the earth's most toxic
locations, Fuller introduces readers to the plight of the "poisoned
poor," and suggests specific ways people everywhere can help combat
pollution all over the world.