In Village Life in Modern Japan, author Akira Furukawa argues that the
mainstream of environmentalism today remains trapped within the
modernist paradigm that has led to the present global environmental
malaise. Through a variety of case studies, including primary research
in Japan and Nepal, as well as a rich array of secondary sources,
Furukawa outlines the case for 'life-environmentalism.' Grounded in an
ethnographic approach that recognizes that local, everyday-life
knowledge- which has been widely denigrated and suppressed in the
processes of modernization - this book offers the hope of rectifying
global environmental crises. Furukawa argues that slogans such as 'think
global, act local' remain problematic unless we also 'think local, act
local.'