9781421410654-1421410656-The Housing Bomb: Why Our Addiction to Houses Is Destroying the Environment and Threatening Our Society

The Housing Bomb: Why Our Addiction to Houses Is Destroying the Environment and Threatening Our Society

ISBN-13: 9781421410654
ISBN-10: 1421410656
Edition: Illustrated
Author: M. Nils Peterson, Jianguo Liu, Tarla Peterson
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Format: Hardcover 224 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781421410654
ISBN-10: 1421410656
Edition: Illustrated
Author: M. Nils Peterson, Jianguo Liu, Tarla Peterson
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Format: Hardcover 224 pages

Summary

The Housing Bomb: Why Our Addiction to Houses Is Destroying the Environment and Threatening Our Society (ISBN-13: 9781421410654 and ISBN-10: 1421410656), written by authors M. Nils Peterson, Jianguo Liu, Tarla Peterson, was published by Johns Hopkins University Press in 2013. With an overall rating of 3.9 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent The Housing Bomb: Why Our Addiction to Houses Is Destroying the Environment and Threatening Our Society (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.35.

Description

How our thirst for more and larger houses is undermining society and what we can do about it.

Have we built our way to ruin? Is your desire for that beach house or cabin in the woods part of the environmental crisis? Do you really need a bigger home? Why don’t multiple generations still live under one roof? In The Housing Bomb, leading environmental researchers M. Nils Peterson, Tarla Rai Peterson, and Jianguo Liu sound the alarm, explaining how and why our growing addiction to houses has taken the humble American dream and twisted it into an environmental and societal nightmare.

Without realizing how much a contemporary home already contributes to environmental destruction, most of us want bigger and bigger houses and dream of the day when we own not just one dwelling but at least the two our neighbor does. We push our children to "get out on their own" long before they need to, creating a second household where previously one existed. We pave and build, demolishing habitat needed by threatened and endangered species, adding to the mounting burden of global climate change, and sucking away resources much better applied to pressing societal needs. "Reduce, reuse, recycle" is seldom evoked in the housing world, where economists predict financial disasters when "new housing starts" decline and the idea of renovating inner city residences is regarded as merely a good cause.

Presenting irrefutable evidence, this book cries out for America and the world to intervene by making simple changes in our household energy and water usage and by supporting municipal, state, national, and international policies to counter this devastation and overuse of resources. It offers a way out of the mess we are creating and envisions a future where we all live comfortable, nondestructive lives. The "housing bomb" is ticking, and our choice is clear―change our approach or feel the blast.

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