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Earth Repair: A Grassroots Guide to Healing Toxic and Damaged Landscapes
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Description
From contaminated urban lots to polluted waterways and massive oil spills, how can communities transform toxic landscapes and respond to environmental disasters positively and effectively? Earth Repair is packed with accessible, simple, and practical tools for healing and regenerating damaged ecosystems to create thriving, fertile places and nourishing food forests in our own communities.
Author Biography
Leila Darwish is a community organizer and permaculturalist with a BSc in Environmental Conservation Sciences. Most of her grassroots organizing has centered on environmental justice issues in communities struggling with either the threat of or the enduring legacy of toxic contamination of their land and drinking water. Her focus on grassroots bioremediation stems from a deep commitment to justice and the passionate desire to empower people by providing them with simple, practical, transformative, and accessible tools for regenerative earth repair.
ReviewsThe real and imagined consequences of contaminated soil and water have been some of the greatest impediments to restoration of urban wastelands for food production. Leila Darwish combines the experience of the pioneer activists and innovators with the expertise and knowledge of remediation professionals to create an empowering guide for the large numbers of citizens looking for guidance on this issue. Earth Repair includes enough technical detail and explanation to get most readers up to speed on the subject. The case studies provide empowering examples of how low cost remediation techniques that reflect permaculture design principles can be used to enhance community resilience and advance social justice. In the energy descent future, many more people will be growing food on contaminated land; out of necessity! Earth Repair offers the hope that this can be done without fear of further eroding health and well being. --David Holmgren, co-originator of permaculture and author, Permaculture: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability Earth Repair, what a brilliant and useful book! Leila Darwish & New Society have brought forth a book for people who will not wait around to heal the world. With a broad and deep view of the historical dynamics of thoughtless upheaval and waste, Earth Repair provides thorough, local-action strategies that communities, with or without resources, can undertake to remediate their damaged landscapes. In accessible language, this book explains how to deal with a serious local issue while also shining light on where to go to deal with the source! --Mark Lakeman, cofounder, The City Repair Project, communitecture, and the Planet Repair Institute Earth Repair is a fantastic introduction to grassroots bioremediation -- an indispensible guide for citizen scientists, permaculturists, and ecological justice activists wanting to proactively address the legacy of environmental pollution which we've inherited from our industrial civilization. Within is a highly accessible toolkit of techniques and skills usable by the average person, empowering them to safely destroy or immobilize common contaminants by partnering with familiar biological allies such as microbes, worms, fungi, and plants. As we transition into a sustainable society, this book will be a key text, critical for informing communities in the process of de-toxifying our planet. --Scott Kellogg, educational director of the Radix Ecological Sustainability Center and author,Toolbox for Sustainable City Living -- A Do-It-Ourselves Guide. We are an odd, almost unique, creature that soils its own nest. As we've become more industrially and technologically muscular, our soiling has penetrated into the heart of Earth's systems, where we now pile our filth upon genetics, delicate geochemical balances, and climate. We have destabilized nature, and we won't find a way out the same way we came in. Darwish's good news is that nature WANTS to heal, and even knows how. We just have to use the tools she gives us. --Albert Bates, author, The Post-Petroleum Survival Guide and Biochar: Carbon Farming and Climate Change
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