Beyond the Limits

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Beyond the Limits
Beyond the limits cover.jpg
First edition cover
AuthorDonella Meadows
Dennis Meadows
Jørgen Randers
SubjectEnvironment
PublisherChelsea Green Publishing
Publication date
1992
ISBN0-930031-62-8
OCLC48886446

Beyond the Limits is a 1992 book continuing the modeling of the consequences of a rapidly growing global population that was started in the 1972 report Limits to Growth. Donella Meadows, Dennis Meadows, and Jørgen Randers are the authors and all were involved in the original Club of Rome study as well. Beyond the Limits (Chelsea Green Publishing Company) and Earthscan[1] addressed many of the criticisms of the Limits to Growth book, but still has caused controversy and mixed reactions.

Reviews[]

"Society has gone into overshoot, … a state of being beyond limits without knowing it. These limits are more like speed limits than barriers at the end of the road: the rate at which renewable resources can renew themselves, the rate at which we can change from nonrenewable resources to renewable ones, and the rate at which nature can recycle our pollution. … [W]e are overshooting such crucial resources as food and water while overwhelming nature with pollutants like those causing global warming."[2]
"Beyond the Limits recognizes that the future doesn't lie in tinkering with resource use or simply squelching population growth in developing countries. A sustainable future will require profound social and psychological readjustments in the developed and developing world."[3]
"Current crop yields can only sustain the world's population at subsistence levels, … while nonrenewable energy resources and fresh water supplies are dwindling, and greenhouse gases and other pollutants increase. But while the prognosis is disaster within decades if nothing is done, there are encouraging signs. Technology offers greater efficiency in energy consumption and pollution control, international response to the ozone crisis has been relatively swift, and recycling efforts are gaining headway. [However] … the conditions underlying limit overshoots--population growth and resource depletion in a finite world, for example--remain unaddressed in the corridors of power."[4]

Influence[]

Billionaire investor Richard Rainwater indicates having been influenced by reading Beyond the Limits'.[5] His niece Kelley Rainwater reports she gave him this book as a Christmas present. She was introduced to the book through Dr. Jay Earley who is a social transformation theorist and colleague of the Meadows.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ http://www.earthscan.co.uk
  2. ^ Publishers Weekly (1992)
  3. ^ Mary Jane Ballou, Ford Foundation Library, New York (1992) Reed Business Information, Inc.
  4. ^ Robot Check. August 1993.
  5. ^ Ryan, Oliver (2005-12-26). "The Rainwater Prophecy". Fortune. Archived from the original on 2008-04-13. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
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