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parsed(2025-01-07) - pubdate: 01/25
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pub date: 1736229600
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Wild by Design

The Rise of Ecological Restoration

January 7, 2025 | Trade paperback
ISBN: 9780674298361
$29.95
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Description

"A fascinating book--far-reaching, deeply researched, and probing." --Elizabeth Kolbert, author of Under a White Sky

"Outstandingly well-researched and deeply thoughtful . . . An essential read." --John Dupré, Los Angeles Review of Books


"Makes a strong case for restoration's enduring value." --Michelle Nijhuis, New York Review of Books

Today environmental restoration is a global pursuit. Governments, nonprofits, and corporations spend billions of dollars each year to remove invasive species, build wetlands, and reintroduce species driven from their habitats.

In Wild by Design, historian Laura J. Martin uncovers the origins of restoration science and policy. She explores how restorationists struggled with the problem of caring for biodiversity without romanticizing nature as an untouched Eden. Could humans intervene in nature for nature's own sake? What natural baselines should be restored? Was it possible to design nature without destroying wildness? In illuminating restoration's past, Wild by Design not only provides vital lessons for our future in a changing climate--it makes an urgent call for environmental restoration that is socially just.

About this Author

Laura J. Martin is Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies at Williams College. She is a past fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies, the Stanford Humanities Center, and the Harvard University Center for the Environment. She has written for Scientific American, Slate, Environmental History, Environmental Humanities, Trends in Ecology and Evolution, and other publications.

ISBN: 9780674298361
Format: Trade paperback
Pages: 336
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 2025-01-07

Reviews

An outstandingly well-researched and deeply thoughtful account of the way that the United States has attempted to negotiate its relationship to wild plants and animals...an essential read for anyone who wants to understand the implications of our interventions.

Can we repair the ecological damage that we've done? As Laura Martin observes, no question today could be more pressing, or more uncertain. Wild by Design is a fascinating book--far-reaching, deeply researched, and probing.

Reaching back over a century in this intricate, revelatory book, Martin shows that just as we have to reckon with the physical legacy of past ecological degradation, we must also face the social, cultural, and political legacy of past ecological restoration...Wild by Design will be a foundational work for scholars of restoration history or politics. Like ecological restoration as a field, this book is valuable both to its disciplines and to the public--it is timely, engaging, and entertaining.

Examines how the practice and philosophy of restoration has evolved since the early twentieth century...[Martin] makes a strong case for restoration's enduring value.

A comprehensive history of the practice of 'ecological restoration,' or human assistance in recovering a damaged world. Martin both eschews blanket optimism and refuses to fall victim to doomsday cynicism around climate change. By examining the precedents for restorative ecology, she illuminates how the development of the field influences contemporary practices, and how ghosts from the historical record haunt our ecological future...Its historical contributions alone...mark Wild by Design as a major achievement.

With astute and thought-provoking insights and graceful prose, this book arrives at a timely moment, as the twentieth century's two dominant modes of environmental management, conservation and preservation, are being supplemented by techniques of ecological restoration...The book stands out as a portrayal of ecological restoration as an active scientific and social pursuit that offers a meaningful and needed sense of hope.

Wild by Design deserves a wide readership. It not only complements the foundational analyses of influential historians of extinction and ecology, it also contributes in vital ways to the ongoing work that all ecologists and environmentalists need to do--confronting the problematic social assumptions that still pervade many aspects of ecological science and environmental management.

Wild by Design's biggest gift is to 'denaturalize' restoration as it is done today, showing that concepts that can seem essential to the practice, such as eradicating invasive species or returning landscapes to some pre-disturbance state, have been insignificant for much of the movement's history.

Explores fundamental questions at the intersection of the sciences and humanities...A century of well-intended environmental management has been sullied by pseudoscience, racism, greed, and shocking blunders. Martin's erudite perspective on these complexities shines throughout her incisive first book...Aldo Leopold, a pioneering restoration ecologist, wrote in 1938 that 'the oldest task in human history [is] to live on a piece of land without spoiling it.' As Laura Martin's astute book illuminates, that task has never been more urgent.

This is a superb book. Laura Martin's research takes us where no restoration literature has gone before, asking, 'Who gets to decide where and how wildlife management occurs?' Martin tackles this question with unmatched clarity and insight, illuminating the crucial discussions we must have to secure a future with thriving natural species and spaces.

A brilliant intervention in the history of conservation that charts changes in ecological understanding of how landscapes rebound from disaster. In following the roots of restoration ecology, Martin explores how naturalness can be cultivated rather than found, providing us with seeds of hope in an age of climate despair.

What does it mean to care for a wild species? In this provocative and fascinating book, Laura Martin grapples with this question by examining the boundaries of human intervention and wildness. As we face a rapidly changing planet, Martin's clear-sighted, intelligent analysis offers hope that by recognizing the complex history of restoration, we can make way for its promising future.

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