Required reading……Padmaparna Ghosh
Anurag Behar, corporate vice-president, social and community initiatives at Wipro Ltd, never loses a chance to spread the word. Behar thinks Earth Day is as good a time as any to brush up on your green quotient. The key problem is not the availability of solutions, but an inadequate understanding of the depth of the problems, he says. Here are his favourite reads:
Robert Cotanza et al The Value of the Worlds Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital(from the journal Nature): Since we may still want to put a dollar value to all that cannot be valued by dollars.
Leo Tolstoys How Much Land Does a Man Need?: Master of the grand novel, he is also a master of the short story. At heart Tolstoy was the humanist that a lot of us want to be.
Garrett Hardins The Tragedy of the Commons (from the journal Science): Simple,
short, specific
and broad.
EF Schumachers Small is Beautiful: Read it for its prescient nature. Read every sentencebecause each sentence seems to have greater immediate meaning 35 years after he wrote it. Read it despite its curious fascination with things like Burma. Read it (above all) so that it may make you read Gandhi, rather than merely having an opinion about him. And perhaps Buddha too.
Rachel Carsons Silent Spring: Read it for, how a single issue can capture the essence of our dilemmas. Read it for the remarkable resonance of its title. Read it in tribute to her courage.
More books we like