Environmental degradation in the Aral Sea basin in Central Asia has been a touchstone for increasing public awareness of environmental issues. The Aral crisis has been touted as a "quiet Chernobyl" and as one of the worst human-made environmental catastrophes of the twentieth century. This multidisciplinary book is the first to comprehensively describe the slow onset of low grade but incremental changes (i.e., creeping environmental change) that affected the region and its peoples. Through a set of case studies, it describes how the region's decision-makers allowed these changes to grow into an environmental and societal nightmare. It outlines many lessons to be learned for other areas undergoing detrimental creeping environmental change, and provides an important example of how to approach such disasters for students and researchers of environmental studies, global change, political science and history.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 11, 2001
This book is a collection of papers written mostly by Russian scientists on the effects of large-scale diversion of water from the Aral Sea for irrigation. No where else is there such a comprehensive look at the effects, including effects on human health (particularly in Karakalpakstan), ecological health, and climate. And its in English!