Save the Humans? : Common Preservation in Action
Save the Humans? : Common Preservation in Action
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Author(s): Brecher, Jeremy
ISBN No.: 9781612050973
Pages: 254
Year: 201201
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 49.90
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (On Demand)

Jeremy Brecher''s work is astonishing and refreshing; and, God knows, necessary. --Studs Terkel I have been an advocate, a student, and a teacher of advocacy for more than 40 years, but I have never learned more useful knowledge about advocacy than from this book. It is absolutely unique in its integration of engaging personal narratives of the author''s direct involvement in every significant social justice movement of the last 40 years with his analytic history of previous movements. --Mike Pertschuk, former chair, Federal Trade Commission This is a remarkable book: part personal story, part intellectual history told in the first person by a skilled writer and assiduous historian, part passionate--but clearly and logically argued--plea for pushing the potential of collective action not only to right the injustices that abound around us but ultimately to preserve the human race. Easy reading and full of useful and unforgettable stories.A medicine against apathy and political despair much needed in the U.S. and the world today --Peter Marcuse, Columbia University Over the last decades, Jeremy Brecher has known how to detect the critical issue of a period, to sort the many realities of suffering and injustice, and to emerge with a clear, short, powerful description.


He does it again in this important book--it is about people: how our system devalues people and what needs to be done. --Saskia Sassen, Columbia University and author of Territory, Authority, Rights Indispensable.A fascinating blend of political autobiography and manual for social change, giving cogent primacy to the stark goal of human preservation. With species survival at stake, what Jeremy Brecher writes is at once frightening and inspiring. --Richard Falk, University of California-Santa Barbara In a world with multiple specific demands, Jeremy Brecher outlines a concept for a politics which links environmental justice, economic fairness, and a movement for democracy renewal. It is a vital contribution. If anyone asks what connects the struggles between police and protesters, those out in the streets, and those who would rather see them disappear from the public commons, Brecher has given us a concise way of describing the way a movement is struggling for a common future for all of us. --Benjamin Shepard, Political Media Reviewagainst apathy and political despair much needed in the U.


S. and the world today --Peter Marcuse, Columbia University Over the last decades, Jeremy Brecher has known how to detect the critical issue of a period, to sort the many realities of suffering and injustice, and to emerge with a clear, short, powerful description. He does it again in this important book--it is about people: how our system devalues people and what needs to be done. --Saskia Sassen, Columbia University and author of Territory, Authority, Rights Indispensable.A fascinating blend of political autobiography and manual for social change, giving cogent primacy to the stark goal of human preservation. With species survival at stake, what Jeremy Brecher writes is at once frightening and inspiring. --Richard Falk, University of California-Santa Barbara In a world with multiple specific demands, Jeremy Brecher outlines a concept for a politics which links environmental justice, economic fairness, and a movement for democracy renewal. It is a vital contribution.


If anyone asks what connects the struggles between police and protesters, those out in the streets, and those who would rather see them disappear from the public commons, Brecher has given us a concise way of describing the way a movement is struggling for a common future for all of us. --Benjamin Shepard, Political Media Reviewinks environmental justice, economic fairness, and a movement for democracy renewal. It is a vital contribution. If anyone asks what connects the struggles between police and protesters, those out in the streets, and those who would rather see them disappear from the public commons, Brecher has given us a concise way of describing the way a movement is struggling for a common future for all of us. --Benjamin Shepard, Political Media Review.


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