Overdevelopment, Overpopulation, Overshoot
Isn’t it time to start talking about the equation that matters most to the future of people and the planet? Overpopulation + Overdevelopment = Overshoot.
The recklessness with which we’ve treated our only home since the Industrial Revolution is coming back to haunt us, with wasteful consumerism, overpopulation and resource extraction contributing to a warming atmosphere and diminishing natural landscapes. A new book, Overdevelopment, Overpopulation, Overshoot, hopes to document some of the damage and shed light on both the personal and large-scale impact human action has had on the environment.
The results are a powerful photo collection that may not always be uplifting, but will hopefully contribute to a growing understanding that collective action is necessary if we hope to slow or stop these effects.
Even now, people around the world are struggling to cope with habitat loss and changing natural landscapes, both of which are just two of the more immediate impacts of climate change. As you’ll see in the images below, the threat is dire and imminent, yet may still offer humans a chance to course correct.
Source: http://www.mindbodygreen.com/0-17704/this-is-what-climate-change-looks-l…
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Sometimes an incredible image is enough to focus public attention on the big-picture issues that often remain stuck in the backs of our minds.
“Overdevelopment, Overpopulation, Overshoot,” a new large-format photography book published by the Population Institute, hopes to do just that with the subject of global population growth and its effect on our planet.
The nonprofit environmental and social justice group’s book contains images from all over the world, from a Brazilian Farm to the Atlantic Ocean, each intended to show the “ecological and social tragedies of humanity’s ballooning numbers and consumption.”
“We sought to present a range of images reflecting how the human demographic explosion—7.3 billion people and still growing by over 1.5 million every week—has diminished Earth’s richness and beauty, and contributed to so much misery among people,” says one of the authors, Tom Butler, of the Foundation for Deep Ecology.
Even people who tend to shrug off environmental and global problems as either overhyped or insurmountable will be struck by the photos in “Over.” There are images of endless seas of people crowding through cities around the world, farm animals in pens too high to count, and surfers riding a garbage-filled wave. It would be hard to look at them all and feel good about humankind’s stewardship of our planet.
“Even after months of researching, editing, and choosing images, our editorial team sometimes would stop and sit in silence while assembling the photo essays in the book, amazed at the behavior of our species and fearful for the future of nature and people,” says Butler.
“Over” shows how creativity and artistic skill can help get a message heard, and we believe it embodies the Maker movement. Butler selected a few images from the book to highlight here on Yahoo Makers, and you can view the entire collection on Population Speak Out’s “Over” site. He also wrote the captions that appear with the photos.
Source: https://www.yahoo.com/makers/14-photos-that-will-make-c1425841004079/pho…
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