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Biodiversity (1988)
Commission on Life Sciences (CLS)

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Wilson, E.O.. "Part 8: Restoration Ecology: Can We Recover Lost Ground?." Biodiversity. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 1988.

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BioDiversity

emerging ecosystems. When the ecosystems are ready for agriculture, natural resource management, and conservation on a given section of land, the corporation could divest itself of the land, selling it to the formerly landless workers who would be trained land stewards and farmers. The original corporation would become a mortgage banking company for the new landholders and at the same time continue to own and operate part of the infrastructure, including the training component, and to share in processing and marketing. Its earnings would be used in turn to acquire new blocks of land and repeat the cycle. In this particular model, there is the potential theoretically to link capital, institutional structures, information, and family-held productive lands to effect land restoration. There is also an opportunity to set aside lands as wilderness, since the intensive agriculture will reduce pressure on the overall environment. Even in poorer parts of the world, there is the chance to generate enough wealth to underwrite continuing ecological research out of which new models of Earth stewardship will arise.

REFERENCES

Baum, C.M. 1981. Gardening in fertile waters. New Alchemy Q. Summer (5):3–8.


Todd, J. 1983. Planetary healing. Annals of Earth Stewardship 1(1):7–9.

Todd, J. 1984. The practise of stewardship. Pp. 152–159 in W.Jackson, W.Berry, and B.Coleman, eds. Meeting the Expectations of the Land. North Point Press, San Francisco.

Todd, N., and J.Todd. 1984. Bioshelters, Ocean Arks, City Farming: Ecology as the Basis for Design. Sierra Club Books, San Francisco. 210 pp.


Zweig, R. 1986. An integrated fish culture hydroponic vegetable production system. Aquaculture 12(3):34–40.

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