
Blood and Earth
Modern Slavery, Ecocide, and the Secret to Saving the World
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نقد و بررسی

November 23, 2015
Some of the developed world’s conveniences and pleasures will seem less enjoyable after reading this exposé of the global economy’s “deadly dance” between slavery and environmental disaster. Bales (Disposable People), cofounder of Free the Slaves, follows the supply chain from miners and fishers (often made into slaves by warfare, or into peons by corruption) straight to the cell phones in our pockets, shrimp on our table, and wedding bands on our fingers. Based on extensive travels through eastern Congo’s mineral mines, Bangladeshi fisheries, Ghanian gold mines, and Brazilian forests, Bales reveals the appalling truth in graphic detail. This disquieting book is impersonal and objective in its historical and statistical detail—Bales simply says, “It works like this”—which adds immediacy to its general call for reform, with personal accounts from those who produce raw materials and turn them into finished goods. Readers will be deeply disturbed to learn how the links connecting slavery, environmental issues, and modern convenience are forged.

Starred review from December 1, 2015
In a heart-wrenching narrative, Bales (Ending Slavery: How We Free Today's Slaves, 2007, etc.) explores modern slavery and the devastating effects on its victims as well as the environmental degradation caused by this morally reprehensible institution. As co-founder and former president of Free the Slaves, the world's largest abolitionist organization, the author has dedicated his life to exposing the evils of slavery. For his latest book, Bales traveled around the globe for seven years documenting the wretched lives of the enslaved and revealing how their forced work destroys the natural world. Weaving together interviews, history, and statistics, the author shines a light on how the poverty, chaos, wars, and government corruption create the perfect storm where slavery flourishes and environmental destruction follows. "When we better understand the interrelationship of environmental issues and human rights," he writes, "we're likely to see in many ways that working to solve one can help to solve the other." In this system, men, women, and children are lured into work extracting the various commodities our modern appetites desire, including gold from Ghana, shrimp from Bangladesh, granite from India, and timber from Brazil. Bales provides an excellent account of the 11-step supply chain required for procuring the minerals needed to build cellphones and laptops, revealing the individuals involved at each stop along the way, from slaves working in the Congolese mines to the consumer with his or her cellphone in hand. The author offers some hope for change, as well, describing various slave-free models, including the development of small family farms, cooperatives, and small-scale mines. Bales prods readers to consider the origins of our consumer products and the conditions under which they are made. While taking these steps will only cause "some inconvenience" for most of us, "small choices, made at the right moment, can bring very big changes." Bales also includes a list of organizations working for change in the Eastern Congo. A cleareyed account of man's inhumanity to man and Earth. Read it to get informed, and then take action.
COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

December 15, 2015
Smartphones and shrimp cocktails, wedding rings and kitchen countertops. When it comes to the stuff we use on a daily basis, what we actually acquire is not what one sees. The hidden sources of all the paraphernalia that dominates everyday life are rooted in a base and barbarous subculture that entraps the most helpless members of societies and destroys the most fragile and essential ecosystems on the planet. Bales (Modern Slavery, 2009), renowned abolitionist and founder of the global antislavery group Free the Slaves, has traveled the world from India to Brazil, investigating the insidious ways in which the most vulnerable members of a culture are exploited by unscrupulous slave masters and their corporate sponsors. Kidnapped and forced into torturous manual labor, kept in servitude by unconquerable debt and the rape of women and children, millions of people sacrifice their lives and decimate precious natural resources to mine commodities that fuel an often-uncontrollable consumer economy. Bales' passionately precise, revelatory, and important chronicle is for every reader concerned with human rights and global ecology issues.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

December 1, 2015
Modern-day slavery contributes $150 billion a year to our global economy. Though slavery is rejected politically by every country, it thrives among the vulnerable and poor. These defenseless areas of society supporting slave labor are further degraded by widespread environmental destruction. Social scientist Bales (Disposable People: New Slavery in the Global Economy) sets out to explain why there is a direct correlation between modern slavery and environmental degradation. Bales travels from the tin mines of the Congo to the interior of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil to further understand why slave-driven trade has a direct link to global warming. This book documents dramatic accounts of human atrocity as well as stories of hope and empowerment. The author concludes his powerful journey with a reminder that this knowledge gives everyone the ability to end modern slavery and ecocide starting at the consumer level. VERDICT This book is for both academic and public libraries with strong collection development in the areas of social justice, environmental studies, and global studies.--Angela Forret, Clive P.L., IA
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

August 1, 2015
Cofounder and past president of Free the Slaves, Bales began noticing that wherever human trafficking took root, environmental destruction soon followed. Here he shows that the two are directly linked via a supply chain he follows right up to our pockets. Bales's Ending Slavery and Disposable People were academic best sellers, translated into ten languages; this broad-ranging book is for readers of Katherine Boo, Tracy Kidder, Bill McKibben, and more.
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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