Craig E. Colten is the Carl O. Sauer Professor of Geography and Anthropology at Louisiana State University. He is the author of An Unnatural Metropolis: Wresting New Orleans from Nature; Perilous Place, Powerful Storms: Hurricane Protection in Coastal Louisiana; and Southern Waters: The Limits to Abundance.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Colten reminds us that Louisiana's coast is a human place, diverse in tradition and ways of living, working, and adapting to environmental change. He warns that any plan for coastal restoration is doomed, if it privileges science, engineering, and economics over social sciences, geography, history, and other fields of expertise on the human condition, and indeed, over the people themselves.-- "Christopher Morris, author of "The Big Muddy: An Environmental History of the Mississippi and Its Peoples"" Craig Colten speaks as a long-time resident of Louisiana who is also a dispassionate observer of a special place that is under threat. He is a guide for the rest of us, pointing toward the kind of place-focused environmental and social restoration that could help many coastal regions. Colten is a master of what we know about Louisiana's coast. But he argues that science is not enough. At a time when the state is preparing another round of interventions to shape the coast, Colten argues for humility and for making expertise serve public needs. Knowledge and values must come from the people who know and use the coast. This is important for social justice, but also for the success of any restoration effort, because the ways people learn from and use the coast in the future is vital to the region's fate.-- "Karen O'Neill, Associate Professor, Department of Human Ecology, Rutgers University" Steeped in the literature on hazards and resilience, and deeply familiar with the perilous place that is coastal Louisiana, Colten masterfully explains how policy makers responded to successive disasters with piecemeal, disarticulated efforts at remediation and environmental management that, collectively, failed to recognize and address the cultural impacts of, and economic inequities produced by, these initiatives.-- "Graeme Wynn, professor emeritus of geography, University of British Columbia" Meticulously researched and sensitively argued, State of Disaster paints a lesson for all who may confront subsiding lands, rising seas, and disappearing coastal heritage. In our age of accelerating global change, the contested and dynamic Mississippi Delta becomes an evocative case study for finding better ways to manage the planet's irreplaceable cultural and natural treasures.-- "Marcus Hall, author of "Earth Repair: A Transatlantic History of Environmental Restoration""

