Arid Lands Newsletter--link to home pageNo. 39, Spring/Summer 1996
Borders

Selected books of interest

  BORDERLANDS
picture of book's cover

Border People: Life and Society in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands by Oscar J. Martinez
Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1994.
The U.S.-Mexico borderland region is unique in that nowhere else do so many people from two dissimilar cultures live so closely together and interact so intensely. This book is based on firsthand interviews with a wide variety of people from all walks of life. It presents case histories that show how borderlands residents' lives have been shaped by the unique milieu in which they live.

picture of book's cover

The Mexican Border Cities: Landscape Anatomy and Place Personality
by Daniel D. Arreola and James R. Curtis
Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1993.
This book examines the regional geography of18 Mexican towns and cities located along the U.S.-Mexican border and ranging in population from 10,000 to nearly a million. The authors demonstrate that, despite their close proximity to the United States, all these communities remain fundamentally Mexican in terms of their cultural landscape. The book includes chapters on urban structures, tourist and pariah landscapes, commercial landscapes, residential townscapes, and landscapes of industry and transit.

picture of book's cover

A Legacy of Change: Historic Human Impact on Vegetation of the Arizona Borderlands
by Conrad Joseph Bahre
Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1991.
Major vegetation changes have occurred in Southeastern Arizona since the arrival of Anglo settlers in the 1870s. While human land-use has long been acknowledged as an influence in some of these changes, it has also long been assumed that climate change was also a major influence in these changes. Bahre challenges this assumption of climate-induced vegetation change. By correlating his own field research with archival records and photos, he demonstrates that most of the major vegetation changes documented have occurred following some human disturbance. His work also provides new techniques for differentiating between human-caused and naturally occurring vegetation change.

picture of book's cover

Mountain Islands and Desert Seas:
A Natural History of the U.S.-Mexican Borderlands

by Frederick R. Gehlbach
College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1993.
This is a new edition of a work originally published in 1981. Written in an engaging and accessible style, the author considers the region within 100 miles of the International Border, from the mouth of the Rio Grande to the western edge of the Sonoran Desert. The entire book is informed by the author's view that (a) everything is connected to everything else, and (b) we can't begin to understand environmental conflicts, let alone resolve them, without a basic knowledge of natural history.

 

Other Books

 

Famine Early Warning and Response: The Missing Link
by Margaret Buchanan-Smith and Susanna Davies
London: Intermediate Technology Publications, 1995.
Drought has caused several serious famines in Africa, and most of them were preceded by early warning signs. However, relief efforts are frequently "too little and too late" to be of real assistance to the target populations. Using case studies from Ethiopia, Sudan, Chad, Mali, and Kenya, this book examines how early warning information is used in decision-making, particularly within key donor agencies. Two major problems areas are identified: inability of the current relief system to respond quickly enough to prevent potential problems from becoming emergencies, and the complexity of government-donor relations, which tend to become mired in red tape and political maneuvering.

Functions of Nature: Evaluation of Nature in Environmental Planning,
Management and Decision Making

by Rudolf S. de Groot
Amsterdam: Wolters-Noordhoff, 1992.
This book provides a comprehensive method for systematic assessment and evaluation of all functions and values of natural and semi-natural ecosystems. Furthermore, it gives examples of how to use the concept of environmental function as a tool in environmental planning, management and decision-making. Of interest to managers of protected areas, planners, resource economists, environmental educators, and conservationists.

bar denoting end of article text

About the Arid Lands Newsletter

Link to ALN home page Link to index page for back web issues Link to index page for pre-web issue archive Link to this issue's table of contents