The Pesticide Question

The Pesticide Question: Environment, Economics, and Ethics  
Author(s) David Pimentel, Hugh Lehman
Language English
Publisher Springer
Publication date 1993
Pages 441 pages
ISBN 9780412035814
OCLC Number 25748386
Dewey Decimal 363.17/92 20
LC Classification QH545.P4 P4793 1993

The Pesticide Question: Environment, Economics and Ethics is a 1993 book edited by David Pimentel and Hugh Lehman.[1] The book argues that modern agriculture cannot completely do without synthetic chemicals, but that it is technologically possible to reduce the amount of pesticides used in the United States by 35-50 per cent without reducing crop yields.[2]

The Pesticide Question builds on the 1962 best-seller Silent Spring by Rachel Carson. Carson did not reject the use of pesticides, but argued that their use was often indiscriminate and resulted in harm to people and the environment. She also highlighted the problem of pests becoming resistant to pesticides.[2]

Carson's work is referred to many times in The Pesticide Question, which critically explores many non-technical issues associated with pesticide use, mainly in the United States. The book has 40 contributors, mainly academics from a wide range of disciplines. The Pesticide Question is divided into five main parts:

References

  1. ^ Cornell Entomology -- David Pimental
  2. ^ a b c Foster, John and Mark Walton. "Book Review: The Pesticide Question", Australian Journal of Environmental Management, March 1995, pp. 55-56.

Bibliography

External links