Down By the Riverside
We residents of the St. Louis area know the importance of rivers, but we can learn a lot more from Martin Doyle's The Source.
William Lowry is professor of political science at Washington University in St. Louis and author of the 2009 book Repairing Paradise: The Restoration of Nature in America’s National Parks.
We residents of the St. Louis area know the importance of rivers, but we can learn a lot more from Martin Doyle's The Source.
Protecting the Planet will work well for students and others working in the area of environmental policy who want a quick summary, but the reader should not expect to find nuanced theoretical argument or in-depth analysis on issues other than the climate in these pages.
The 2016 Academy Awards nominations’ whiteness has become a national civil rights issue. In his opening monologue at the ceremony, host Chris Rock stated: “I’m sure there wasn’t no black nominees [in] ’62 or ’63. And black people did not protest. Why? Because we had real things to protest at…
Now is an apt time to look back on Caleb Peterson’s protest, both as an antecedent and as inspiration. His strategy, which turned Hollywood’s moneymaking spectacles into race relations controversies, smartly used theatricality as a tool for protest. While its impact on equal hiring practices was unclear, it can still be read as radical and successful.
"If we thought that the distribution of income among individuals in an economy is determined in a similar manner to the distribution of income across countries in the world, we would then look primarily for explanations which attach importance to knowledge, education, and skills. But Piketty’s theory of income and wealth distribution, contrary to what we might anticipate, is startlingly simple, and can be boiled down to a couple of ’laws.’ Piketty first argues, by appealing to the data, that capital income is more important than labor income in concentrating income and wealth at the top of the distribution."
The Earth moves in mysterious ways, and even once altered the flow of the Mississippi River. Conevery Bolton Valencius' new book on Missouri's New Madrid fault shows how those tremors spread through culture and history. Read it, and be prepared when "The Big One" next hits."