Columbia University Press is pleased to announce the publication of
Environment, Power, and Society for the Twenty-First Century by Howard T. Odum.

This volume is a major modernization of Odum's classic work on the
significance of power and its role in society. For this edition Odum refines
his original theories and introduces two new measures: emergy and
transformity. These concepts can be used to evaluate and compare systems and
their transformation and use of resources by accounting for all the energies
and materials that flow in and out and expressing them in equivalent ability
to do work. Natural energies such as solar radiation and the cycling of
water, carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen are diagrammed in terms of energy and
emergy flow. Through this method Odum reveals the similarities between human
economic and social systems and the ecosystems of the natural world. In the
process, we discover that our survival and prosperity are regulated as much
by the laws of energetics as are systems of the physical and chemical world.

Praise for the Book:

"Environment, Power, and Society for the Twenty-first Century brackets the
career of a great man. A scholar with a gigantic message, Howard T. Odum
offers an approach that is distinctive, large, and coherent. This time he
really can take a new generation into the air with him."—Tim Allen,
University of Wisconsin

About the Author

Howard T. Odum was Graduate Research Professor at the University of
Florida's Department of Environmental Engineering Sciences from 1970 until
his death in 2002. He won the Crafoord Prize from the Royal Swedish Academy
of Sciences and the Prix de l'Institut de la Vie awarded by the French
government. He is the author of numerous books and papers, including
Ecological and General Systems: An Introduction to Systems Ecology,
Environmental Accounting: Emergy and Decision Making, and, with Elisabeth C.
Odum, Modeling for all Scales: An Introduction to System Simulation and The
Prosperous Way Down: Principles and Policies.

(Columbia University Press, Paper, $39.50)

Philip Leventhal
Columbia University Press

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