Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Levitt's Progress: The Rise of the Suburban-Industrial Complex
- 2 From the Solar House to the All-Electric Home: The Postwar Debates over Heating and Cooling
- 3 Septic-Tank Suburbia: The Problem of Waste Disposal at the Metropolitan Fringe
- 4 Open Space: The First Protests against the Bulldozed Landscape
- 5 Where Not to Build: The Campaigns to Protect Wetlands, Hillsides, and Floodplains
- 6 Water, Soil, and Wildlife: The Federal Critiques of Tract-House Development
- 7 Toward a Land Ethic: The Quiet Revolution in Land-Use Regulation
- Conclusion
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
- Plate section
Conclusion
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Levitt's Progress: The Rise of the Suburban-Industrial Complex
- 2 From the Solar House to the All-Electric Home: The Postwar Debates over Heating and Cooling
- 3 Septic-Tank Suburbia: The Problem of Waste Disposal at the Metropolitan Fringe
- 4 Open Space: The First Protests against the Bulldozed Landscape
- 5 Where Not to Build: The Campaigns to Protect Wetlands, Hillsides, and Floodplains
- 6 Water, Soil, and Wildlife: The Federal Critiques of Tract-House Development
- 7 Toward a Land Ethic: The Quiet Revolution in Land-Use Regulation
- Conclusion
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
In 1950, economist K. William Kapp published a pioneering book entitled The Social Costs of Private Enterprise. He did not mention homebuilding at all, and he devoted only a page to urban land use, yet his work offered a powerful analysis of the environmental problems caused by the postwar pattern of development.
The capitalist system contained a fundamental flaw, Kapp argued, since businesses routinely forced members of society to pay a significant part of the costs of production. To illustrate the point, Kapp considered a handful of environmental issues, including air and water pollution, soil erosion, destruction of wildlife, and waste of energy. Because no one charged for the use of air as a waste depository, manufacturers sent dirty, destructive, and deadly pollutants into the skies. Manufacturers also destroyed aquatic life, contaminated drinking supplies, and marred the aesthetic qualities of water by pouring wastes into rivers, lakes, and oceans. To reduce the costs of logging, timber companies often left steep slopes to erode, and so increased the siltation of streams and the severity of floods. In the race to exploit limited oil, gas, and coal resources, extractive firms used inefficient means of production and abandoned wells and mines prematurely. Market hunters also took for today without thought of tomorrow. For a number of species, from the passenger pigeon to the whale, the result of competitive exploitation was extinction or near-extinction.
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- Information
- The Bulldozer in the CountrysideSuburban Sprawl and the Rise of American Environmentalism, pp. 255 - 270Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001