Scorched Earth
How War Reshapes the Planet
de Moises Montalvo
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War is typically remembered through human loss: names carved into stone, cities reduced to rubble, borders redrawn on maps. Far less examined, however, are war's lingering effects on the natural world, and how those environmental consequences continue to shape human life long after the fighting ends.
This book argues that war is not only a political or human catastrophe, but also an ecological force. Throughout history, organized violence has altered landscapes, poisoned water systems, depleted soils, accelerated extraction, and disrupted ecosystems on a scale that rivals natural disasters. Unlike earthquakes or storms, however, the damage caused by war is deliberate, cumulative, and rarely repaired once peace is declared.
Tracing conflict from early land-based warfare through empire, industrialization, total war, proxy conflicts, and the modern military era, this book reveals how environmental harm has been central to the execution of wars and the maintenance of power. Forests are cleared, rivers redirected, land degraded, and entire regions transformed to sustain violence and control. These changes do not end with treaties; they persist as conditions that shape food systems, public health, migration, inequality, and vulnerability to future conflict.
Rather than treating environmental damage as collateral or secondary, this book places it at the center of war's legacy. It examines why this damage is so often excluded from historical memory, how it becomes normalized as geography rather than recognized as consequence, and how societies inherit altered landscapes without acknowledging their origins.
Written at a moment of renewed global instability, this book offers a sobering lens on the long-term costs of conflict. It does not propose easy solutions or moral absolution, but instead insists on a fuller accounting of what war does to the planet, and why understanding that record matters for any future shaped by both conflict and climate stress.
This book argues that war is not only a political or human catastrophe, but also an ecological force. Throughout history, organized violence has altered landscapes, poisoned water systems, depleted soils, accelerated extraction, and disrupted ecosystems on a scale that rivals natural disasters. Unlike earthquakes or storms, however, the damage caused by war is deliberate, cumulative, and rarely repaired once peace is declared.
Tracing conflict from early land-based warfare through empire, industrialization, total war, proxy conflicts, and the modern military era, this book reveals how environmental harm has been central to the execution of wars and the maintenance of power. Forests are cleared, rivers redirected, land degraded, and entire regions transformed to sustain violence and control. These changes do not end with treaties; they persist as conditions that shape food systems, public health, migration, inequality, and vulnerability to future conflict.
Rather than treating environmental damage as collateral or secondary, this book places it at the center of war's legacy. It examines why this damage is so often excluded from historical memory, how it becomes normalized as geography rather than recognized as consequence, and how societies inherit altered landscapes without acknowledging their origins.
Written at a moment of renewed global instability, this book offers a sobering lens on the long-term costs of conflict. It does not propose easy solutions or moral absolution, but instead insists on a fuller accounting of what war does to the planet, and why understanding that record matters for any future shaped by both conflict and climate stress.
Características y detalles
- Categoría principal: Naturaleza / Vida salvaje
- Categorías adicionales Ciencias sociales, Historia
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Características: 13×20 cm
N.º de páginas: 152 -
ISBN
- Tapa blanda: 9798261141310
- Fecha de publicación: ene. 10, 2026
- Idioma English
- Palabras clave pollution, climate, environment, landscape, war
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