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Zusatztext "...an interesting read! well-written and thoroughly documented... completed by 50 pages of careful notes and references! helpful and informative." (World Business! March 2007) Informationen zum Autor Alan Snitow is an award-winning documentary filmmaker and journalist. Kaufman and Snitow's films include Thirst , Secrets of Silicon Valley , and Blacks and Jews . Deborah Kaufman is a film producer, director, and writer. Michael Fox is a film critic, journalist, and teacher. Klappentext Praise for Thirst"As a congressman from the Great Lakes region, I appreciate this timely and important work on a critical public policy question: Is water a natural resource to be protected by the public realm, or is it just another commodity?"--Congressman Dennis Kucinich, Ohio"A riveting and engaging account of one of the most important environmental issues of our time: Will corporations or citizens control our water?"--Carl Pope, executive director, Sierra Club"A smart, gripping narrative of the way 'big money' is cornering the market for life's basic ingredient. It will shock you--and it should!"--Jeff Faux, founder of the Economic Policy Institute, and author, The Global Class War"The fight for the right to water has hit the U.S. heartland and this passionate, information-packed book tells the story of ordinary Americans engaged in extraordinary struggles to save their water heritage for future generations. Every American should read it."--Maude Barlow, chair of Council of Canadians, and author, Blue Gold"Who really owns your water? It may not be who you think. Read this provocative and insightful book and find out about the politics and economics of growing attempts to privatize our most vital public resource--the stuff that comes out of your tap."--Peter Gleick, president, Pacific Institute for Development, Environment and Security"A terrific read--startling and motivating. Thirst helps us see that the fight for the right to water is in fact a struggle for democracy itself. Read Thirst and dive into the twenty-first century's core challenge: Do we save ourselves by the market's logic, or as citizens do we deepen democracy's logic?"--Frances Moore Lappé, author, Democracy's Edge: Choosing to Save Our Country by Bringing Democracy to Life Zusammenfassung Thirst shows how average citizens in communities across the U.S. are fighting multinational corporations and their supporters to maintain public control of our water and most necessary resource. We are at the tipping point in the new global water wars, and the United States is a major front. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface. Acknowledgments. 1. Water: Commodity or Human Right? Battles for Water in the West. 2. Hardball vs. the High Road. Stockton, California. 3. Small-Town Surprise for a Corporate Water Giant. Felton, California. Scandals in the South. 4. The Price of Incompetence. Atlanta, Georgia. 5. The Hundred-Year War. Lexington, Kentucky. New England Skirmishes. 6. Keeping the Companies at Bay. Lee, Massachusetts. 7. Cooking the Numbers. Holyoke, Massachusetts. Corporate Target: The Great Lakes. 8. When Nestlé Comes. Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin. 9. To Quench a Thirst. Mecosta County, Michigan. 10. Whose Water, Whose World Is It? Notes. Resources. Index. The Authors. ...