The Riverkeepers

The Riverkeepers: Two Activists Fight to Reclaim Our Environment as a Basic Human Right is an 1997 book written by John Cronin and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

The Riverkeepers
AuthorsJohn Cronin and Robert Kennedy Jr.
SubjectEnvironmentalism
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherCharles Scribner's Sons
Publication date
15 Oct 1997
ISBN978-0-684-83908-0

The book documents its author's activism and legal action against the corporate polluters of the Hudson River in New York.

Publication

The Riverkeepers is a 1997 book written by fisherman John Cronin and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., both co-founders of the Riverkeeper organization.[1]

The book was published in 1997, in New York by Charles Scribner's Sons.[2][1]

Synopsis

The book, with a foreword by Al Gore, documents the work by its authors in their legal battles with the corporate polluters of the Hudson River. The authors write about their 1983 founding of Riverkeeper non-profit organization and the almost-100 lawsuits they have started. Targets of the author's litigation include General Electric and Exxon. The authors are critical of the United States Congress.[1]

The book notes "right-wing stereotypes about environmental elitism" and recommends strategies to persuade political opponents. Recommended strategies are local action, linking environmentalism with preserving historical industry such as fishing, rather than as being against economic growth, and framing environmentalism as a struggle "against special interests who would monopolize, exclude, and liquidate [resources] for cash."[1]

Critical reception

Kirkus Reviews notes the book's lack of objectivity and describes the authors as "self-righteous" but praised the book as informative.[1] Publishers Weekly described the book as "staunch and quietly passionate".[2]

References

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