INTRODUCING...! The Appropriate Technology Sourcebook
Book review of a guide to plans and methods for village and intermediate technology, Appropriate Technology Sourcebook.
by: Bamboo Waterwheel
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We here at MOTHER see an awful lot of information on the
efforts and achievements of the "alternatives movement" in
this country and there's no doubt that the folks now
striving to develop new sources of energy, better food
production techniques, and low-impact lifestyles here in
the United States are involved in some mighty crucial
endeavors indeed. But if you allow your mind's eye to move
back a step or two and get a somewhat wider perspective
you'll soon see that the real need for such work does not
fall within our borders at all: Instead; it lies among the
impoverished, suffering millions now barely surviving in
Third World countries.
For some time now, organizations like VITA (Volunteers in
Technical Assistance) and ITDG (intermediate Technology
Development Group) have been working to devise tools,
techniques, and methods that the people of underdeveloped
nations can adapt to their own situations and thus help
themselves to better, more fulfilling lives. Unfortunately,
however, much of that work including such desperately
needed items as plans for low cost shelters using native
materials simple energy devices (like bamboo waterwheels)
and ways to increase community food production is still
virtually unknown among the very people for whom it is
intended. The problem? Well, it all boils down to a lack of
widespread communication which is why we're so glad to see
the APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY SOURCEBOOK pop up.
Produced by Volunteers in Asia a mall, non-profit,
international people's self-help organization the
APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY SOURCEBOOK pulls together all the
alternatives devised so far that might be of use to, say, a
farmer in Bangladesh or the residents of a native village
in Surinam. Although only 72 pages in length, the booklet
outlines and reviews dozens of sources for how to
information on the likes of simple. tool making, crop
storage, food production, water supply development, home
construction, and the entire range of possible energy
sources from pedal power to methane digesters. Each entry
critically analyzes whatever book, blueprint, or set of
plans is offered op the basis of simplicity, materials and
manpower needed, expense, and adaptability to local needs
and resources. In other words, the APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY
SOURCEBOOK provides Third World residents with a single
guide to a vast storehouse of valuable (but little known)
information and then leaves those people to make their own
decisions (which is as it should, be) in terms of which
ideas might be most useful to them.