Community
Development Resources
The
Appropriate Technology Library and the Appropriate
Technology Sourcebook!
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| The
AT Library contains the full text and images
fro over 1050 of the best books dealing with
all areas of do-it-yourself technology.
Learn more about this valuable resource! |
The
online version of the Appropriate Technology
Sourcebook contains reviews of all the books
in the books in the AT Library. View
it Here |
This is the
online version of latest edition of the guide
to practical books on village and small community
technology. Over 50,000 print copies of the previous
editions have been used in more than 130 countries
to find a wide range of published technical information
that can be used by individuals and small groups.
In the new edition, 1150 publications from international
and U.S. sources are reviewed, covering small
water supply systems, renewable energy devices
such as water mill and improved cook stoves, agricultural
tools and implements, intensive gardening, conformal
education, small business management, transportation,
small industries and other topics. Extensive index.
Price and ordering information are provided for
each publication. The Sourcebook can also be used
as the index for the Appropriate Technology Library
on CD-ROM or Microfiche, which contains the complete
text of 1050 books.
Click
here
to Learn more about the complete AT Library on
CD-ROM!
What
is Appropriate Technology?
Schumacher's
famous introduction of the concept of "intermediate"
(or "appropriate") technology has had
a major impact on current thinking in the development
field. Schumacher was a founder of the Intermediate
Technology Development Group.
For Schumacher,
solutions to the world's problems must embody
the four qualities of smallness, simplicity, capital-saving,
and non-violence. To that end he is a leading
advocate of "appropriate technology"
as a partial answer to global problems of food
and energy shortages, alienation, and poverty.
In the developing countries, designed particularly
to suit agricultural conditions that are different
from those in the industrialized countries, this
technology should be superior to the primitive
forms of the past. Yet it should also be simpler,
cheaper, and all but independent of the energy
requirements of today's technology of the rich.
"One can also call it 'self-help' or 'people's
technology"' says Schumacher.
"The
task, then, is to bring into existence millions
of new workplaces in the rural areas and small
towns. That modern industry, as it has arisen
in the developed countries, cannot possibly fulfill
this task should be perfectly obvious. It has
arisen in societies which are rich in capital
and short of labor and therefore cannot possibly
be appropriate for societies short of capital
and rich in labor. The real task may be formulated
in four propositions:
1) Workplaces
have to be created in the areas where the people
are living now, and not primarily in metropolitan
areas into which they tend to migrate.
2) These
workplaces must be, on the average, cheap enough
so that they can be created in large numbers without
this calling for an unattainable level of capital
formation and imports.
3) The production
methods employed must be relatively simple, so
that the demands for high skills are minimized,
not only in the production process itself but
also in matters of organization, raw material
supply, financing, marketing, and so forth.
4) Production
should be mainly from local materials and mainly
for local use."
Schumacher
on technological complexity: "Any third-rate
engineer can make a machine or a process more
complex; afterwards, it takes a first-rate engineer
to make it simple again." An excellent book. |