About This Book
The work traces coal's geological formation and follows its central role in powering industrial transformation, including mechanized production, steel, and transportation. It examines geographic patterns of coal fields and national development, details social consequences in mining regions — poverty, urban change, and labor unrest — and recounts miners' organizing efforts and broader democratic responses. It also surveys technological shifts, rivals to coal, and policy choices. Throughout it raises moral and practical questions about steering large-scale energy and industrial advances toward collective welfare rather than intensified exploitation.
About the Author
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