The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty

The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty

by PeterSinger (Author)

Synopsis

`Brilliant. A practical plan to eradicate world poverty' Observer

Would you walk past a drowning child?

This is a book that will change the way you think about giving. It shows what you can do, as an individual, about the fact that more than a billion people are living in extreme poverty. It argues for an urgent change in our culture, and it invites you to play your part.

The complexities of the aid debate are well rehearsed; the phrase `charity begins at home' is all too familiar; the sheer scale of the task is overwhelming. But Singer, who has been writing for more than three decades about how we should respond to hunger and poverty, suggests that anything other than urgent and direct action is tantamount to walking by.

If enough people regularly give a small amount, he says, we can together make a significant difference.

Find out about the life you can save.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Edition: Reprints
Publisher: Picador
Published: 05 Feb 2010

ISBN 10: 0330454595
ISBN 13: 9780330454599

Media Reviews
'This book has persuaded me that I should give more -- significantly more -- to help those less fortunate' Financial Times 'It's the opposite of a glossy self-help book. It's a help-others book.' Sunday Herald 'If you believe world poverty is far too big a problem to solve, this book will convince you otherwise. A can do lifesaver, just one or two steps along the evolutionary tree from Nudge' Scotland on Sunday 'Thoroughly compelling, practical, unanswerable' The Times
Author Bio
Peter Singer is Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University. Author, co-author, or editor of forty books on a range of topics, Singer is best known for Animal Liberation, widely considered to be the founding statement of the animal-rights movement. In 2005, Time magazine voted him 'one of the 100 most influential people in the world.' He lives in Melbourne, Australia, and is married with three daughters.