John S. Dryzek / David Schlosberg (eds.)The Environmental Politics Reader
Debating the Earth
The Environmental Politics Reader
Herausgegeben von Dryzek, John S.; Schlosberg, David
John S. Dryzek / David Schlosberg (eds.)The Environmental Politics Reader
Debating the Earth
The Environmental Politics Reader
Herausgegeben von Dryzek, John S.; Schlosberg, David
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Debating the Earth brings together over 40 essential readings that illustrate the diversity of political responses to environmental issues. They are organized in a way that emphasizes the differences and debates across the various schools of thought on environmental affairs and there is a mixture of classic pieces and cutting-edge essays. The key debates that are covered include the severity of environmental problems, reformist responses to environmental issues, the environment and economics and green critiques.
The second edition includes a new section on 'The Global South and Indigenous…mehr
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Debating the Earth brings together over 40 essential readings that illustrate the diversity of political responses to environmental issues. They are organized in a way that emphasizes the differences and debates across the various schools of thought on environmental affairs and there is a mixture of classic pieces and cutting-edge essays. The key debates that are covered include the severity of environmental problems, reformist responses to environmental
issues, the environment and economics and green critiques.
The second edition includes a new section on 'The Global South and Indigenous Perspectives' which broadens the geographical scope. 25 extracts are new to this edition and there are more extracts by women.
issues, the environment and economics and green critiques.
The second edition includes a new section on 'The Global South and Indigenous Perspectives' which broadens the geographical scope. 25 extracts are new to this edition and there are more extracts by women.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- The Environmental Politics Reader
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- 2. Aufl.
- Seitenzahl: 674
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Dezember 2004
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 189mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 1250g
- ISBN-13: 9780199276295
- ISBN-10: 0199276293
- Artikelnr.: 13049288
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- The Environmental Politics Reader
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- 2. Aufl.
- Seitenzahl: 674
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Dezember 2004
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 189mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 1250g
- ISBN-13: 9780199276295
- ISBN-10: 0199276293
- Artikelnr.: 13049288
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
John S. Dryzek was the Head of the Political Science Departments at both Oregon and Melbourne. He is a former editor of the Australian Journal of Political Science and Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. He is currently the Head of the Social and Political Theory Program at The Australian National University David Schlosberg has taught at Northern Arizona University and the London School of Economics and is currently on sabbatical from the University of Arizona as a Fulbright Senior Scholar Fellow at ANU, Canberra.
* Part One: Feast or Famine? The severity of environmental problems
* Section One: Limits and Survivalism
* 1: Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jorgen Randers, and William
H. Behrens III: The Limits to Growth
* 2: Garrett Hardin: The Tragedy of the Commons
* 3: Lester Brown: A Planet Under Stress
* Section Two: The Promethean Response
* 4: Julian L. Simon and Herman Kahn: Introduction to the Resourceful
Earth
* 5: Bjorn Lomborg: The Truth about the Environment
* 6: Tom Burke: Ten Pinches of Salt
* Part Two: Reformist Responses
* Section Three: Administrative Rationalism
* 8: Kai Lee: Appraising Adaptive Management
* 9: Charles Sabel, Archon Fung, and Bradley Karkkainen: Beyond
Backyard Environmentalism
* 10: Mary O'Brien: Goal: Replace Risk Assessment with Alternatives
Assessment
* Section Four: Liberal Democracy
* 11: Mark Sagoff: The Allocation and Distribution of Resources
* 12: Robert Paehlke: Democracy and Environmentalism
* 13: Marcel Wissenburg: Sustainability and the Limits of Liberalism
* 14: William P. Ophuls with A. Stephen Boyan, Jr.: The American
Political Economy II: The Non-Politics of Laissez Faire
* Part Three: Environment and Economics
* Section Five: Market Liberalism
* 15: Terry L. Anderson and Donald T. Leal: Rethinking the Way We Think
* 16.: Robert Stavins and Bradley Whitehead: Market-Based Environmental
Policies
* 17: Robert E. Goodin: Selling Environmental Indulgences
* Section Six: Sustainable Development
* 18: World Commission on Environment and Development: From One Earth
to One World
* 19: James Meadowcroft: "Sustainable Development: a New(ish) Idea for
a New Century?"
* 20: David Carruthers: "From Opposition to Orthodoxy: The Remaking of
Sustainable Development"
* Section Seven: Ecological Modernization
* 21: Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins: The Next Industrial
Revolution
* 22: John Barry: Ecological Modernization
* Part Four: Green Social Critiques
* Section Eight: Deep Ecology and Bioregionalism
* 23: Arne Naess: The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology
Movement: A Summary
* 24: Dave Foreman: Putting the Earth First
* 25: Jim Dodge: Living by Life: Some Bioregional Theory and Practice
* 26: Robyn Eckersley: "Ecocentric Discourses: Problems and Future
Prospects for Nature Advocacy"
* Section Nine: Social and Socialist Ecology
* 27: Murray Bookchin: Society and Ecology
* 28: Ynestra King: Toward an Ecological Feminism and a Feminist
Ecology
* 29: Joel Kovel: Ecosocialism
* Section Ten: Environmental Justice
* 30: First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit:
Principles of Environmental Justice
* 31: Robert Bullard: Environmental Justice in the 21st Century
* 32: Celene Krauss: Women of Color on the Front Line
* Section Eleven: Southern and Indigenous Perspectives
* 33: Ramachandra Guha and Juan M. Alier: Environmentalism of the Poor
* 34: Vandana Shiva: On Poverty and Globalization
* 35: Winona LaDuke: Introduction and Conclusion to All My Relations
* 36: Fabienne Bayet: Overturning the Doctrine: Indigenous People and
Wilderness - Being Aboriginal in the Environmental Movement
* Part Five: Society, the State and the Environment
* Section Eleven: The Green Movement
* 37: Doug Torgerson: Farewell to the Green Movement? Political Action
and the Green Public Sphere
* 38: David Schlosberg: Networks and Mobile Arrangements:
Organizational Innovation in the U.S. Environmental Justice Movement
* 39: Paul Wapner: Politics Beyond the State: Environmental Activism
and World Civic Politics
* 40: Thomas Poguntke: Green Parties in National Governments: From
Protest to Acquiescence?
* Section Twelve: Ecological Democracy
* 41: Ulrich Beck: The Politics of the Risk Society
* 42: Andrew Dobson: Ecological Citizenship
* 43: Val Plumwood: Inequality, Ecojustice, and Ecological Rationality
* 44: John S. Dryzek: Political and Ecological Communication
* Section One: Limits and Survivalism
* 1: Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jorgen Randers, and William
H. Behrens III: The Limits to Growth
* 2: Garrett Hardin: The Tragedy of the Commons
* 3: Lester Brown: A Planet Under Stress
* Section Two: The Promethean Response
* 4: Julian L. Simon and Herman Kahn: Introduction to the Resourceful
Earth
* 5: Bjorn Lomborg: The Truth about the Environment
* 6: Tom Burke: Ten Pinches of Salt
* Part Two: Reformist Responses
* Section Three: Administrative Rationalism
* 8: Kai Lee: Appraising Adaptive Management
* 9: Charles Sabel, Archon Fung, and Bradley Karkkainen: Beyond
Backyard Environmentalism
* 10: Mary O'Brien: Goal: Replace Risk Assessment with Alternatives
Assessment
* Section Four: Liberal Democracy
* 11: Mark Sagoff: The Allocation and Distribution of Resources
* 12: Robert Paehlke: Democracy and Environmentalism
* 13: Marcel Wissenburg: Sustainability and the Limits of Liberalism
* 14: William P. Ophuls with A. Stephen Boyan, Jr.: The American
Political Economy II: The Non-Politics of Laissez Faire
* Part Three: Environment and Economics
* Section Five: Market Liberalism
* 15: Terry L. Anderson and Donald T. Leal: Rethinking the Way We Think
* 16.: Robert Stavins and Bradley Whitehead: Market-Based Environmental
Policies
* 17: Robert E. Goodin: Selling Environmental Indulgences
* Section Six: Sustainable Development
* 18: World Commission on Environment and Development: From One Earth
to One World
* 19: James Meadowcroft: "Sustainable Development: a New(ish) Idea for
a New Century?"
* 20: David Carruthers: "From Opposition to Orthodoxy: The Remaking of
Sustainable Development"
* Section Seven: Ecological Modernization
* 21: Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins: The Next Industrial
Revolution
* 22: John Barry: Ecological Modernization
* Part Four: Green Social Critiques
* Section Eight: Deep Ecology and Bioregionalism
* 23: Arne Naess: The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology
Movement: A Summary
* 24: Dave Foreman: Putting the Earth First
* 25: Jim Dodge: Living by Life: Some Bioregional Theory and Practice
* 26: Robyn Eckersley: "Ecocentric Discourses: Problems and Future
Prospects for Nature Advocacy"
* Section Nine: Social and Socialist Ecology
* 27: Murray Bookchin: Society and Ecology
* 28: Ynestra King: Toward an Ecological Feminism and a Feminist
Ecology
* 29: Joel Kovel: Ecosocialism
* Section Ten: Environmental Justice
* 30: First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit:
Principles of Environmental Justice
* 31: Robert Bullard: Environmental Justice in the 21st Century
* 32: Celene Krauss: Women of Color on the Front Line
* Section Eleven: Southern and Indigenous Perspectives
* 33: Ramachandra Guha and Juan M. Alier: Environmentalism of the Poor
* 34: Vandana Shiva: On Poverty and Globalization
* 35: Winona LaDuke: Introduction and Conclusion to All My Relations
* 36: Fabienne Bayet: Overturning the Doctrine: Indigenous People and
Wilderness - Being Aboriginal in the Environmental Movement
* Part Five: Society, the State and the Environment
* Section Eleven: The Green Movement
* 37: Doug Torgerson: Farewell to the Green Movement? Political Action
and the Green Public Sphere
* 38: David Schlosberg: Networks and Mobile Arrangements:
Organizational Innovation in the U.S. Environmental Justice Movement
* 39: Paul Wapner: Politics Beyond the State: Environmental Activism
and World Civic Politics
* 40: Thomas Poguntke: Green Parties in National Governments: From
Protest to Acquiescence?
* Section Twelve: Ecological Democracy
* 41: Ulrich Beck: The Politics of the Risk Society
* 42: Andrew Dobson: Ecological Citizenship
* 43: Val Plumwood: Inequality, Ecojustice, and Ecological Rationality
* 44: John S. Dryzek: Political and Ecological Communication
* Part One: Feast or Famine? The severity of environmental problems
* Section One: Limits and Survivalism
* 1: Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jorgen Randers, and William
H. Behrens III: The Limits to Growth
* 2: Garrett Hardin: The Tragedy of the Commons
* 3: Lester Brown: A Planet Under Stress
* Section Two: The Promethean Response
* 4: Julian L. Simon and Herman Kahn: Introduction to the Resourceful
Earth
* 5: Bjorn Lomborg: The Truth about the Environment
* 6: Tom Burke: Ten Pinches of Salt
* Part Two: Reformist Responses
* Section Three: Administrative Rationalism
* 8: Kai Lee: Appraising Adaptive Management
* 9: Charles Sabel, Archon Fung, and Bradley Karkkainen: Beyond
Backyard Environmentalism
* 10: Mary O'Brien: Goal: Replace Risk Assessment with Alternatives
Assessment
* Section Four: Liberal Democracy
* 11: Mark Sagoff: The Allocation and Distribution of Resources
* 12: Robert Paehlke: Democracy and Environmentalism
* 13: Marcel Wissenburg: Sustainability and the Limits of Liberalism
* 14: William P. Ophuls with A. Stephen Boyan, Jr.: The American
Political Economy II: The Non-Politics of Laissez Faire
* Part Three: Environment and Economics
* Section Five: Market Liberalism
* 15: Terry L. Anderson and Donald T. Leal: Rethinking the Way We Think
* 16.: Robert Stavins and Bradley Whitehead: Market-Based Environmental
Policies
* 17: Robert E. Goodin: Selling Environmental Indulgences
* Section Six: Sustainable Development
* 18: World Commission on Environment and Development: From One Earth
to One World
* 19: James Meadowcroft: "Sustainable Development: a New(ish) Idea for
a New Century?"
* 20: David Carruthers: "From Opposition to Orthodoxy: The Remaking of
Sustainable Development"
* Section Seven: Ecological Modernization
* 21: Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins: The Next Industrial
Revolution
* 22: John Barry: Ecological Modernization
* Part Four: Green Social Critiques
* Section Eight: Deep Ecology and Bioregionalism
* 23: Arne Naess: The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology
Movement: A Summary
* 24: Dave Foreman: Putting the Earth First
* 25: Jim Dodge: Living by Life: Some Bioregional Theory and Practice
* 26: Robyn Eckersley: "Ecocentric Discourses: Problems and Future
Prospects for Nature Advocacy"
* Section Nine: Social and Socialist Ecology
* 27: Murray Bookchin: Society and Ecology
* 28: Ynestra King: Toward an Ecological Feminism and a Feminist
Ecology
* 29: Joel Kovel: Ecosocialism
* Section Ten: Environmental Justice
* 30: First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit:
Principles of Environmental Justice
* 31: Robert Bullard: Environmental Justice in the 21st Century
* 32: Celene Krauss: Women of Color on the Front Line
* Section Eleven: Southern and Indigenous Perspectives
* 33: Ramachandra Guha and Juan M. Alier: Environmentalism of the Poor
* 34: Vandana Shiva: On Poverty and Globalization
* 35: Winona LaDuke: Introduction and Conclusion to All My Relations
* 36: Fabienne Bayet: Overturning the Doctrine: Indigenous People and
Wilderness - Being Aboriginal in the Environmental Movement
* Part Five: Society, the State and the Environment
* Section Eleven: The Green Movement
* 37: Doug Torgerson: Farewell to the Green Movement? Political Action
and the Green Public Sphere
* 38: David Schlosberg: Networks and Mobile Arrangements:
Organizational Innovation in the U.S. Environmental Justice Movement
* 39: Paul Wapner: Politics Beyond the State: Environmental Activism
and World Civic Politics
* 40: Thomas Poguntke: Green Parties in National Governments: From
Protest to Acquiescence?
* Section Twelve: Ecological Democracy
* 41: Ulrich Beck: The Politics of the Risk Society
* 42: Andrew Dobson: Ecological Citizenship
* 43: Val Plumwood: Inequality, Ecojustice, and Ecological Rationality
* 44: John S. Dryzek: Political and Ecological Communication
* Section One: Limits and Survivalism
* 1: Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jorgen Randers, and William
H. Behrens III: The Limits to Growth
* 2: Garrett Hardin: The Tragedy of the Commons
* 3: Lester Brown: A Planet Under Stress
* Section Two: The Promethean Response
* 4: Julian L. Simon and Herman Kahn: Introduction to the Resourceful
Earth
* 5: Bjorn Lomborg: The Truth about the Environment
* 6: Tom Burke: Ten Pinches of Salt
* Part Two: Reformist Responses
* Section Three: Administrative Rationalism
* 8: Kai Lee: Appraising Adaptive Management
* 9: Charles Sabel, Archon Fung, and Bradley Karkkainen: Beyond
Backyard Environmentalism
* 10: Mary O'Brien: Goal: Replace Risk Assessment with Alternatives
Assessment
* Section Four: Liberal Democracy
* 11: Mark Sagoff: The Allocation and Distribution of Resources
* 12: Robert Paehlke: Democracy and Environmentalism
* 13: Marcel Wissenburg: Sustainability and the Limits of Liberalism
* 14: William P. Ophuls with A. Stephen Boyan, Jr.: The American
Political Economy II: The Non-Politics of Laissez Faire
* Part Three: Environment and Economics
* Section Five: Market Liberalism
* 15: Terry L. Anderson and Donald T. Leal: Rethinking the Way We Think
* 16.: Robert Stavins and Bradley Whitehead: Market-Based Environmental
Policies
* 17: Robert E. Goodin: Selling Environmental Indulgences
* Section Six: Sustainable Development
* 18: World Commission on Environment and Development: From One Earth
to One World
* 19: James Meadowcroft: "Sustainable Development: a New(ish) Idea for
a New Century?"
* 20: David Carruthers: "From Opposition to Orthodoxy: The Remaking of
Sustainable Development"
* Section Seven: Ecological Modernization
* 21: Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins: The Next Industrial
Revolution
* 22: John Barry: Ecological Modernization
* Part Four: Green Social Critiques
* Section Eight: Deep Ecology and Bioregionalism
* 23: Arne Naess: The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology
Movement: A Summary
* 24: Dave Foreman: Putting the Earth First
* 25: Jim Dodge: Living by Life: Some Bioregional Theory and Practice
* 26: Robyn Eckersley: "Ecocentric Discourses: Problems and Future
Prospects for Nature Advocacy"
* Section Nine: Social and Socialist Ecology
* 27: Murray Bookchin: Society and Ecology
* 28: Ynestra King: Toward an Ecological Feminism and a Feminist
Ecology
* 29: Joel Kovel: Ecosocialism
* Section Ten: Environmental Justice
* 30: First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit:
Principles of Environmental Justice
* 31: Robert Bullard: Environmental Justice in the 21st Century
* 32: Celene Krauss: Women of Color on the Front Line
* Section Eleven: Southern and Indigenous Perspectives
* 33: Ramachandra Guha and Juan M. Alier: Environmentalism of the Poor
* 34: Vandana Shiva: On Poverty and Globalization
* 35: Winona LaDuke: Introduction and Conclusion to All My Relations
* 36: Fabienne Bayet: Overturning the Doctrine: Indigenous People and
Wilderness - Being Aboriginal in the Environmental Movement
* Part Five: Society, the State and the Environment
* Section Eleven: The Green Movement
* 37: Doug Torgerson: Farewell to the Green Movement? Political Action
and the Green Public Sphere
* 38: David Schlosberg: Networks and Mobile Arrangements:
Organizational Innovation in the U.S. Environmental Justice Movement
* 39: Paul Wapner: Politics Beyond the State: Environmental Activism
and World Civic Politics
* 40: Thomas Poguntke: Green Parties in National Governments: From
Protest to Acquiescence?
* Section Twelve: Ecological Democracy
* 41: Ulrich Beck: The Politics of the Risk Society
* 42: Andrew Dobson: Ecological Citizenship
* 43: Val Plumwood: Inequality, Ecojustice, and Ecological Rationality
* 44: John S. Dryzek: Political and Ecological Communication







