The World Summit on Sustainable Development: The Johannesburg ConferenceL. Hens, Bhaskar Nath Springer Science & Business Media, 2006 M02 28 - 422 pages The Johannesburg Earth Summit, which took place in the summer of 2002, confirmed the irreversible nature of the process that is founded upon the concept of Sustainable Development initially given form at Rio de Janeiro ten years earlier. This process is to be welcomed, while at the same time recognising the tremendous work that has taken place in converting this concept into a more concrete vision. The Sustainable Development concept relates to every human activity, covering the social, economic and ecological dimensions, which are often in conflict. Consequently, it is most important to include in research programmes some thought of the way people behave. In theory, the general elements of this inclusion are relatively easily defined. However, assessing the effects of one or another decision on all the interactions between the social, economic and ecological dimensions involves significant difficulties. All the more since we have to recognise, in all modesty, that humanity has not always excelled in the art of forward studies. In fact, the Precautionary Principle was introduced partly as a reaction to the sometimes blind confidence in technology and logic (even if it is sometimes invoked in an exaggerated manner). Nevertheless, the duty to act for the sake of present and future generations is pressing. Throughout history mankind has had to adapt and to innovate. Now, at st the beginning of the 21 century the urgent need for such adaptations is obvious. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 61
Page xxvi
... patterns of production and consumption, and that poverty eradication is proving to be an apparently intractable challenge. Globalisation, and a credible and objective evaluation of its costs and benefits, is proving to be difficult too ...
... patterns of production and consumption, and that poverty eradication is proving to be an apparently intractable challenge. Globalisation, and a credible and objective evaluation of its costs and benefits, is proving to be difficult too ...
Page xxvii
... patterns. And second, this exercise identifies, or defines more precisely, the gaps in scientific information which must be filled in order for policy-makers to formulate more effective policies for SD. Indeed, filling such information ...
... patterns. And second, this exercise identifies, or defines more precisely, the gaps in scientific information which must be filled in order for policy-makers to formulate more effective policies for SD. Indeed, filling such information ...
Page 12
... patterns , human settlements , waste , finance and trade , protection of the atmosphere , energy and transport , oceans and seas , tourism and water . PrepCom 2 was held during 28 January and 8 February 2002 , again in New York . Impact ...
... patterns , human settlements , waste , finance and trade , protection of the atmosphere , energy and transport , oceans and seas , tourism and water . PrepCom 2 was held during 28 January and 8 February 2002 , again in New York . Impact ...
Page 13
... patterns of production and consumption ; inadequate attention to the core issues of water , energy , health , agriculture and biodiversity ( collectively known by the acronym WEHAB ) ; coherent policies on finance , trade , investment ...
... patterns of production and consumption ; inadequate attention to the core issues of water , energy , health , agriculture and biodiversity ( collectively known by the acronym WEHAB ) ; coherent policies on finance , trade , investment ...
Page 17
... patterns of production and consumption, natural resource base, and social and economic development • The North–South divide • Continuing environmental degradation • Globalisation as a challenge • Credibility of democratic ...
... patterns of production and consumption, natural resource base, and social and economic development • The North–South divide • Continuing environmental degradation • Globalisation as a challenge • Credibility of democratic ...
Contents
1 | |
POVERTY REDUCTION AND SUSTAINABLE | 35 |
References | 53 |
WATER FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT | 91 |
ENERGY AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT | 112 |
MANAGEMENT OF CHEMICALS FOR SUSTAINABLE | 135 |
A NECESSITY FOR SUSTAINABLE | 151 |
F GHINA | 183 |
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT A NEW CHALLENGE | 210 |
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND THE ROLE | 241 |
SCIENCE RESEARCH KNOWLEDGE | 299 |
GOVERNANCE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT | 318 |
PARTNERSHIPS | 347 |
IS MULTILATERALISM THE FUTURE? SUSTAINABLE | 373 |
List | 395 |
Index | 403 |
Other editions - View all
The World Summit on Sustainable Development: The Johannesburg Conference L. Hens,Bhaskar Nath Limited preview - 2005 |
The World Summit on Sustainable Development: The Johannesburg Conference L. Hens,Bhaskar Nath No preview available - 2010 |
The World Summit on Sustainable Development: The Johannesburg Conference L. Hens,Bhaskar Nath No preview available - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
achieve action Africa Agenda 21 assessment biodiversity capacity building chapter chemicals civil society climate change Commission on Sustainable commitments concept Conference consumption patterns Convention developing countries diseases economic ecosystems energy Environment and Development framework governance groups growth human impact implementation of Agenda important increase industry initiatives institutions investment islands issues Johannesburg Declaration Johannesburg Plan Johannesburg Summit Kyoto Protocol major Maldives Millennium Development Goals multi-stakeholder natural resources NGOs organisations participation partnerships for sustainable Persistent Organic Pollutants pfsds Plan of Implementation pollution population principles problems production and consumption Programme promote protection reduce reefs regional Report responsibility risk role sanitation sector SIDS social stakeholders Stockholm Stockholm Convention strategies Summit on Sustainable sustainable consumption sustainable development sustainable production targets trade UNCSD UNDP UNEP United Nations unsustainable vulnerable World Bank World Summit WSSD