Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third WorldThis revised and updated new edition retains the clear and powerful argument which characterized the original. It gives a valuable analysis of the theory and practice of sustainable development and suggests that at the start of the new millennium, we should think radically about the challenge of sustainability. Fully revised, this latest edition includes further reading, chapter outlines, chapter summaries and new discussion topics, and explores:
Offering a synthesis of theoretical ideas on sustainability based on the industrialized economies of the North and the practical, applied ideas in the South which tend to ignore 'First World' theory, this important text gives a clear discussion of theory and extensive practical insights drawn from Africa, Latin America and Asia. |
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Contents
The dilemma of sustainability | 1 |
Power without meaning? | 4 |
The discourse of development | 6 |
The challenge of poverty | 9 |
The challenge of environmental change | 12 |
one problem two cultures | 15 |
Outline of the book | 17 |
Summary | 19 |
The neoMalthusian narrative | 192 |
Overpopulation or intensification? | 193 |
Overgrazing and new range ecology | 197 |
Landscapes misread | 203 |
Sustainability and desertification policy | 206 |
The Convention to Combat Desertification | 209 |
Summary | 212 |
Further reading | 213 |
Further reading | 20 |
The origins of sustainable development | 22 |
Tropical environmentalism | 23 |
Nature preservation and the emergence of sustainable development | 25 |
Tropical ecology and sustainable development | 34 |
Ecology and the balance of nature | 37 |
Ecological managerialism | 40 |
Ecology and economic development | 42 |
Environmentalism population and global crisis | 45 |
Global science and sustainable development | 47 |
Summary | 51 |
Further reading | 52 |
The development of sustainable development | 54 |
The World Conservation Strategy | 59 |
Sustainable development in the World Conservation Strategy | 65 |
The Brundtland Report | 69 |
Caring for the Earth | 76 |
Summary | 78 |
Further reading | 79 |
Sustainable development the Rio machine | 80 |
The Rio Declaration on Environment and Development | 83 |
Agenda 21 | 86 |
The Forest Principles | 89 |
The Biodiversity Convention | 90 |
The Framework Convention on Climate Change | 92 |
Beyond Rio | 95 |
Summary | 99 |
Further reading | 100 |
Mainstream sustainable development | 102 |
Market environmentalism | 104 |
Ecological modernisation | 110 |
Environmental populism | 113 |
Natural capital and sustain ability | 117 |
Ecological economics and cultural capital | 123 |
Mechanisms for mainstream sustainable development | 126 |
Tradeoffs equity and complexity | 133 |
Summary | 136 |
Further reading | 137 |
Countercurrents in sustainable development | 139 |
NeoMalthusianism and sustainable development | 142 |
Green critiques of developmentalism | 148 |
Ecosocialism and sustainability | 153 |
Ecoanarchism | 159 |
Deep ecology and sustainability | 164 |
Ecofeminism and sustainability | 167 |
Sustainability and radical environmentalisni | 170 |
Summary | 172 |
Further reading | 173 |
Web sources | 174 |
Environment degradation and sustainability | 175 |
The desertification industry | 177 |
Desertification and climate change | 182 |
Desertification and the scientific imagination | 188 |
Web sources | 214 |
The environmental costs of development | 215 |
Planning water resource development | 217 |
The physical impacts of river control | 220 |
The ecological impacts of river control | 223 |
Dams people and floodplains | 228 |
Dams and resettlement | 233 |
The environmental impacts of irrigation | 240 |
Summary | 247 |
Further reading | 248 |
The political ecology of sustainability | 250 |
Political ecology | 251 |
Understanding tropical deforestation | 255 |
The political ecology of deforestation | 261 |
Forest clearance and forest people | 265 |
The political ecology of conservation | 270 |
The political ecology of famine | 277 |
Summary | 283 |
Further reading | 284 |
Sustainability and Risk Society | 285 |
Risk and environmental class | 287 |
Development and environmental pollution | 290 |
Manufacturing pollution | 295 |
The problem of pesticides | 299 |
Summary | 308 |
Web sources | 309 |
Mainstreaming risk | 310 |
The assessment of environmental and soeial impacts | 312 |
Environmental assessment in the Third World | 313 |
Environmental assessment in project appraisal | 318 |
Why projects fail | 320 |
Reforming impact assessment | 323 |
Aid agencies and environmental policy | 325 |
Summary | 332 |
Web sources | 333 |
Sustainable development from below | 334 |
Development planning and indigenous knowledge | 337 |
Community conservation | 341 |
Conservation with development | 343 |
Sustainability through consumption | 349 |
Rainforest management reform | 353 |
the example of river basin planning | 361 |
Summary | 365 |
Further reading | 366 |
Green development reformism or radicalism? | 368 |
Adapting for sustainability | 371 |
Resistance to development | 372 |
Protest for sustainability | 374 |
Sustainability and civil society | 379 |
reformism or radicalism? | 381 |
References | 384 |
436 | |
Other editions - View all
Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World W. M. Adams Limited preview - 2003 |