The Resilient Organization
In: Public management review, Volume 15, Issue 3, p. 429-445
ISSN: 1471-9045
5 results
Sort by:
In: Public management review, Volume 15, Issue 3, p. 429-445
ISSN: 1471-9045
In: Public management review, Volume 15, Issue 3, p. 429-445
ISSN: 1471-9037
In: Global environmental politics, Volume 4, Issue 4, p. 36-53
ISSN: 1526-3800
Opposition to globalization by environmentalists tends to fall into two camps: a so-called "green" counternarrative & an "ecological" one. The green counternarrative assumes that we have already witnessed sufficient harm done to the environment due to globalization & thus prescribes taking action now to oppose further globalizing forces. It is confident in its knowledge about the causes of environmental degradation as they relate to globalization & certain in its wholesale opposition to globalization. In contrast, the ecological counternarrative is less certain about globalization's record of environmental harm but worries about future threats given the scale & intensity of globalization's increasing reach. Rather than call for immediate action & wholesale opposition, it seeks further research to identify -- & specific policy initiatives to avoid -- potentially massive but as yet unknown effects of globalization on the environment. Policy analysts opposing globalization are caught between the counternarratives & often subscribe to elements of each. The challenge is to find another, more compelling counternarrative in which real-time environmental harm can be treated more seriously than it is in either of the two primary counterparts. 27 References. Adapted from the source document.
In: Knowledge, technology and policy: an international quarterly, Volume 14, Issue 4, p. 94-108
ISSN: 1874-6314
In: The Economics of Information Security and Privacy, p. 265-300