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In: Third world planning review: TWPR, Band 10, Heft 4, S. 431
ISSN: 2058-1076
In: (2003) 119 Law Quarterly Review 326
SSRN
In: Issues, Cases, and Methods in Biodiversity Conservation
Small farmers are often viewed as engaging in wasteful practices that wreak ecological havoc. Exploring Agrodiversity sets the record straight: Small farmers are in fact ingenious and inventive and engage in a diverse range of land-management strategies, many of them resourcefully geared toward conserving resources, especially soil. They have shown considerable resilience in the face of major onslaughts against their way of life by outsiders and government.Using case studies from Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Pacific, this book provides in-depth analysis of agricultural diversity and ex
In: Routledge Handbook of Russian Politics and Society
In: Pacific affairs, Band 42, Heft 3, S. 416
ISSN: 0030-851X
In: Journal of Public Health Policy
By recognizing the structural causes of health and illness, public health has often been associated with values of compassion and solidarity, and a relational understanding of human agency. Rather than supporting the consistent integration and application of these insights, however, public health is now sometimes invoked more as a rhetorical move, used to construct issues as simple questions of neoliberal scientistic rationalism. Public health practitioners must reckon, therefore, with how the field can be discursively deployed in the public square, for multiple divergent political ends. If public health is always positioned as a value-neutral and detached scientific approach to addressing complex subjects, from drug use to pandemics, it not only fails to connect with the arguments of its critics, but further divorces what was once called the public health 'movement' from the strong and progressive political and theoretical positions it was founded upon and should advocate for today.
In: The journal of development studies: JDS, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 126
ISSN: 0022-0388
In: The journal of development studies: JDS, Band 25, Heft Oct 88
ISSN: 0022-0388
Reviews 8 books. Covers energy, food and land use, and also discusses carbon dioxide omissions and disasters such as Bhopal and Chernobyl. (SJO)
In: The journal of development studies: JDS, Band 25, Heft 1, S. 126-135
ISSN: 0022-0388
A review essay on books by: the World Commission on Environment & Development, Our Common Future (Oxford: Oxford U Press, 1987); Michael Redclift, Sustainable Development: Exploring the Contradictions (London: Methuen, 1987); Charles E. Ziegler, Environmental Policy in the USSR (London: Frances Pinter, 1987); Bernhard Glaeser (Ed), Learning from China?: Development and Environment in Third World Countries (London: Allen & Unwin, 1987); Vaclav Smil, Energy, Food, Environment: Realities, Myths, Options (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987); Essam El-Hinnawi & Manzur H. Hashimi, The State of the Environment (London: Butterworths, for the UN Environment Programme, 1987); Ted J. Davis & Isabelle A. Schirmer (Eds), Sustainability Issues in Agricultural Development: Proceedings of the Seventh Agriculture Sector Symposium (Washington, DC: World Bank, 1987); & Wolf Donner, Land Use and Environment in Indonesia (London: C. Hurst & Co. in association with the Instit of Asian Affairs, Hamburg, 1987 [see listings in IRPSPPD No. 19). These works explore the relationship between development & the environment. Our Common Future (also known as the Brundtland Report) is a political document rather than a scientific treatise on the world's problems; its strength lies in its detailed proposals for instructional & legal change, nationally & internationally. Redclift attempts but fails to provide a definition of sustainable development; his analysis of development assumptions & practice is not balanced by any clear understanding of the issues involved, even to a minimal level. Environmental Policy in the USSR examines how environmental issues enter policy, given both the Marxist refusal to admit natural limitations & the state corporatism that determines what interest representation is permitted to arise. Learning from China? focuses on mismanagement of the land, arguing that successes in such areas as integrated pest management, & the energy with which problems are being tackled with limited resources may be of greater benefit in the long run. Smil closely examines the principal issues raised by the environmental movement since the late 1960s; his retrospective analysis of the predictions of global energy crisis & food shortage made in the 1970s is devastating, & is soundly based on well-researched data. The State of the Environment covers standard UN Environment Program ground, including all the issues treated in the Brundtland Report & by Smil. Davis & Schirmer illustrate the gap between economic & ecological thinking: consideration of basic issues in land management is clearly far removed from the rarefied atmosphere of the World Bank. Donner concentrates mainly on the problem of soil erosion in upland areas of Java, providing good but biased coverage of the evidence. In summary, all these authors support development & all seek ways to sustain & improve the welfare of growing numbers of people while reversing the trend toward environmental deterioration, but there is no agreement on how this is to be done. 16 References. F. S. J. Ledgister
In: The journal of development studies, Band 25, Heft 1, S. 126-135
ISSN: 1743-9140
In: American political science review, Band 71, Heft 3, S. 1214-1215
ISSN: 1537-5943
In: Routledge library editions v. 99
In: Routledge library editions. Development vol. 99
In: Routledge Library Editions: Development Ser.
In: The Jossey-Bass higher and adult education series
Designed as an alternative introduction to the field, covering the traditional topics of adult learning, adult development, program planning, training, teaching, and research
World Affairs Online
In: Regional development dialogue: RDD ; an international journal focusing on Third World development problems, Band 11, Heft 4, S. 54-71
ISSN: 0250-6505