Environmental Management: Principles and practice
BOX 8.4 Broad groupings of greens (avoiding deep and shallow
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BOX 8.4 Broad groupings of greens (avoiding deep and shallow
categorization) Conservationists/traditionalists heirs to the nineteenth-century romantic liberal rejection of industry and materialism. Less interested in drastic change of attitudes and lifestyle than some greens. Includes traditional conservationists like members of the UK Royal Society for the Protection of Birds or the Council for the Protection of Rural England and in the USA of the National Audubon Society or Sierra Club. Reformists no particular tradition, midway between the previous and following groupings. Tend to be single-issue groups with problem-orientated aims, for example: a group opposed to construction of a new airport or road or rail route. Formal political parties and political groupings e.g. Die Grunen, UK Green Party, Greens in the European Parliament, SERA, etc. These produce regularly revised manifestos of wide-ranging policies. Green thinking has also been incorporated into the policies of a range of political institutions and has prompted new perspectives. Academic responses to green issues marxist/structuralist and market (mainstream) economics tend to be hostile or dismissive of many green paradigms (including New Economics and some aspects of sustainable development). Radical environmentalists draw ideas from sources like Kropotkin, Henry Thoreau, Theodor Roszak, Aldo Leopold, Godwin, etc. Recognize need for considerable change of attitudes and lifestyles because environmental problems arise. They seek to alter other people’s outlook, the economic system, social inequalities, etc. Often holistic, multi- issue approach. Considerable range, from moderates like Friends of the Earth to extremists like Earth First! who espouse militant tactics like ‘ecotage’ (sabotage of things and people they see as a threat to the environment), ‘ecovangelists’ (who profess reverence for environment, not just stewardship) and even shamanists. (A schism has opened between practical and spiritual factions of Earth First!) Eco-feminists believe women need to organize to achieve sustainable development and blame male-centred approaches to development rather than anthropocentric approaches, so can be hostile to deep ecology (see chapter 12). ENVIRONMENTALISM AND SOCIAL SCIENCE 165 Cornucopians place faith in technology and science as a solution for environment and development problems (e.g. Fuller, 1969). Rational seek to use science, social science and technology with care to achieve sustainable development. For example, non-cornucopian techno-fixers (e.g. work by the Rocky Mountain Institute— http://www.rmi.org/newsletter/97fwn/index.html). Mystics a wide diversity, who turn to their inner voices for inspiration and guidance. This grouping would include those who derive their inspiration from Teilhard de Chardin, Buckminster Fuller, Taoism, Zen and paganism. The label ‘New Age’ was coined in the late 1960s by journalists to incorporate a hotchpotch of greens who rely on astrology, the occult, Gaianism, non-mainstream religions, etc., as a guide to their relationship with the environment—in effect those with a postmodern spiritualist worldview. Many New Age supporters look towards the change from the present solar age of Pisces to Aquarius early next century as a moment of opportunity and possibly crisis (Henderson, 1981b). Certainly, there are greens who might be dismissed as ‘cranky’. Sources: Porritt (1984:4–5); Weston (1986:20); Taylor (1991) management; pastoral development and range management; involvement of indigenous peoples in conservation; fisheries management and conservation; human resources management. Sociologists have studied relationships between society and the environment (Albrecht and Murdock, 1986; Yearley, 1991). Various social science disciplines focus on behavioural fields (risk perception, hazard avoidance, consumerism, property rights, etc.) (Shankar, 1986). Historians have explored past attitudes and approaches to environment; political studies specialists and economists consider the politics and economics of environmental usage; theologians and philosophers explore the human—environment relationship. Anthropology and human resources management is increasingly used to inform the environmental manager about human behaviour, attitudes and beliefs, institutions and organizational capacity (Wehrmeyer, 1996). Environmental management has also been aided by the development of participatory research and management, monitoring and appraisal (Burton et al., 1986; Brokensha, 1987; Montgomery, 1990a) (see chapter 13). Anthropologists have been less aloof from environmental studies than sociologists, possibly because of their involvement with indigenous peoples and livelihood strategies and with archaeologists, palaeoecologists and ecologists helping to reconstruct past scenarios. Anthropological input has been especially strong in the fields of relocation and resettlement, pre- development appraisal, SIA, conservation area management planning, and in studies of resource use, hazard perception and survival strategies adopted by land users (Jull, 1994; Blackburn and Anderson, 1995). Ethnobotany involves anthropologists and ethnographers assessing indigenous peoples’ use of plant and animal resources with the hope of identifying useful crops, pharmaceuticals, etc. Anthropologists have CHAPTER EIGHT 166 also played a role in helping governments and environmental managers understand and reach working arrangements with indigenous peoples, and in assessing social and cultural impacts of development on them (Snipp, 1986; Dale, 1992). Much has been published on the potential contributions of social science to environmental management, most from social scientists, rather than from environmental scientists (Freudenburg, 1989; Herberlein, 1989). Some natural scientists are sceptical, even hostile, to these contributions. However, at the very least they act as catalyst where progress might otherwise have been slow. Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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