Environmental Management: Principles and practice
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Adaptive environmental management 253 ♦ GIS and environmental management 253 ♦ Expert systems and environmental management
- Local, community, regional and sectoral environmental management 254 ♦ The state and environmental management 255
- Strategic environmental management 257 ♦ Stance and environmental management 258 ♦ Political ecology approach to environmental
Recommended reading
Journals which publish articles on participation in environmental management Alternatives: Perspectives on Society, Technology and Environment Community Development Journal Development & Change Ecofeminism Environmental Ethics Feminist Studies Journal of Peasant Studies Society & Natural Resources Technology and Environment 249 C h a p t e r 1 3 Environmental management approaches ♦ Adaptive environmental management 253 ♦ GIS and environmental management 253 ♦ Expert systems and environmental management 253 ♦ Decision support for environmental management 254 ♦ Systems or network approaches 254 ♦ Local, community, regional and sectoral environmental management 254 ♦ The state and environmental management 255 ♦ Transboundary and global environmental management 255 ♦ Integrated environmental management 256 ♦ Strategic environmental management 257 ♦ Stance and environmental management 258 ♦ Political ecology approach to environmental management 259 ♦ Political economy approach to environmental management 259 ♦ Human ecology approach to environmental management 260 ♦ The best approach? 260 ♦ Recommended reading 260 250 Environmental management involves the application of a mixture of objective scientific and more subjective, often qualitative approaches. It is a blend of policy making and planning, with greater implementation, control and management; but it still does not have a well-defined, widely adopted framework to shape its application, although there are guides to policy and procedures, and standards and systems—like ISO 14001 (Croner Publications Ltd, 1997). Each situation faced by an environmental manager is to some extent unique. The approach adopted reflects the attitudes of those involved, the particular situation, time and funding available, and many other factors. Even synthesizing information is often hindered by the sheer volume of material. Although ‘environmental management’ is sometimes little more than a catch- phrase, when seriously undertaken it is a process of decision-making about the allocation of natural and artificial resources that will make optimum use of the environment to satisfy at least basic human needs for an indefinite period of time and, where possible, to improve environmental quality. Newson (1992:259) noted that a large part of environmental management was ‘decision-making under uncertainty’. There is often more than one route to a goal: perhaps one is the best all- round solution, one the best practical, one is that favoured by the government, another is favoured by a company—the environmental manager generally tries to pursue the best all-round solution. Another core role of environmental management is environmental arbitration. This can be attempted by an individual acting as a ‘czar’, by a democratic body, or through ‘green anarchy’. Much of what has just been said is difficult to separate from environmental planning. In the past planners often neglected environmental issues, were insufficiently aware of the dynamic nature of Earth processes, and failed to identify natural limits, hazards and potential. Today it is hard to comprehend that before the 1970s bodies like the World Bank or the United Nations had few, if any, established environmental advisors, and that often environmental quality was seen as an optional extra by teams of decision makers dominated by economists and lawyers. Planners nowadays are much more aware of environmental issues, and differ from environmental managers mainly in that they are more concerned with forward decision making. Environmental planning might be defined as efforts to strike a balance between resource use and the environment, the primary objective of planning being to make decisions about the use of resources. Landscape planning has a long tradition and runs parallel with environmental management, focusing on aesthetic issues (Ashworth and Kivell, 1989; Foder and Walker, 1994; Kivell et al., 1988). An important aspect of environmental planning which overlaps with environmental management is Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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