Environmental Management: Principles and practice
♦ Sustainable development and coping with
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
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- The politics and ethics to support environmental management 267 ♦ Concluding note 270 ♦ Recommended reading 272
- Key challenges and new supports
262
♦ Sustainable development and coping with global environmental change 263 ♦ The 1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development, Rio de Janeiro, Agenda 21, and follow-up meetings 265 ♦ Post-Cold War environmental management 266 ♦ The politics and ethics to support environmental management 267 ♦ Concluding note 270 ♦ Recommended reading 272 262 ‘We have to understand that we can never control Nature. Nature’s systems are far, far too complex. But we can manage them’ (Charles Secrett, Director, Friends of the Earth: The Times, 28 April 1998:8). Key challenges and new supports Some of the problems faced by environmental managers are reasonably clear: population increase, pollution, urbanization, and rising consumption (consumerism) and globalization (Kiely and Marfleet, 1998). A consequence of some of these are: possible greenhouse warming, worsening soil degradation, and loss of biodiversity. For some of these problems remedial action has been much too limited, and necessary future responses may have to be ‘quick and dirty’ with no time to wait for adequate data, better technology, change of public opinion and effective legislation. It is fair to say that environmental management is increasingly running-on-the-spot, trying to keep up with growing environmental problems, and some fear that cumulative/ synergistic problems may be emerging to make it even more difficult. North (1995: 105) warned of ‘a blizzard of cliché and prejudice’ surrounding environmental challenges. However, he was able to present a rational, often optimistic and readable assessment of the challenges being faced by environmental management. North felt that, though the world may have to support 10 billion people within a couple of generations, it might be possible to do so and still care for the natural world. Not all challenges faced by environmental management are about human survival and conservation of biodiversity. Many concern aesthetics. For example, windfarms make sense as a means of supplying clean sustainable electricity, but siting them in countries like the UK is proving controversial. Often environmental management will be invoked to give scientific respectability to government or public preferences, rather than to ensure sound research and rational choice (North, 1995:119). There is a need to better integrate physical and social sciences, and to get a more problem-oriented problem-solving form of environmental science (de Groot, 1992, has discussed such issues). Some of these issue are familiar to geographers, and perhaps human geography and environmental management can be usefully linked. Both environmental management and geography stress the importance of multidisciplinarity or interdisciplinarity. There are difficulties in seeking this—Marion (1996) warned of ‘infoglut’, the flood of data that has to be constantly sifted and made sense of. To be effective, environmental management must have mastery of ‘infoglut’ and effectively develop a clear overview of development scenarios. Environmental management can draw upon palaeoecologist and historian to ‘backcast’, i.e. from an understanding of past events obtain warning of possible future THE WAY AHEAD 263 challenges and of how environments and people might respond to various changes in the light of past responses. Environmental managers might benefit from two popular books which also use backcasting to try explain the present and suggest future situations: Diamond (1997) provided an interesting insight into how human fortunes might be affected by environmental factors and past history; and Kennedy (1993) tried to produce an objective assessment of likely future scenarios using the approach of a historian. Environmental managers must have a broad and long-term view, which can bring them into contact with the field of futures study and ‘futurists’. These may often (if not always) be speculative, but they provide ideas, warnings, and prompt contingency planning (e.g. futures debates in the 1960s and 1970s helped prompt concern for limits and the concept of sustainable development). Environmental management must deal with a diversity of stakeholders— ministries, NGOs, various groups among the public, international agencies, etc. That demands an ability to cope with complexity and conflicting demands. Environmental management must not be pursued in isolation from issues like growing poverty, resource degradation, etc. There has been progress in understanding and monitoring the world’s structure and function, the development of environmental management standards and systems, accessible computing systems, tools like remote sensing, automatic instrumentation and GIS which permit much better data gathering, information storage, retrieval and processing. The tools used for risk, hazard and impact assessment have also improved a lot since the 1970s. The improvement and spread of telecommunications, especially the Internet, makes contact between the environmentally concerned easier and cheaper, and should help prevent planners, governments or special-interest groups from hindering dissemination of information to the public, NGOs and various other bodies. The Internet has made it easier for people to blow the whistle on environmentally ill-advised activities, share information and promote environmental issues. Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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