Environmental Management: Principles and practice
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
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- Existing users 236 ♦ Groups seeking change 239 ♦ Groups with little control 239 ♦ The public 244
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Journals which publish articles on environmental management of waste and pollution Ambio Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology Atmospheric Environment Biogeochemistry Environment and Planning (C) Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Environmental Pollution Environmental Science and Technology Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta International Journal of Environment and Pollution Journal of Cleaner Production Journal of Environmental Quality Journal of Environmental Management Journal of the Water Pollution Control Federation Science Land Degradation & Development Science of the Total Environment Waste Management Water Air and Soil Pollution World Wastes 235 C h a p t e r 1 2 Participants in environmental management ♦ Existing users 236 ♦ Groups seeking change 239 ♦ Groups with little control 239 ♦ The public 244 ♦ Facilitators 245 ♦ Controllers 246 ♦ NGOs 247 ♦ Recommended reading 248 236 This chapter explores the groups involved in environmental management. Adams (1990) identified two groups involved in environment and development: ‘the blind’ and ‘the dumb’. The ‘dumb’ may include people or governments who are uninformed of the implications of development, or are unable adequately to voice their views and affect change. The ‘blind’ may include consultants, scientists, economists, bankers, those bent on riches or blinkered by concern for sovereignty, religion, or national security. The ‘dumb’ are often marginalized people, victims of disaster or unrest, underclasses, or simply those without enough influence or power to realize what the ‘blind’ are doing and to lobby them to act when change is needed. The environmental manager has to try to disseminate information to the ‘dumb’, and possibly protect or empower them and, if need be, inform and control the ‘blind’. Modern development has focused on yield increase, often for the benefit of individuals or special-interest groups. It is only in the last few decades that appropriateness, sustainability, equity, participation and security have also started to become goals. Traditional resource users often seek sustainability, equity and security, and much can often be learnt from them. Before the 1970s only a minority of development agencies asked whether a proposal was ‘appropriate’, or made any effort to seek indigenous knowledge, or involve local people in decision making and management. In any given environmental management situation there are likely to be a number of different perspectives, and hence various possible responses. The environmental manager has to grasp the sum total of perspectives and try to avoid conflicts between Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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