Environmental Management: Principles and practice
BOX 1.2 Some definitions of sustainable development
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
BOX 1.2 Some definitions of sustainable development
♦ Environmental care ‘married’ to development. ♦ Improving the quality of human life while living within the carrying capacity of supporting ecosystems. ♦ Development based on the principle of inter-generational (i.e. bequeathing the same or improved resource endowment to the future that has been inherited), inter-species and inter-group equity. ♦ Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. ♦ An environmental ‘handrail’ to guide development. ♦ A change in consumption patterns towards more benign products, and a shift in investment patterns towards augmenting environmental capital. ♦ A process that seeks to make manifest a higher standard of living (however interpreted) for human beings…that recognizes this cannot be achieved at the expense of environmental integrity. Source: Barrow, 1995b:372 public interest in the environment. It also spread the messages that global environmental management was needed; and that without a reduction of poverty ecosystem damage would be difficult to counter. Environmental management is thus clearly interrelated with socioeconomic development. Twenty years after the World Conservation Strategy the same three bodies published Caring for the Earth (IUCN, UNEP and WWF, 1991), which proposed principles intended to help move from theory to practice. Sustainable development was in part generated by fears that the materially comfortable way of life enjoyed in some countries probably cannot be maintained on anything like a global scale with likely population growth (Pirages, 1994). As a concept, sustainable development draws upon two, often opposed, intellectual traditions: one concerned with the limits nature presents to humans, the other with the potential for human material development (Redclift, 1987:199; Barrow, 1995b). Interpretation varies a lot: ♦ Some see it as a quest for harmony between humans and their environment; ♦ Some fail to accept that in a finite world there cannot be unlimited growth; ♦ Some feel there can be a shift to less environmentally damaging improvements in the quality of human life; ♦ Some hope technology will allow limits to be stretched. There are too many situations where naive, ill-thought-out appeals for sustainable development are made. This harms the concept, risking its dismissal by the public and decision makers as shallow, unworkable, and so on. Worse, there are cases where sustainable development is being used as rhetoric or cunning deceit to INTRODUCTION 9 mislead people. Some fear calls for sustainable development may be a way of sidestepping more radical socioeconomic reform. Environmental management must police the use of the concept to prevent its misuse for propaganda or it will become devalued (genetic engineering is subject to similar misleading propaganda which could make its responsible use difficult if the public loses trust). ‘Mainstream’ sustainable development typically urges: ♦ the maintenance of ecological integrity; ♦ the integration of environmental care and development; ♦ the adoption of an internationalist (North-South interdependence) stance; ♦ the satisfaction of at least basic, human needs for all; ♦ ‘utilitarian conservation’; ♦ concern for inter-generational, inter-group and inter-species equity; ♦ the application of science, technology and environmental knowledge to world development; ♦ the acceptance of some economic growth (within limits); ♦ the adoption of a long-term view. The question is whether sustainable development is going to act just as a guiding principle (which in itself is valuable) or whether it generates practical strategies that improve human well-being and prevent environmental degradation. It is not only misuse of sustainable development language by the media, politicians, activists and commerce that poses a problem: some academics and environmental managers are careless. Care is needed to ensure that sustainable development is a realistic objective based on workable strategy. Environmental problems often do not have a single simple solution. Their solution presents alternatives and challenges; environmental management therefore faces dilemmas (Bennett, 1992:5–9): (1) Ethical dilemmas—e.g. what to conserve—Inuit hunters or whales? (2) Efficiency dilemmas—e.g. how much environmental damage is acceptable? (3) Equity dilemmas—e.g. who benefits from environmental management decisions, and who pays? (4) Liberty dilemmas—e.g. to what degree must people be restricted to protect the environment? (5) Uncertainty dilemmas—e.g. how to choose a course of action without adequate knowledge or data? (6) Evaluation dilemmas— e.g. how to compare different effects of various options or actions? Human beings often respond to perceived crisis, rather than carefully assessing the situation and acting to prevent problems. With sustainable development as a central goal, crisis management is a dangerous practice, for, once manifest, problems may not be easily solved and could jeopardize sustainability. The solution is to adopt the precautionary principle (see chapter 3 for further discussion) (Bodansky, 1991; Costanza and Cornwell, 1992; O’Riordan and Cameron, 1995; Francis, 1996). The precautionary principle shifts the burden of proof that a proposal is safe from the ‘victim’ to the ‘developer’ (O’Riordan, 1995:8–10). It also makes sense because environmental management often deals with inadequate data, may have to rely on modelling that is deficient, and has to cope with issues that are complex and not fully understood. CHAPTER ONE 10 Decision making is often affected by ‘polarized perceptions’ (ideas based more on stakeholders’ prejudice, misconception or greed than objectivity) (Baarschers, 1996). Even if the environmental manager is objective, powerful special-interest groups (e.g. the rich; government ministers; lobby groups; non-governmental organizations (NGOs), industry, the military) may not be. Problems are often caused by sovereignty or strategic arguments which threaten common-sense decisions and make transboundary issues difficult to resolve. The environmental manager must manipulate these forces, trading off stakeholders’ desires against protecting the environment. Little remains fixed: demands from various stakeholders alter, the environment changes, public attitudes shift, human capabilities vary—so environmental management must be flexible, adaptive and perceptive (Holling, 1978). Co-ordination of environment and development requires awareness of environmental and human limits, potential and risks or hazards. For most of human history worries have mainly been caused by the acquisition of inputs (food, water, fuel, etc.); over the last century have appeared added problems over outputs (pollution and waste). Environmental problems are commonly caused by human behaviour, notably consumerism; another challenge is the growing human population; another is poverty. Somehow, environmental management has to separate what is real from vague abstractions and fashionable attitudes (Wisner, 1990). It is widely argued that environmental management must address poverty and encourage the use of aid to prevent people degrading their surroundings. These issues were debated, but by no means resolved, at the 1992 Earth Summit, and most environmental managers accept that a component of any strategy for sustainable development is the satisfaction of basic human needs. Environmental managers are increasingly likely to face: ♦ an unproven threat; ♦ transboundary or global challenges; ♦ problems demanding rapid decisions; ♦ an increasing exchange of information with NGOs via the Internet and various other networks. This means that environmental managers must keep abreast of the activities of many bodies (it also offers possibilities for alliances, and data gathering from different sources). Modern science has traditionally adopted a reductionist approach, with disciplinary specialists studying components of a problem and avoiding any judgement or advice to managers or planners before there is adequate proof. Environmental managers have to deal with uncertainty and complex problems which often cannot afford to wait long enough for proof to be obtained. Reductionist approaches may be too slow when there is pressure to give advice (Funtowicz and Ravetz, 1991). Something may have the potential to cause serious, possibly irreversible problems unless prompt action is taken but it has not actually been proved to be a threat (the classic case being global warming). Environmental management may have to rely on modelling, simulation and forecasts rather than factual predictions—it may be necessary to resort to advocacy without proof, and identify the agency and the mechanism whereby advocacy can be pursued (Redclift, 1984:44). INTRODUCTION 11 The last few decades have seen the recognition of more and more transboundary or global threats. However, there have been helpful developments: environmental management can now draw on improved knowledge of the structure and function of the environment, and of human institution-building, group interaction and perceptions, and new tools are available which improve monitoring, data gathering, impact assessment, information processing, decision making and communication. Though environmental managers face growing problems, they have more powerful aids to draw upon. These developments mean it is possible for environmental management to move away from corrective to anticipatory approaches (adopting the precautionary principle). Who are environmental managers? A wide range of bodies professionals are involved in environmental management: government agencies (e.g. the European Environmental Agency), international bodies and aid organizations (like the UNEP, FAO, World Bank, USAID, etc.), research institutes (e.g. the Worldwatch Institute, IIED, etc.), NGOs (e.g. WWF, IUCN, Friends of the Earth, etc.); the public (see Box 1.2). Identifying a single environmental manager in a given situation may be like trying to identify who built a Boeing 747 aircraft. What motivates environmental management? One or more of the following may lead to its adoption: ♦ Pragmatic reasons—fear or common sense makes people or administrators seek to avoid a problem. ♦ Desire to save costs—it may be cheaper to avoid problems or counter them than suffer the consequences (pollution, litigation, etc.). There may also be advantages in waste recovery, energy conservation, and maintaining environmental quality. ♦ Compliance—individuals, local government, companies, states, etc., may be required by laws, national or international agreement to care for the environment. ♦ Shift in ethics—research, the media, individuals or groups of activists may trigger new attitudes, agreements or laws. ♦ Macro-economics—promotion of environmental management may lead to economic expansion: a market for pollution control equipment, use of recovered waste, more secure and efficient energy and raw materials supply; or there may be advantages in ‘internalizing externalities’ (see pareto optimum discussion in chapter 5). Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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