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Regional Environmental Policies, Conservation Policies, Environmental Conservation & Protection Policy, Environmental Conservation & Protection of Natural Resources, Human Ecology
After Earth Day: Continuing the Conservation Effort by Max Oelschlaeger β€” book cover

After Earth Day: Continuing the Conservation Effort

by Max Oelschlaeger
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Overview

After Earth Day celebrates the spirit of Earth Day as exemplifying the sustained commitments of many different people and organizations to a common cultural effort:conservation itself. As the essays show, conservation depends upon the continuing efforts of everyone: people in business, in the university, in science and technology, and citizens in every community who act locally but think globally. Essays cover conservation politics, environmental science, economics and the corporation, environmental philosophy and religion written by some of North America's leading environmental thinkers: Susan Bratton, Elinor Gadon, Pete A. Y. Gunter, Eugene Hargrove, Dolores LaChapelle, Max Oelschlaeger, Robert Paehlke, George Sessions

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

This collection of 16 often-stimulating essays on the polities, science and philosophy of conservation grew out of a 1991 conference held at the University of North Texas. Political scientist Robert Paehlke offers a savvy overview, explaining how environmentalists have shifted from seeking regulations to achieving sustainability and global change. Zoologist Neil Evernden describes how current metaphorical debates about ecology recycle ideas from turn-of-the-century conservationists Gifford Pinchot, who viewed nature as an object for manipulation, and John Muir, who respected nature as an independent entity. Essays by corporate contributors on recycling and the future of energy are thin, but economist Michael L. Nieswiadomy deftly describes economic approaches to resource conservation, including innovative solutions such as a deposit-refund system for toxic-waste disposal. Philosopher Michael Zimmerman provocatively warns that radical ecologists might foster a kind of ecofascism. Oelsehlaeger (The Idea of Wilderness) closes the book by suggesting that, in our current culture, religion is fundamental to solving ecological crises. (Sept.)

Booknews

Inaugurating a new series from the U. of North Texas Press is this collection of essays, originally delivered at a conference held at the U. of North Texas in April 1991. The essays are gathered into five sections: conservation politics; environmental science today and tomorrow; conservation, economics, and the corporate effort; environmental philosophy; and religion and conservation. Distributed by Texas A&M U. Press. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
June 15, 2006
Publisher
Texas A & M University Press
Pages
241
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780929398440

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