Reviews three broad perspectives on our relationship with Nature,and the environmental strategies which flow from them, two of which are identified with the Green movement. Argues that the first, which opposes economic growth and industrialism, is profoundly misguided though well‐intentioned and with wide appeal. By virtue of its association with the core ideal of a homeostatic relationship between human society and Nature, it is inextricably linked with the second perspective: a misanthropic one, which treats humanity itself as the cause of environmental problems and implies totalitarian solutions to these. The third perspective is a pragmatic one. It entails imaginative policy responses which can include regulation and taxation, but must, as in the issuing of tradeable permits, be tailored to act in symbiosis with market mechanisms.
Article navigation
1 February 1992
This article was originally published in
Environmental Management and Health
Research Article|
February 01 1992
Thinking Green Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7085
Print ISSN: 0956-6163
© MCB UP Limited
1992
Environmental Management and Health (1992) 3 (2): 6–12.
Citation
Pearce I (1992), "Thinking Green". Environmental Management and Health, Vol. 3 No. 2 pp. 6–12, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09566169210010842
Download citation file:
180
Views
Suggested Reading
Green Audit: The Path to Global Survival
Executive Development (May,1993)
Aerosols and global warming
Environmental Management and Health (May,1996)
Internet commentary
Circuit World (December,2001)
Environmental Disclosure in the Annual Reports of British Companies: A Research Note
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal (September,1991)
Food and the environment
Environmental Management and Health (August,1995)
Related Chapters
Construction
Sustainable Infrastructure: Principles into Practice
Concluding observations
Building Regulations, Codes and Standards: A guide for safe, sustainable and healthy development
Introduction
Building Regulations, Codes and Standards: A guide for safe, sustainable and healthy development
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
