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A01=Michael Redclift
Agri Food System
anthropogenic impacts
Author_Michael Redclift
Basle Convention
biogeochemical cycles
brundtland
Can
Category=GTP
change
Commercial Energy Consumption
commission
countries
developing
development
Doe
ecological footprint analysis
Energy Conservation
Energy Policies
environmental
Environmental Issues
environmental sociology
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
European Energy Policy
GEF's Work
global
Global Environmental Management
Human Economic Activities
International Environmental Policy
Luxembourg Netherlands Norway Portugal Spain
management
North South consumption disparity
OST
Pa R Ry
resource consumption patterns
Sink Functions
Soil Fertility
sustainable
sustainable consumption policy frameworks
Sustainable Energy Policy
Tonnes
Total Commercial Energy Consumption
Tucurui Dam
UN
World Automobile Fleet
World Development Report

Product details

  • ISBN 9781844079438
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 1996
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Sustainable development cannot be achieved solely at the international level. Without the creation of more sustainable livelihoods, it will remain a utopian and elusive goal. Yet given the huge differences in economic development and levels of consumption between North and South, how might this be brought about?

Taking the 1992 Rio Summit as its point of departure, Wasted examines what we now need to know, and what we need to do, to live within sustainable limits. One of the key issues is how we use the environment: converting natural resources into human artifices, commodities and services. In the process of consuming, we also create sinks. Today, these sinks - the empty back pocket in the global biogeographical system - are no longer empty. The fate of the global environment is indissolubly linked to our consumption: particularly in the energy-profligate North.

To understand and overcome environmental challenges, we need to build the outcomes of our present consumption rates into our future behavior: to accept sustainable development as a normative goal for societies; one that is bound up with our everyday social practices and actions. In this absorbing new book, Michael Redclift argues that the way we understand and think about the environment conditions our responses, and our ability to meet the challenge, and discusses tangible policies for increased sustainability that are grounded in recent research and practice.