Environment the Science Behind the Stories 4th Edition Chapter 6
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Lecture Outlines Chapter 6 Environment: The Science behind the Stories 4th Edition Withgott/Brennan
Lecture Outlines Chapter 6 Environment: The Science behind the Stories 4th Edition Withgott/Brennan
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Lecture Outlines Chapter 6 Environment: The Science behind the Stories 4th Edition Withgott/Brennan
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Lecture Outlines Chapter 6 Environment:The Science behind the Stories 4th Edition Withgott/Brennan
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Culture, worldviews, and choices Environmental ethics Economics and the environment Classical and neoclassical economics Economic growth, well-being, and sustainability Environmental and ecological economics This lecture will help you understand:
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Central Case: The Mirrar Clan Confronts the Jabiluka Uranium Mine • Commercially valuable uranium deposits in Australia occur on sacred Aboriginal land • The Mirrar oppose the mine for economic, social, cultural, spiritual, ethical, and health reasons • Despite the economic benefits of jobs, income, development, and a higher standard of living Mining options may be revisited due to increased uranium prices
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Ethics and economics involve values • Both disciplines deal with what we value • Values affect our decisions and actions • Solving environmental problems needs more than understanding how natural systems work • Values shape human behavior • Ethics and economics give us tools to pursue the "triple bottom line" of sustainability • Environmental, economic, social
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Culture and worldview • Our relationship with the environment depends on assessments of costs and benefits • But culture and worldview also affect this relationship • Culture = knowledge, beliefs, values, and learned ways of life shared by a group of people • Worldview = a person's or group's beliefs about the meaning, operation, and essence of the world • How a person sees his or her place in the world People draw dramatically different conclusions about a situation based on their worldviews
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Worldviews differ among people • Well-meaning people can support or oppose an action • Some support uranium mines • Jobs, income, energy, economic growth • Opponents see other impacts • Destroyed land, pollution, radiation poisoning • Community disruption, substance abuse, crime, etc.
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Culture and worldviews affect perceptions • The landscape is a sacred text to Australian Aborigines • Holding their beliefs and values • Equal to the Christian Bible or Islamic Koran • Spirit ancestors leave signs and lessons in the landscape • Aborigines construct mental maps of their surroundings in "walkabouts"
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Many factors shape worldviews • Religious and spiritual beliefs shape our worldview and perception of the environment • Community experiences shape attitudes • Political ideology: government's role in protecting the environment • Economics • Vested interest = the strong interest of an individual in the outcome of a decision • Results in gain or loss for that individual
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Environmental ethics • Ethics = the study of good and bad, right and wrong • Moral principles or values held by a person or society • Promoting human welfare, maximizing freedom, minimizing pain and suffering • Relativists = ethics varies with social context • Universalists = right and wrong remains the same across cultures and situations • Ethics is a prescriptive pursuit: it tells us how we ought to behave
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Ethical standards: judging right and wrong • Ethical standards = criteria that help differentiate right from wrong • Categorical imperative: the golden rule • Most world religions teach this same lesson • How would you feel if your sacred homeland was defiled with a uranium mine? • Principle of utility = something right produces the most practical benefits for the most people • A uranium mine could benefit thousands of people
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We value things in two ways • Instrumental (utilitarian) value: valuing something for its pragmatic benefits by using it • Animals are valuable because we can eat them • Intrinsic (inherent) value: valuing something for its own sake because it has a right to exist • Animals are valuable because they live their own lives • Things can have both instrumental and intrinsic value • But different people emphasize different values • How we value something affects how we treat it
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Environmental ethics • Environmental ethics = application of ethical standards to relationships between human and nonhuman entities • Hard to resolve: it depends on the person's ethical standards and domain of ethical concern Should we save resources for future generations? When is it OK to destroy a forest to create jobs? Is it OK for some communities to be exposed to more pollution? Should humans drive other species to extinction?
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We have expanded our ethical consideration • People have granted intrinsic value and ethical consideration to more and more people and things • Including animals, communities, and nature • Animal rights activists voice concern for animals that are hunted, raised in pens, or used for testing • Rising economic prosperity broadens our ethical domain • Science shows people are part of nature • All organisms are interconnected • Non-Western cultures often have broader ethical domains
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Three ethical perspectives • Anthropocentrism = only humans have intrinsic value • Biocentrism = some nonhuman life has intrinsic value • Ecocentrism = whole ecological systems have value • A holistic perspective that preserves connections
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History of environmental ethics • Christianity's attitude toward the environment: anthropocentric hostility or stewardship? • The Industrial Revolution increased consumption and pollution • John Ruskin: people no longer appreciated nature • Transcendentalism = nature is a manifestation of the divine • People need to experience nature • Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau'sWalden
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The preservation ethic • Unspoiled nature should be protected for its own intrinsic value • John Muir had an ecocentric viewpoint • He was a tireless advocate for wilderness preservation
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The conservation ethic • Use natural resources wisely for the greatest good for the most people (the utilitarian standard) • Gifford Pinchot had an anthropocentric viewpoint
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The land ethic • Healthy ecological systems depend on protecting all parts • Aldo Leopold believed the land ethic changes the role of people from conquerors of the land to citizens of it • The land ethic can help guide decision making
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Deep ecology, ecofeminism, and justice • Some scholars feel that male-dominated societies cause both social and environmental problems • Domination and competition degrade women and the environment • Ecofeminism = the female worldview interprets the world through interrelationships and cooperation • More compatible with nature • Environmental justice = the fair and equitable treatment of all people regarding environmental issues • The poor and minorities have less information, power, and money
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Environmental justice (EJ) • The poor and minorities are exposed to more pollution, hazards, and environmental degradation North Carolina wanted to put a toxic waste site in the county with the highest percentage of African Americans
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Environmental justice and Native Americans • From 1948 to the 1960s, neither the U.S. government nor industry provided Navajo miners with information or protection
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Significant inequities still remain • Significant inequities remain despite progress toward racial equality • Economic gaps between rich and poor have widened • Minorities and the poor still suffer substandard environmental conditions • Poor Latino farm workers in California suffer from unregulated air pollution (dairy and pesticide emissions) • Organized groups convinced regulators to enforce the Clean Air Act and state legislatures to pass new laws
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Environmental justice and Hurricane Katrina People most affected by the hurricane and its aftermath were poor and nonwhite
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Environmental justice: an international issue • Wealthy nations impose pollution on poorer nations • Hazardous waste is expensive to dispose of • Companies pay poor nations to take the waste • It is dumped illegally • It may be falsely labeled as harmless or beneficial • Workers are uninformed or unprotected • The Basel Convention prohibits international export of waste • But illegal trade and dumping continue • The United States has not ratified this treaty
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The environment vs. economics • Friction occurs between ethical and economic impulses • Is there a trade-off between economics and the environment? • People say protection costs too much money, interferes with progress, or causes job loses • But environmental protection is good for the economy • Traditional economic thought ignores or underestimates contributions of the environment to the economy • Human economies depend on the environment
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Uranium mining: ethics vs. economics • Uranium mining provides jobs and income • Unemployment is above 16% among Aborigines • 20% of mine employees are Aboriginal
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Economics • Economics studies how people use resources to provide goods and services in the face of demand • Most environmental and economic problems are linked • Root oikos, meaning "household," gave rise to both ecology and economics • Economy = a social system that converts resources into: • Goods: manufactured materials that are bought, and • Services: work done for others as a form of business
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Types of modern economies • Subsistence economy = people get their daily needs directly from nature or their own production • They do not purchase or trade products • Capitalist market economy = buyers and sellers interact to determine prices and production of goods and services • Centrally planned economy = the government determines how to allocate resources • Mixed economy = governments intervene to some extent • Unregulated financial practices caused the 2009 recession
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Governments intervene in a market economy • Even in mixed market economies, governments intervene to: • Eliminate unfair advantages held by single buyers or sellers • Provide social services (national defense, medical care, education) • Provide safety nets for elderly, disaster victims, etc. • Manage the commons • Mitigate pollution and other threats to health and quality of life
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The economy exists within the environment • Economies receive inputs (resources) • Process them • Discharge outputs (waste) • Traditional economics • Ignores the environment • Resources are "limitless" • Wastes are absorbed at no cost
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Environmental view of economics Human economies exist within, and depend on, the environment for goods and services
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Environmental systems support economies • Environmental goods = natural resources (sun's energy, water, trees, rocks, fossil fuels) • Ecosystem services = essential services support the life that makes economic activities possible * Soil formation * Pollination * Water purification * Nutrient cycling * Climate regulation * Waste treatment • Economic activities affect the environment • Depleting natural resources, generating pollution • 15 of 24 ecosystem services are being degraded or used unsustainably
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Adam Smith's "invisible hand" • Classical economics: when people pursue economic self-interest in a competitive marketplace • The market is guided by an "invisible hand" • Society benefits • This idea is a pillar of free-market thought today • It is also blamed for economic inequality between rich and poor • Critics feel that market capitalism promotes environmental degradation
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Neoclassical economics includes psychology • What psychological factors underlie consumer choices? • Market prices reflect supply vs. demand • Buyers vs. sellers • The "right" quantities of a product are produced • "Optimal" levels of pollution, resource use The market favors equilibrium between supply and demand
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Cost-benefit analysis • Cost-benefit analysis = costs of a proposed action are compared to benefits that result from the action • If benefits > costs: pursue the action • Cost-benefit analysis is controversial: not all costs and benefits can be identified or defined • It is easy to quantify wages paid to miners • But hard to assess the cost of a scarred landscape • Monetary benefits are overrepresented • Analysis is biased in favor of economic development • Biased against environmental protection
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Capitalist market systems operate according to neoclassical economics Enormous wealth and jobs are generated Environmental problems are also created Assumptions of neoclassical economics: Resources are infinite or substitutable Costs and benefits are internal Long-term effects are discounted Growth is good Neoclassical economics
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Assumption: resources are infinite • Economic models treat resources as substitutable and interchangeable • A replacement resource will be found • Goods and services are treated as "free gifts of nature" • Infinitely abundant, resilient, and substitutable • But Earth's resources are limited • Nonrenewable resources can be depleted • Renewable resources (e.g., forests) can also be depleted
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Only the buyer and seller experience costs and benefits Pricing ignores social, environmental, or economic costs of pollution and degradation Externalities = costs or benefits involving people other than the buyer or seller External costs = borne by someone not involved in a transaction Health problems, resource depletion, property damage Governments develop laws and regulations But how do you assign monetary value to illness? Assumption: costs and benefits are internal
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People suffer external costs External costs include water pollution, health problems, property damage, and harm to other organism
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A future event counts less than a present one Discounting = short-term costs and benefits are more important than long-term costs and benefits Present conditions are more important than future ones Cutting trees now brings in more money than cutting them in the future Policymakers ignore long-term consequences of actions Puts costs of degradation, resource depletion, pollution on to future generations Assumption: discounted long-term effects
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Assumption: growth is good • Economic growth = an increase in an economy's production and consumption of goods • It is necessary to maintain social order • Promoting economic growth creates opportunities for poor to become wealthier • Progress is measured by economic growth • But economic activity and true wealth are not the same • Affluenza = material goods do not always bring contentment • Runaway growth can destroy our economic system
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We live in a growth-oriented economy • Growth is used to measure progress • All economic growth is seen as good and necessary • Economic growth is always good news • Modern global economic growth is unprecedented • Higher trade, production, amount and value of goods • The United States has a "more and bigger" attitude • Americans are in a frenzy of consumption
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The dramatic rise in per-person consumption has severe environmental consequences Is the growth paradigm good for us?
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Can growth go on forever? • Economic growth comes from: • Increased inputs (labor, natural resources) • Economic development = improved efficiency of production (technology, ideas, equipment) • Uncontrolled economic growth is unsustainable • Technology can push back limits, but not forever • Efficient resource extraction and production perpetuate the illusion that resources are unlimited • Many economists believe technology can solve anything
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Cornucopians vs. Cassandras • Cornucopians = economists, businesspeople, policymakers • Improved technology allows continued economic growth • Human innovation, technologies, and market forces increase access to resources and avoid depletion • Cassandras = scientists and others • Limits to Growth, Beyond the Limits, Limits to Growth: The Thirty-year Update • Computer models predict economic collapse as resources become scarce
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Computer simulations project future trends Results of policies of sustainability Current consumption patterns predict economic collapse
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Other types of economies • Environmental economics = unsustainable economies have high population growth and inefficient resource use • Modify neoclassical economics to increase efficiency • Calls for reform • Ecological economics = civilizations cannot overcome environmental limitations • Endless economic growth is not possible • Calls for revolution • Steady-state economies mirror natural ecological systems—they neither grow nor shrink
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A steady-state economy • As resources became harder to find, economic growth slows and stabilizes (John Stuart Mill, 1806–1873) • Individuals and societies exist on steady flows of natural resources • Herman Daly does not think a steady state will evolve on its own • We must fundamentally change our economics • This does not mean a lower quality of life • Technology and behavior will enhance sustainability
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Measuring economic progress: GDP • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) = the total monetary value of goods and services a nation produces • Does not account for nonmarket values • Does not express only desirable economic activity • Pollution, oil spills, disasters, etc. increase GDP
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GPI: An alternative to the GDP • Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) = differentiates between desirable and undesirable economic activity • Positive contributions (e.g., volunteer work) not paid for with money are added to economic activity • Negative impacts (crime, pollution) are subtracted In the United States, GDP has risen greatly, but not GPI
Environment the Science Behind the Stories 4th Edition Chapter 6
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