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Academic & Professional Books  Environmental & Social Studies  Economics, Politics & Policy  Sustainable Development: General

Sustainability: A Philosophy of Adaptive Ecosystem Management

By: Bryan G Norton(Author)
607 pages, 12 line drawings
NHBS
Invigorating contribution to sustainability, by a respected ecologial scientist
Sustainability: A Philosophy of Adaptive Ecosystem Management
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  • Sustainability: A Philosophy of Adaptive Ecosystem Management ISBN: 9780226595214 Paperback Nov 2005 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £39.99
    #154547
  • Sustainability: A Philosophy of Adaptive Ecosystem Management ISBN: 9780226595191 Hardback Aug 2006 Out of stock with supplier: order now to get this when available
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About this book Contents Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

While many disciplines contribute to environmental conservation, there is little successful integration of science and social values. Arguing that the central problem in conservation is a lack of effective communication, Bryan Norton shows in Sustainability how current linguistic resources discourage any shared, multidisciplinary public deliberation over environmental goals and policy. In response, Norton develops a new, interdisciplinary approach to defining sustainability-the cornerstone of environmental policy-using philosophical and linguistic analyses to create a nonideological vocabulary that can accommodate scientific and evaluative environmental discourse.

Emphasizing cooperation and adaptation through social learning, Norton provides a practical framework that encourages an experimental approach to language clarification and problem formulation, as well as an interdisciplinary approach to creating solutions. By moving beyond the scientific arena to acknowledge the importance of public discourse, Sustainability offers an entirely novel approach to environmentalism.
 

Contents


Preface: Beyond Ideology
A Note to the Busy Reader: Some Shorter Paths

Chapter 1 An Innocent at EPA
1.1 The Old EPA Building
1.2 Towers of Babel: The Structural Problems at EPA
1.3 The Costs of Not Being Able to Get There from Here (Conceptually)
1.4 Hijinks and Political Hijackings

Part I: Setting the Stage for Adaptive Management

Chapter 2 Language as Our Environment
2.1 Introduction: The Importance of Language
2.2 Of Hedgehogs and Foxes
2.3 Progressivism, Pragmatism, and the Method of Experience
2.4 Environmental Pragmatism and Action-Based Logic

Chapter 3 Epistemology and Adaptive Management
3.1 Aldo Leopold and Adaptive Management
3.2 What Is Adaptive Management?
3.3 Uncertainty, Objectivity, and Sustainability
3.4 A Pragmatist Epistemology for Adaptive Management
3.5 Uncertainty, Pragmatism, and Mission-Oriented Science
3.6 How Adaptive Management Is Adaptive

Chapter 4 Interlude: Removing Barriers to Integrative Solutions
4.1 Avoiding Ideology by Rethinking Environmental Problems
4.2 Overcoming the Serial Approach to Environmental Science and Policy

Part II: Value Pluralism and Cooperation

Chapter 5 Where We Are and Where We Want to Be
5.1 The Practical Problem about Theory
5.2 Four Problems of Environmental Values
5.3 Where We Are: A Beginning-of-the-Century Look at Environmental Ethics
5.4 Economism as an Ontological Theory
5.5 Breaking the Spell of Economism and IV Theory
5.6 Pluralism and Adaptive Management: What the Study of Environmental Values Could Be

Chapter 6 Re-modeling Nature as Valued
6.1 Radical, but How New?
6.2 A Naturalistic Method and a Procedure
6.3 Re-modeling Nature: Learning to Think like a Mountain
6.4 Hierarchy Theory and Multiscalar Management

Chapter 7 Environmental Values as Community Commitments
7.1 Public Goods and Communal Goods
7.2 The Advantages of Democratic Experimentalism
7.3 Environmental Problems as Problems of Cooperative Behavior
7.4 Discourse Ethics
7.5 Experimental Pluralism: Naturalism and Environmental Values

Chapter 8 Sustainability and Our Obligations to Future Generations
8.1 Intertemporal Ethics
8.2 Strong versus Weak Sustainability
8.3 Philosophers and the Grand Simplification
8.4 Grandly Oversimplified?
8.5 Passmore and Shared Moral Communities
8.6 What We Owe the Future
8.7 The Logic of Intergenerational Obligation

Chapter 9 Environmental Values and Community Goals
9.1 A Schematic Definition of Sustainability
9.2 A Catalog of Sustainability Values
9.3 Beyond the Fact-Value Divide
9.4 Choosing Indicators as Community Self-Definition

Part III: Integrated Environmental Action

Chapter 10 Improving the Decision Process
10.1 Decision Analysis and Community-Based Decision Making
10.2 What Does Not Work: The Red Book
10.3 Heading in the Right Direction: The Changing Field of Decision Science
10.4 Getting It Mostly Right: Understanding Risk
10.5 The Two Phases Revisited: Putting Multicriteria Analysis to Work

Chapter 11 Disciplinary Stew
11.1 Beyond Towering
11.2 Philosophical Analysis and Policy Choice
11.3 Scale and Value: The Key to It All
11.4 Disciplinary Stew: The Prospects for an Integrated Environmental Science
11.5 Environmental Evaluation: A Fresh Start in the World of What-If

Chapter 12 Integrated Environmental Analysis and Action
12.1 Conservation: Moral Crusade or Environmental Public Philosophy?
12.2 An Alternative: The Dutch System
12.3 EPA and Environmental Policy Today: A Report Card
12.4 Constitutive Values and Constitutional Environmentalism
12.5 Problem-Solving Environmentalism
12.6 Seeking Convergence
12.7 Ecology and Opportunity

Appendix Justifying the Method
A.1 Philosophy's Abdication
A.2 The Rise of Linguistic Philosophy: Its Inevitability and Meaning
A.3 The Rise and Transformation of Logical Empiricism, aka Positivism
A.4 Pragmatism: The New Way Forward
A.5 Pragmatism and Environmental Policy
A.6 Philosophy's Role: An Epilogue

Notes
Index

Customer Reviews

Biography

Bryan G. Norton is professor of philosophy at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is the author of Linguistic Frameworks and Ontology, Why Preserve Natural Variety? and Toward Unity among Environmentalists and the editor of The Preservation of Species.

By: Bryan G Norton(Author)
607 pages, 12 line drawings
NHBS
Invigorating contribution to sustainability, by a respected ecologial scientist
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