CH 1

Understanding Our Environment

Outline

•Introduction

•A. Historical Perspective

1. Pragmatic Resource Conservation

2. Moral and Aesthetic Nature Conservation

3. Modern Environmentalism

4. Global Conservation

•B. Current Conditions

•C. Divided World

•D. Sustainable Development

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•A. Humans have always inhabited both the natural world and the social world.

•B. Environment:

1. Circumstances or conditions that surround an organism or groups of organisms.

2. The complex of social or cultural conditions that affect an individual or community.

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•C. Environmental Science: Systematic study of our environment, and our proper place in it.

1. Interdisciplinary

2. Integrative

-Natural Sciences
-Social Sciences
-Humanities

3. Mission Oriented

Environmental Science

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE

•D. Four Distinct Stages

1. Pragmatic Resource Conservation

2. Moral and Aesthetic Nature Preservation

3. Health and Ecological Damage Concerns

4. Global Environmental Citizenship

E. Pragmatic Resource Conservation

•George Perkins Marsh - Man and Nature

-Influenced Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot.
1. Pragmatic Utilitarian Conservation
“Greatest good for the greatest number for the longest time”
Multiple Use Policies of USFS.

Moral and Aesthetic Nature Preservation

2. Nature deserves to exist for its own sake - regardless of degree of usefulness to humans. (Biocentric Preservation) John Muir - President Sierra Club

3. Modern Environmentalism

•Industrial explosion of WW II added new concerns to the environmental agenda.

Rachel Carson - Silent Spring (1962)

•Environmental Agenda expanded in 1960’s and 70’s to include:

Atomic Weapons Testing

Fossil Fuel Issues

Air and Water Pollution

Wilderness Protection

4. Global Concerns

•Increased technology has greatly expanded international communications.

Daily events now reported worldwide instead of locally or regionally.

-Global Environmentalism

F. CURRENT CONDITIONS

1. Human Population > 6 Billion.

Food shortages and famines exist in many densely populated areas.

Water Quantity and Quality Issues

Fossil Fuel Burning

- Air and Water Pollution

Landscape Destruction

-Loss of Biodiversity

G. Signs of Hope

1. Progress has been made on many fronts.

Population has stabilized in many industrialized countries.

Incidence of life-threatening diseases has been reduced in some countries.

Average life expectancy nearly doubled.

H. RICH / POOR: A DIVIDED WORLD

•Poor countries tend to be located in Southern Hemisphere.

World Bank estimates1.4 billion people live in acute poverty of < $1 (U.S.) per day.

Daily survival necessitates over-harvesting resources thus degrading chances of long-term sustainability.

Poor are often victims and agents of environmental degradation.

•Wealthy countries tend to be located in the Northern Hemisphere.

• About 1/5 of world population live in countries with per capita income > $25,000.00 (U.S.).

Poor people exist here as well.

•Gap between rich and poor continues to increase.

Wealthiest 200 people in the world have combined wealth of $1 trillion - more than total wealth of poorest half (3 billion) of the world’s population.