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Environmentalism

Environmentalism or environmental rights is a broad philosophy, ideology, and social movement regarding concerns for environmental protection and improvement of the health of the environment, particularly as the measure for this health seeks to incorporate the impact of changes to the environment on humans, animals, plants and non-living matter.[circular definition] While environmentalism focuses more on the environmental and nature-related aspects of green ideology and politics, ecologism combines the ideology of social ecology and environmentalism. Ecologism is more commonly used in continental European languages, while environmentalism is more commonly used in English but the words have slightly different connotations.

Environmentalism on United States stamps

Environmentalism advocates the preservation, restoration and improvement of the natural environment and critical earth system elements or processes such as the climate, and may be referred to as a movement to control pollution or protect plant and animal diversity.[1] For this reason, concepts such as a land ethic, environmental ethics, biodiversity, ecology, and the biophilia hypothesis figure predominantly.

At its crux, environmentalism is an attempt to balance relations between humans and the various natural systems on which they depend in such a way that all the components are accorded a proper degree of sustainability. The exact measures and outcomes of this balance is controversial and there are many different ways for environmental concerns to be expressed in practice. Environmentalism and environmental concerns are often represented by the colour green,[2] but this association has been appropriated by the marketing industries for the tactic known as greenwashing.[3]

Environmentalism is opposed by anti-environmentalism, which says that the Earth is less fragile than some environmentalists maintain, and portrays environmentalism as overreacting to the human contribution to climate change or opposing human advancement.[4]

Definitions

Environmentalism denotes a social movement that seeks to influence the political process by lobbying, activism, and education in order to protect natural resources and ecosystems.

An environmentalist is a person who may speak out about our natural environment and the sustainable management of its resources through changes in public policy or individual behaviour. This may include supporting practices such as informed consumption, conservation initiatives, investment in renewable resources, improved efficiencies in the materials economy, transitioning to new accounting paradigms such as ecological economics, renewing and revitalizing our connections with non-human life or even opting to have one less child to reduce consumption and pressure on resources.

In various ways (for example, grassroots activism and protests), environmentalists and environmental organisations seek to give the natural world a stronger voice in human affairs.[5]

In general terms, environmentalists advocate the sustainable management of resources, and the protection (and restoration, when necessary) of the natural environment through changes in public policy and individual behaviour. In its recognition of humanity as a participant in ecosystems, the movement is centered around ecology, health, and human rights.

History

 
Lord Mahavira, the last Jain Tirthankar, is also considered to be a great environmentalist.[6]

A concern for environmental protection has recurred in diverse forms, in different parts of the world, throughout history. The earliest ideas of environmental protectionism can be found in Jainism, a religion from ancient India revived by Mahavira in the 6th century BC. Jainism offers a view that is in many ways compatible with core values associated with environmental activism, such as the protection of life by nonviolence, which could form a strong ecological ethos for global protection of the environment. Mahavira's teachings on the symbiosis between all living beings—as well as the five elements of earth, water, air, fire, and space—are core to environmental thought today.[7][8]

In the Middle East, the Caliph Abu Bakr in the 630s AD commanded his army to "Bring no harm to the trees, nor burn them with fire," and to "Slay not any of the enemy's flock, save for your food."[9] Various Arabic medical treatises during the 9th to 13th centuries dealt with environmentalism and environmental science, including the issue of pollution. The authors of such treatises included Al-Kindi, Qusta ibn Luqa, Al-Razi, Ibn Al-Jazzar, al-Tamimi, al-Masihi, Avicenna, Ali ibn Ridwan, Ibn Jumay, Isaac Israeli ben Solomon, Abd-el-latif, Ibn al-Quff, and Ibn al-Nafis. Their works covered a number of subjects related to pollution, such as air pollution, water pollution, soil contamination, and the mishandling of municipal solid waste. They also included asessments of certain localities' environmental impact.[10]

In Europe, King Edward I of England banned the burning and sale of "sea-coal" in 1272 by proclamation in London, after its smoke had become a prevalent annoyance throughout the city.[11][12] This fuel, common in London due to the local scarcity of wood, was given this early name because it could be found washed up on some shores, from where it was carted away on a wheelbarrow.

Early environmental legislation

 
Levels of air pollution rose during the Industrial Revolution, sparking the first modern environmental laws to be passed in the mid-19th century.

At the advent of steam and electricity the muse of history holds her nose and shuts her eyes (H. G. Wells 1918).[13]

The origins of the environmental movement lay in the response to increasing levels of smoke pollution in the atmosphere during the Industrial Revolution. The emergence of great factories and the concomitant immense growth in coal consumption gave rise to an unprecedented level of air pollution in industrial centers; after 1900 the large volume of industrial chemical discharges added to the growing load of untreated human waste.[14] The first large-scale, modern environmental laws came in the form of Britain's Alkali Acts, passed in 1863, to regulate the deleterious air pollution (gaseous hydrochloric acid) given off by the Leblanc process, used to produce soda ash. An Alkali inspector and four sub-inspectors were appointed to curb this pollution. The inspectorate's responsibilities were gradually expanded, culminating in the Alkali Order 1958 which placed all major heavy industries that emitted smoke, grit, dust and fumes under supervision.

In industrial cities, local experts and reformers, especially after 1890, took the lead in identifying environmental degradation and pollution, and initiating grass-roots movements to demand and achieve reforms.[15] Typically the highest priority went to water and air pollution. The Coal Smoke Abatement Society was formed in 1898 making it one of the oldest environmental NGOs. It was founded by artist Sir William Blake Richmond, frustrated with the pall cast by coal smoke. Although there were earlier pieces of legislation, the Public Health Act 1875 required all furnaces and fireplaces to consume their own smoke. It also provided for sanctions against factories that emitted large amounts of black smoke. This law's provisions were extended in 1926 with the Smoke Abatement Act to include other emissions, such as soot, ash, and gritty particles, and to empower local authorities to impose their own regulations.

During the Spanish Revolution, anarchist-controlled territories undertook several environmental reforms, which were possibly the largest in the world at the time. Daniel Guerin notes that anarchist territories would diversify crops, extend irrigation, initiate reforestation, start tree nurseries and help to establish naturist communities.[16] Once there was a link discovered between air pollution and tuberculosis, the CNT shut down several metal factories.[17]

It was only under the impetus of the Great Smog of 1952 in London, which almost brought the city to a standstill and may have caused upward of 6,000 deaths, that the Clean Air Act 1956 was passed and airborne pollution in the city was first tackled. Financial incentives were offered to householders to replace open coal fires with alternatives (such as installing gas fires) or those who preferred, to burn coke instead (a byproduct of town gas production) which produces minimal smoke. 'Smoke control areas' were introduced in some towns and cities where only smokeless fuels could be burnt and power stations were relocated away from cities. The act formed an important impetus to modern environmentalism and caused a rethinking of the dangers of environmental degradation to people's quality of life.[18]

The late 19th century also saw the passage of the first wildlife conservation laws. The zoologist Alfred Newton published a series of investigations into the Desirability of establishing a 'Close-time' for the preservation of indigenous animals between 1872 and 1903. His advocacy for legislation to protect animals from hunting during the mating season led to the formation of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and influenced the passage of the Sea Birds Preservation Act in 1869 as the first nature protection law in the world.[19][20]

First environmental movements

Early interest in the environment was a feature of the Romantic movement in the early 19th century. One of the earliest modern pronouncements on thinking about human industrial advancement and its influence on the environment was written by Japanese geographer, educator, philosopher and author Tsunesaburo Makiguchi in his 1903 publication Jinsei Chirigaku (A Geography of Human Life).[21] In Britain the poet William Wordsworth travelled extensively in the Lake District and wrote that it is a "sort of national property in which every man has a right and interest who has an eye to perceive and a heart to enjoy".[22]

 
John Ruskin, an influential thinker who articulated the Romantic ideal of environmental protection and conservation

Systematic efforts on behalf of the environment only began in the late 19th century; it grew out of the amenity movement in Britain in the 1870s, which was a reaction to industrialisation, the growth of cities, and worsening air and water pollution. Starting with the formation of the Commons Preservation Society in 1865, the movement championed rural preservation against the encroachments of industrialisation. Robert Hunter, solicitor for the society, worked with Hardwicke Rawnsley, Octavia Hill, and John Ruskin to lead a successful campaign to prevent the construction of railways to carry slate from the quarries, which would have ruined the unspoiled valleys of Newlands and Ennerdale. This success led to the formation of the Lake District Defence Society (later to become The Friends of the Lake District).[23]

Peter Kropotkin wrote about ecology in economics, agricultural science, conservation, ethology, criminology, urban planning, geography, geology and biology. He observed in Swiss and Siberian glaciers that they had been slowly melting since the dawn of the industrial revolution, possibly making him one of the first predictors for climate change. He also observed the damage done from deforestation and hunting.[24] Kropotkin's writings would become influential in the 1970s and became a major inspiration for the intentional community movement as well as his ideas becoming the basis for the theory of social ecology.

In 1893 Hill, Hunter and Rawnsley agreed to set up a national body to coordinate environmental conservation efforts across the country; the "National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty" was formally inaugurated in 1894.[25] The organisation obtained secure footing through the 1907 National Trust Bill, which gave the trust the status of a statutory corporation.[26] and the bill was passed in August 1907.[27]

An early "Back-to-Nature" movement, which anticipated the romantic ideal of modern environmentalism, was advocated by intellectuals such as John Ruskin, William Morris, George Bernard Shaw and Edward Carpenter, who were all against consumerism, pollution and other activities that were harmful to the natural world.[28] The movement was a reaction to the urban conditions of the industrial towns, where sanitation was awful, pollution levels intolerable and housing terribly cramped. Idealists championed the rural life as a mythical utopia and advocated a return to it. John Ruskin argued that people should return to a "small piece of English ground, beautiful, peaceful, and fruitful. We will have no steam engines upon it ... we will have plenty of flowers and vegetables ... we will have some music and poetry; the children will learn to dance to it and sing it."[29]

Practical ventures in the establishment of small cooperative farms were even attempted and old rural traditions, without the "taint of manufacture or the canker of artificiality", were enthusiastically revived, including the Morris dance and the maypole.[30]

These ideas also inspired various environmental groups in the UK, such as the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, established in 1889 by Emily Williamson as a protest group to campaign for greater protection for the indigenous birds of the island.[31] The Society attracted growing support from the suburban middle-classes as well as support from many other influential figures, such as the ornithologist Professor Alfred Newton. By 1900, public support for the organisation had grown, and it had over 25,000 members. The garden city movement incorporated many environmental concerns into its urban planning manifesto; the Socialist League and The Clarion movement also began to advocate measures of nature conservation.[32]

 
Original title page of Walden by Henry David Thoreau

The movement in the United States began in the late 19th century, out of concerns for protecting the natural resources of the West, with individuals such as John Muir and Henry David Thoreau making key philosophical contributions. Thoreau was interested in peoples' relationship with nature and studied this by living close to nature in a simple life. He published his experiences in the book Walden, which argues that people should become intimately close with nature. Muir came to believe in nature's inherent right, especially after spending time hiking in Yosemite Valley and studying both the ecology and geology. He successfully lobbied congress to form Yosemite National Park and went on to set up the Sierra Club in 1892. The conservationist principles as well as the belief in an inherent right of nature were to become the bedrock of modern environmentalism.

In the 20th century, environmental ideas continued to grow in popularity and recognition. Efforts were starting to be made to save some wildlife, particularly the American bison. The death of the last passenger pigeon as well as the endangerment of the American bison helped to focus the minds of conservationists and to popularise their concerns. In 1916, the National Park Service was founded by US President Woodrow Wilson.

The Forestry Commission was set up in 1919 in Britain to increase the amount of woodland in Britain by buying land for afforestation and reforestation. The commission was also tasked with promoting forestry and the production of timber for trade.[33] During the 1920s the Commission focused on acquiring land to begin planting out new forests; much of the land was previously used for agricultural purposes. By 1939 the Forestry Commission was the largest landowner in Britain.[34]

During the 1930s the Nazis had elements that were supportive of animal rights, zoos and wildlife,[35] and took several measures to ensure their protection.[36] In 1933 the government created a stringent animal-protection law and in 1934, Das Reichsjagdgesetz (The Reich Hunting Law) was enacted which limited hunting.[37][38] Several Nazis were environmentalists (notably Rudolf Hess), and species protection and animal welfare were significant issues in the regime.[36] In 1935, the regime enacted the "Reich Nature Protection Act" (Reichsnaturschutzgesetz). The concept of the Dauerwald (best translated as the "perpetual forest") which included concepts such as forest management and protection was promoted and efforts were also made to curb air pollution.[39]

In 1949, A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold was published. It explained Leopold's belief that humankind should have moral respect for the environment and that it is unethical to harm it. The book is sometimes called the most influential book on conservation.

Throughout the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and beyond, photography was used to enhance public awareness of the need for protecting land and recruiting members to environmental organisations. David Brower, Ansel Adams and Nancy Newhall created the Sierra Club Exhibit Format Series, which helped raise public environmental awareness and brought a rapidly increasing flood of new members to the Sierra Club and to the environmental movement in general. This Is Dinosaur, edited by Wallace Stegner with photographs by Martin Litton and Philip Hyde, prevented the building of dams within Dinosaur National Monument by becoming part of a new kind of activism called environmentalism that combined the conservationist ideals of Thoreau, Leopold and Muir with hard-hitting advertising, lobbying, book distribution, letter writing campaigns, and more. The powerful use of photography in addition to the written word for conservation dated back to the creation of Yosemite National Park, when photographs persuaded Abraham Lincoln to preserve the beautiful glacier carved landscape for all time. The Sierra Club Exhibit Format Series galvanised public opposition to building dams in the Grand Canyon and protected many other national treasures. The Sierra Club often led a coalition of many environmental groups including the Wilderness Society and many others.

After a focus on preserving wilderness in the 1950s and 1960s, the Sierra Club and other groups broadened their focus to include such issues as air and water pollution, population concern, and curbing the exploitation of natural resources.

Post-war expansion

 
In the United States and several other countries, the boom was manifested in suburban development and urban sprawl, aided by automobile ownership.

In 1962, Silent Spring by American biologist Rachel Carson was published. The book cataloged the environmental impacts of the indiscriminate spraying of DDT in the US and questioned the logic of releasing large amounts of chemicals into the environment without fully understanding their effects on human health and ecology. The book suggested that DDT and other pesticides may cause cancer and that their agricultural use was a threat to wildlife, particularly birds.[40] The resulting public concern led to the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency in 1970 which subsequently banned the agricultural use of DDT in the US in 1972. The limited use of DDT in disease vector control continues to this day in certain parts of the world and remains controversial. The book's legacy was to produce a far greater awareness of environmental issues and interest into how people affect the environment. With this new interest in environment came interest in problems such as air pollution and petroleum spills, and environmental interest grew. New pressure groups formed, notably Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth (US), as well as notable local organisations such as the Wyoming Outdoor Council, which was founded in 1967.

In the 1970s, the environmental movement gained rapid speed around the world as a productive outgrowth of the counterculture movement.[41]

The world's first political parties to campaign on a predominantly environmental platform were the United Tasmania Group of Tasmania, Australia, and the Values Party of New Zealand.[42][43] The first green party in Europe was the Popular Movement for the Environment, founded in 1972 in the Swiss canton of Neuchâtel. The first national green party in Europe was PEOPLE, founded in Britain in February 1973, which eventually turned into the Ecology Party, and then the Green Party.

Protection of the environment also became important in the developing world; the Chipko movement was formed in India under the influence of Mhatmas Gandhi and they set up peaceful resistance to deforestation by literally hugging trees (leading to the term "tree huggers"). Their peaceful methods of protest and slogan "ecology is permanent economy" were very influential.

Another milestone in the movement was the creation of Earth Day. Earth Day was first observed in San Francisco and other cities on 21 March 1970, the first day of spring. It was created to give awareness to environmental issues. On 21 March 1971, United Nations Secretary-General U Thant spoke of a spaceship Earth on Earth Day, hereby referring to the ecosystem services the earth supplies to us, and hence our obligation to protect it (and with it, ourselves). Earth Day is now coordinated globally by the Earth Day Network,[44] and is celebrated in more than 192 countries every year.[45]

The UN's first major conference on international environmental issues, the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (also known as the Stockholm Conference), was held on 5–16 June 1972. It marked a turning point in the development of international environmental politics.[46]

By the mid-1970s, many felt that people were on the edge of environmental catastrophe. The back-to-the-land movement started to form and ideas of environmental ethics joined with anti-Vietnam War sentiments and other political issues. These individuals lived outside normal society and started to take on some of the more radical environmental theories such as deep ecology. Around this time more mainstream environmentalism was starting to show force with the signing of the Endangered Species Act in 1973 and the formation of CITES in 1975. Significant amendments were also enacted to the United States Clean Air Act[47] and Clean Water Act.[48]

In 1979, James Lovelock, a British scientist, published Gaia: A new look at life on Earth, which put forth the Gaia hypothesis; it proposes that life on earth can be understood as a single organism. This became an important part of the Deep Green ideology. Throughout the rest of the history of environmentalism there has been debate and argument between more radical followers of this Deep Green ideology and more mainstream environmentalists.

21st century and beyond

Environmentalism continues to evolve to face up to new issues such as global warming, overpopulation, genetic engineering, and plastic pollution.

Research demonstrates a precipitous decline in the US public's interest in 19 different areas of environmental concern.[49] Americans are less likely to be actively participating in an environmental movement or organisation and more likely to identify as "unsympathetic" to an environmental movement than in 2000.[50] This is likely a lingering factor of the Great Recession in 2008. Since 2005, the percentage of Americans agreeing that the environment should be given priority over economic growth has dropped 10 points; in contrast, those feeling that growth should be given priority "even if the environment suffers to some extent" has risen 12 percent.[50] Nevertheless, a recent National Geographic survey indicated strong desire for commitment across a dozen countries, indicating a majority were in favour of more than half of the Earth's land surface being protected.[51]

New forms of ecoactivism

 
Demonstrators in a tree at the Berkeley oak grove protest in 2008

Tree sitting is a form of activism in which the protester sits in a tree in an attempt to stop the removal of a tree or to impede the demolition of an area with the longest and most famous tree-sitter being Julia Butterfly Hill, who spent 738 days in a California Redwood, saving a three-acre tract of forest.[52] Also notable is the Yellow Finch tree sit, which was a 932-day blockade of the Mountain Valley Pipeline from 2018 to 2021.[53][54]

Sit-ins can be used to encourage social change, such as the Greensboro sit-ins, a series of protests in 1960 to stop racial segregation, but can also be used in ecoactivism, as in the Dakota Access Pipeline Protest.[55]

Before the Syrian Civil War, Rojava had been ecologically damaged by monoculture, oil extraction, damming of rivers, deforestation, drought, topsoil loss and general pollution. The DFNS launched a campaign titled 'Make Rojava Green Again' (a parody of Make America Great Again) which is attempting to provide renewable energy to communities (especially solar energy), reforestation, protecting water sources, planting gardens, promoting urban agriculture, creating wildlife reserves, water recycling, beekeeping, expanding public transportation and promoting environmental awareness within their communities.[56]

The Rebel Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities are firmly environmentalist and have stopped the extraction of oil, uranium, timber and metal from the Lacandon Jungle and stopped the use of pesticides and chemical fertilisers in farming.[57]

The CIPO-RFM has engaged in sabotage and direct action against wind farms, shrimp farms, eucalyptus plantations and the timber industry. They have also set up corn and coffee worker cooperatives and built schools and hospitals to help the local populations. They have also created a network of autonomous community radio stations to educate people about dangers to the environment and inform the surrounding communities about new industrial projects that would destroy more land. In 2001, the CIPO-RFM defeated the construction of a highway that was part of Plan Puebla Panama.[58]

Environmental movement

 
Before flue-gas desulfurization was installed, the air-polluting emissions from this power plant in New Mexico contained excessive amounts of sulfur dioxide.

The environmental movement (a term that sometimes includes the conservation and green movements) is a diverse scientific, social, and political movement. Though the movement is represented by a range of organisations, because of the inclusion of environmentalism in the classroom curriculum,[59][60] the environmental movement has a younger demographic than is common in other social movements (see green seniors).

Environmentalism as a movement covers broad areas of institutional oppression, including for example: consumption of ecosystems and natural resources into waste, dumping waste into disadvantaged communities, air pollution, water pollution, weak infrastructure, exposure of organic life to toxins, mono-culture, anti-polythene drive (jhola movement) and various other focuses. Because of these divisions, the environmental movement can be categorized into these primary focuses: environmental science, environmental activism, environmental advocacy, and environmental justice.[61]

Free market environmentalism

Free market environmentalism is a theory that argues that the free market, property rights, and tort law provide the best tools to preserve the health and sustainability of the environment. It considers environmental stewardship to be natural, as well as the expulsion of polluters and other aggressors through individual and class action.

Evangelical environmentalism

Evangelical environmentalism is an environmental movement in the United States in which some Evangelicals have emphasized biblical mandates concerning humanity's role as steward and subsequent responsibility for the care taking of Creation. While the movement has focused on different environmental issues, it is best known for its focus of addressing climate action from a biblically grounded theological perspective. This movement is controversial among some non-Christian environmentalists due to its rooting in a specific religion.

Preservation and conservation

 
Federal Register documents and literature related to US environmental regulations, including the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), 1987

Environmental preservation in the United States and other parts of the world, including Australia, is viewed as the setting aside of natural resources to prevent damage caused by contact with humans or by certain human activities, such as logging, mining, hunting, and fishing, often to replace them with new human activities such as tourism and recreation.[62] Regulations and laws may be enacted for the preservation of natural resources.

Organisations and conferences

 
Reef doctor work station in Ifaty, Madagascar

Environmental organisations can be global, regional, national or local; they can be government-run or private (NGO). Environmentalist activity exists in almost every country. Moreover, groups dedicated to community development and social justice also focus on environmental concerns.

Some US environmental organisations, among them the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Environmental Defense Fund, specialise in bringing lawsuits (a tactic seen as particularly useful in that country). Other groups, such as the US-based National Wildlife Federation, Earth Day, National Cleanup Day, the Nature Conservancy, and The Wilderness Society, and global groups like the World Wide Fund for Nature and Friends of the Earth, disseminate information, participate in public hearings, lobby, stage demonstrations, and may purchase land for preservation. Statewide nonprofit organisations such as the Wyoming Outdoor Council often collaborate with these national organisations and employ similar strategies. Smaller groups, including Wildlife Conservation International, conduct research on endangered species and ecosystems. More radical organisations, such as Greenpeace, Earth First!, and the Earth Liberation Front, have more directly opposed actions they regard as environmentally harmful. While Greenpeace is devoted to nonviolent confrontation as a means of bearing witness to environmental wrongs and bringing issues into the public realm for debate, the underground Earth Liberation Front engages in the clandestine destruction of property, the release of caged or penned animals, and other criminal acts. Such tactics are regarded as unusual within the movement, however.

On an international level, concern for the environment was the subject of a United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm in 1972, attended by 114 nations. Out of this meeting developed the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the follow-up United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in 1992. Other international organisations in support of environmental policies development include the Commission for Environmental Cooperation (as part of NAFTA), the European Environment Agency (EEA), and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Environmental protests

 
Climate activists blockade British Airports Authority's headquarters for day of action.
 
"March Against Monsanto", Vancouver, Canada, 25 May 2013

Notable environmental protests and campaigns include:

Environmentalists

Notable advocates for environmental protection and sustainability include:

Assassinations

 
Early American game warden Guy Bradley, who was killed in 1905 while attempting to stop a bird poacher near Flamingo, Florida

Every year, more than 100 environmental activists are murdered throughout the world.[66] Most recent deaths are in Brazil, where activists combat logging in the Amazon rainforest.[67]

116 environmental activists were assassinated in 2014,[68] and 185 in 2015.[66] This represents more than two environmentalists assassinated every week in 2014 and three every week in 2015.[69][70] More than 200 environmental activists were assassinated worldwide between 2016 and early 2018.[71] A 2020 incident saw several rangers murdered in the Congo Rainforest by poaching squads. Occurrences like this are relatively common, and account for a large number of deaths.[72]

In popular culture

  • The U.S. Forest Service created Smokey the Bear in 1944; he appeared in countless posters, radio and television programs, movies, press releases, and other guises to warn about forest fires.[73]
  • The comic strip Mark Trail, by environmentalist Ed Dodd, began in 1946; it still appears weekly in 175 newspapers.
  • The children's animated show Captain Planet and the Planeteers, created by Ted Turner and Barbara Pyle in 1989 to inform children about environmental issues. The show aired for six seasons and 113 episodes, in 100 countries worldwide from 1990 to 1996.[74]
  • In 1974, Spokane, Washington, became the smallest city ever to host a World's Fair. From Saturday, 4 May, to Sunday, 3 November 1974, Spokane hosted Expo 74, the first world's fair to focus on the environment. The theme of Expo 74 was "Celebrating Tomorrow's Fresh New Environment".
  • FernGully: The Last Rainforest is an animated motion picture released in 1992, which focuses exclusively on the environment. The movie is based on a book under the same title by Diana Young. In 1998, a sequel, FernGully 2: The Magical Rescue, was introduced.
  • Miss Earth is one of the Big Four international beauty pageants. (The other three are Miss Universe, Miss International, and Miss World.) Out of these four beauty pageants, Miss Earth is the only international beauty pageant that promotes "environmental awareness". The reigning titleholders dedicate their year to promote specific projects and often address issues concerning the environment and other global issues through school tours, tree planting activities, street campaigns, coastal clean ups, speaking engagements, shopping mall tours, media guesting, environmental fair, storytelling programs, eco-fashion shows, and other environmental activities. The Miss Earth winner is the spokesperson for the Miss Earth Foundation, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and other environmental organizations. The Miss Earth Foundation also works with the environmental departments and ministries of participating countries, various private sectors and corporations, as well as Greenpeace and the World Wildlife Foundation (WWF).
  • Another area of environmentalism is to use art to raise awareness about misuse of the environment.[75][76][77] One example is trashion, using trash to create clothes, jewelry, and other objects for the home. Marina DeBris is one trashion artist, who focuses on ocean and beach trash to design clothes and for fund raising, education.

Criticism and alternative views

When environmentalism first became popular during the early 20th century, the focus was wilderness protection and wildlife preservation. These goals reflected the interests of the movement's initial, primarily white middle and upper class supporters, including through viewing preservation and protection via a lens that failed to appreciate the centuries-long work of indigenous communities who had lived without ushering in the types of environmental devastation these settler colonial "environmentalists" now sought to mitigate. The actions of many mainstream environmental organizations still reflect these early principles.[78] Numerous low-income minorities felt isolated or negatively impacted by the movement, exemplified by the Southwest Organizing Project's (SWOP) Letter to the Group of 10, a letter sent to major environmental organizations by several local environmental justice activists.[79] The letter argued that the environmental movement was so concerned about cleaning up and preserving nature that it ignored the negative side-effects that doing so caused communities nearby, namely less job growth.[78] In addition, the NIMBY movement has transferred locally unwanted land uses (LULUs) from middle-class neighborhoods to poor communities with large minority populations. Therefore, vulnerable communities with fewer political opportunities are more often exposed to hazardous waste and toxins.[80] This has resulted in the PIBBY principle, or at least the PIMBY (Place-in-minorities'-backyard), as supported by the United Church of Christ's study in 1987.[81]

As a result, some minorities have viewed the environmental movement as elitist. Environmental elitism manifested itself in three different forms:

  1. Compositional – Environmentalists are from the middle and upper class.
  2. Ideological – The reforms benefit the movement's supporters but impose costs on nonparticipants.
  3. Impact – The reforms have "regressive social impacts". They disproportionately benefit environmentalists and harm underrepresented populations.[82]

Many environmentalists believe that human interference with 'nature' should be restricted or minimised as a matter of urgency (for the sake of life, or the planet, or just for the benefit of the human species),[83] whereas environmental skeptics and anti-environmentalists do not believe that there is such a need.[84] One can also regard oneself as an environmentalist and believe that human 'interference' with 'nature' should be increased.[85] Nevertheless, there is a risk that the shift from emotional environmentalism into the technical management of natural resources and hazards could decrease the touch of humans with nature, leading to less concern with environment preservation.[86] Increasingly, typical conservation rhetoric is being replaced with restoration approaches and larger landscape initiatives that seek to create more holistic impacts.[87]

In the 2000s, American author, film director, medical graduate and intellect Michael Crichton criticized environmentalism as being religiously motivated rather than grounded in empirical evidence, arguing that climate change was a natural part of Earth's history and had been occurring long before humans dominated the planet. Also claiming to argue from his minor education in anthropology, he stated that religion was a part of human social make-up and that if it was suppressed, it would simply re-emerge in another form. With the decline of Christianity and Church attendance in the Western world, environmentalism has become more popular according to him, which he termed as "the religion of urban atheists".[88][89][90][91]

Others seek a balance that involves both caring deeply for the environment while letting science guide human actions affecting it. Such an approach would avoid the emotionalism which, for example, anti-GMO activism has been criticized for, and protect the integrity of science. Planting trees, for another example, can be emotionally satisfying but should also involve being conscious of ecological concerns such as the effect on water cycles and the use of nonnative, potentially invasive species.[92]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Borowy, Iris. "Before UNEP: who was in charge of the global environment? The struggle for institutional responsibility 1968–72." Journal of Global History 14.1 (2019): 87-106.
  • Daynes, Byron W., and Glen Sussman, eds. White House Politics and the Environment: Franklin D. Roosevelt to George W. Bush (Texas A&M University Press; 2010) 300 pages; evaluates how 12 presidents helped or hindered the cause of environmental protection.
  • Johnson, Erik W., and Scott Frickel, (2011). "Ecological Threat and the Founding of U.S. National Environmental Movement Organizations, 1962–1998," Social Problems 58 (Aug. 2011), 305–29.
  • Lear, Linda (1997). Rachel Carson: Witness for Nature. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-0-8050-3428-8.
  • Martell, Luke. "Ecology and Society: An Introduction". Polity Press, 1994.
  • John McCormick. 1995. The Global Environmental Movement. John Wiley. London. 312 pp. ISBN 9780471949404 OCLC 33832322
  • de Steiguer, J. Edward. 2006. The Origins of Modern Environmental Thought. University of Arizona Press. Tucson. 246 pp. ISBN 9780816524617
  • Tooze, Adam, "Democracy and Its Discontents", The New York Review of Books, vol. LXVI, no. 10 (6 June 2019), pp. 52–53, 56–57. "Democracy has no clear answer for the mindless operation of bureaucratic and technological power. We may indeed be witnessing its extension in the form of artificial intelligence and robotics. Likewise, after decades of dire warning, the environmental problem remains fundamentally unaddressed.... Bureaucratic overreach and environmental catastrophe are precisely the kinds of slow-moving existential challenges that democracies deal with very badly.... Finally, there is the threat du jour: corporations and the technologies they promote." (pp. 56–57.)
  • Verweij, Marco; Thompson, Michael (eds), 2006, Clumsy Solutions for a Complex World: Governance, Politics and Plural Perceptions, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 978-0-230-00230-2
  • Vogel, David. California Greenin': How the Golden State Became an Environmental Leader (2018) 280 pp online review
  • Woodhouse, Keith M. "The Politics of Ecology: Environmentalism and Liberalism in the 1960s," Journal for the Study of Radicalism, Volume 2, Number 2, 2009, pp. 53–84
  • World Bank, 2003, "Sustainable Development in a Dynamic World: Transforming Institutions, Growth, and Quality of Life", World Development Report 2003, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and Oxford University Press.

External links

  • Environment at Curlie
  • Westland – A Canadian television series (1984–2007) on a broad range of environmental issues, from the UBC Library Digital Collections
  • The Directory of Environmental Websites

environmentalism, been, suggested, that, this, article, merged, with, environmental, movement, discuss, proposed, since, october, 2022, environmental, rights, broad, philosophy, ideology, social, movement, regarding, concerns, environmental, protection, improv. It has been suggested that this article be merged with Environmental movement Discuss Proposed since October 2022 Environmentalism or environmental rights is a broad philosophy ideology and social movement regarding concerns for environmental protection and improvement of the health of the environment particularly as the measure for this health seeks to incorporate the impact of changes to the environment on humans animals plants and non living matter circular definition While environmentalism focuses more on the environmental and nature related aspects of green ideology and politics ecologism combines the ideology of social ecology and environmentalism Ecologism is more commonly used in continental European languages while environmentalism is more commonly used in English but the words have slightly different connotations Environmentalism on United States stamps Environmentalism advocates the preservation restoration and improvement of the natural environment and critical earth system elements or processes such as the climate and may be referred to as a movement to control pollution or protect plant and animal diversity 1 For this reason concepts such as a land ethic environmental ethics biodiversity ecology and the biophilia hypothesis figure predominantly At its crux environmentalism is an attempt to balance relations between humans and the various natural systems on which they depend in such a way that all the components are accorded a proper degree of sustainability The exact measures and outcomes of this balance is controversial and there are many different ways for environmental concerns to be expressed in practice Environmentalism and environmental concerns are often represented by the colour green 2 but this association has been appropriated by the marketing industries for the tactic known as greenwashing 3 Environmentalism is opposed by anti environmentalism which says that the Earth is less fragile than some environmentalists maintain and portrays environmentalism as overreacting to the human contribution to climate change or opposing human advancement 4 Contents 1 Definitions 2 History 2 1 Early environmental legislation 2 2 First environmental movements 2 3 Post war expansion 2 4 21st century and beyond 2 5 New forms of ecoactivism 3 Environmental movement 3 1 Free market environmentalism 3 2 Evangelical environmentalism 3 3 Preservation and conservation 4 Organisations and conferences 5 Environmental protests 6 Environmentalists 6 1 Assassinations 7 In popular culture 8 Criticism and alternative views 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDefinitions EditEnvironmentalism denotes a social movement that seeks to influence the political process by lobbying activism and education in order to protect natural resources and ecosystems An environmentalist is a person who may speak out about our natural environment and the sustainable management of its resources through changes in public policy or individual behaviour This may include supporting practices such as informed consumption conservation initiatives investment in renewable resources improved efficiencies in the materials economy transitioning to new accounting paradigms such as ecological economics renewing and revitalizing our connections with non human life or even opting to have one less child to reduce consumption and pressure on resources In various ways for example grassroots activism and protests environmentalists and environmental organisations seek to give the natural world a stronger voice in human affairs 5 In general terms environmentalists advocate the sustainable management of resources and the protection and restoration when necessary of the natural environment through changes in public policy and individual behaviour In its recognition of humanity as a participant in ecosystems the movement is centered around ecology health and human rights History EditSee also Conservation movement and Timeline of history of environmentalism Lord Mahavira the last Jain Tirthankar is also considered to be a great environmentalist 6 A concern for environmental protection has recurred in diverse forms in different parts of the world throughout history The earliest ideas of environmental protectionism can be found in Jainism a religion from ancient India revived by Mahavira in the 6th century BC Jainism offers a view that is in many ways compatible with core values associated with environmental activism such as the protection of life by nonviolence which could form a strong ecological ethos for global protection of the environment Mahavira s teachings on the symbiosis between all living beings as well as the five elements of earth water air fire and space are core to environmental thought today 7 8 In the Middle East the Caliph Abu Bakr in the 630s AD commanded his army to Bring no harm to the trees nor burn them with fire and to Slay not any of the enemy s flock save for your food 9 Various Arabic medical treatises during the 9th to 13th centuries dealt with environmentalism and environmental science including the issue of pollution The authors of such treatises included Al Kindi Qusta ibn Luqa Al Razi Ibn Al Jazzar al Tamimi al Masihi Avicenna Ali ibn Ridwan Ibn Jumay Isaac Israeli ben Solomon Abd el latif Ibn al Quff and Ibn al Nafis Their works covered a number of subjects related to pollution such as air pollution water pollution soil contamination and the mishandling of municipal solid waste They also included asessments of certain localities environmental impact 10 In Europe King Edward I of England banned the burning and sale of sea coal in 1272 by proclamation in London after its smoke had become a prevalent annoyance throughout the city 11 12 This fuel common in London due to the local scarcity of wood was given this early name because it could be found washed up on some shores from where it was carted away on a wheelbarrow Early environmental legislation Edit Levels of air pollution rose during the Industrial Revolution sparking the first modern environmental laws to be passed in the mid 19th century At the advent of steam and electricity the muse of history holds her nose and shuts her eyes H G Wells 1918 13 The origins of the environmental movement lay in the response to increasing levels of smoke pollution in the atmosphere during the Industrial Revolution The emergence of great factories and the concomitant immense growth in coal consumption gave rise to an unprecedented level of air pollution in industrial centers after 1900 the large volume of industrial chemical discharges added to the growing load of untreated human waste 14 The first large scale modern environmental laws came in the form of Britain s Alkali Acts passed in 1863 to regulate the deleterious air pollution gaseous hydrochloric acid given off by the Leblanc process used to produce soda ash An Alkali inspector and four sub inspectors were appointed to curb this pollution The inspectorate s responsibilities were gradually expanded culminating in the Alkali Order 1958 which placed all major heavy industries that emitted smoke grit dust and fumes under supervision In industrial cities local experts and reformers especially after 1890 took the lead in identifying environmental degradation and pollution and initiating grass roots movements to demand and achieve reforms 15 Typically the highest priority went to water and air pollution The Coal Smoke Abatement Society was formed in 1898 making it one of the oldest environmental NGOs It was founded by artist Sir William Blake Richmond frustrated with the pall cast by coal smoke Although there were earlier pieces of legislation the Public Health Act 1875 required all furnaces and fireplaces to consume their own smoke It also provided for sanctions against factories that emitted large amounts of black smoke This law s provisions were extended in 1926 with the Smoke Abatement Act to include other emissions such as soot ash and gritty particles and to empower local authorities to impose their own regulations During the Spanish Revolution anarchist controlled territories undertook several environmental reforms which were possibly the largest in the world at the time Daniel Guerin notes that anarchist territories would diversify crops extend irrigation initiate reforestation start tree nurseries and help to establish naturist communities 16 Once there was a link discovered between air pollution and tuberculosis the CNT shut down several metal factories 17 It was only under the impetus of the Great Smog of 1952 in London which almost brought the city to a standstill and may have caused upward of 6 000 deaths that the Clean Air Act 1956 was passed and airborne pollution in the city was first tackled Financial incentives were offered to householders to replace open coal fires with alternatives such as installing gas fires or those who preferred to burn coke instead a byproduct of town gas production which produces minimal smoke Smoke control areas were introduced in some towns and cities where only smokeless fuels could be burnt and power stations were relocated away from cities The act formed an important impetus to modern environmentalism and caused a rethinking of the dangers of environmental degradation to people s quality of life 18 The late 19th century also saw the passage of the first wildlife conservation laws The zoologist Alfred Newton published a series of investigations into the Desirability of establishing a Close time for the preservation of indigenous animals between 1872 and 1903 His advocacy for legislation to protect animals from hunting during the mating season led to the formation of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and influenced the passage of the Sea Birds Preservation Act in 1869 as the first nature protection law in the world 19 20 First environmental movements Edit Early interest in the environment was a feature of the Romantic movement in the early 19th century One of the earliest modern pronouncements on thinking about human industrial advancement and its influence on the environment was written by Japanese geographer educator philosopher and author Tsunesaburo Makiguchi in his 1903 publication Jinsei Chirigaku A Geography of Human Life 21 In Britain the poet William Wordsworth travelled extensively in the Lake District and wrote that it is a sort of national property in which every man has a right and interest who has an eye to perceive and a heart to enjoy 22 John Ruskin an influential thinker who articulated the Romantic ideal of environmental protection and conservation Systematic efforts on behalf of the environment only began in the late 19th century it grew out of the amenity movement in Britain in the 1870s which was a reaction to industrialisation the growth of cities and worsening air and water pollution Starting with the formation of the Commons Preservation Society in 1865 the movement championed rural preservation against the encroachments of industrialisation Robert Hunter solicitor for the society worked with Hardwicke Rawnsley Octavia Hill and John Ruskin to lead a successful campaign to prevent the construction of railways to carry slate from the quarries which would have ruined the unspoiled valleys of Newlands and Ennerdale This success led to the formation of the Lake District Defence Society later to become The Friends of the Lake District 23 Peter Kropotkin wrote about ecology in economics agricultural science conservation ethology criminology urban planning geography geology and biology He observed in Swiss and Siberian glaciers that they had been slowly melting since the dawn of the industrial revolution possibly making him one of the first predictors for climate change He also observed the damage done from deforestation and hunting 24 Kropotkin s writings would become influential in the 1970s and became a major inspiration for the intentional community movement as well as his ideas becoming the basis for the theory of social ecology In 1893 Hill Hunter and Rawnsley agreed to set up a national body to coordinate environmental conservation efforts across the country the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty was formally inaugurated in 1894 25 The organisation obtained secure footing through the 1907 National Trust Bill which gave the trust the status of a statutory corporation 26 and the bill was passed in August 1907 27 An early Back to Nature movement which anticipated the romantic ideal of modern environmentalism was advocated by intellectuals such as John Ruskin William Morris George Bernard Shaw and Edward Carpenter who were all against consumerism pollution and other activities that were harmful to the natural world 28 The movement was a reaction to the urban conditions of the industrial towns where sanitation was awful pollution levels intolerable and housing terribly cramped Idealists championed the rural life as a mythical utopia and advocated a return to it John Ruskin argued that people should return to a small piece of English ground beautiful peaceful and fruitful We will have no steam engines upon it we will have plenty of flowers and vegetables we will have some music and poetry the children will learn to dance to it and sing it 29 Practical ventures in the establishment of small cooperative farms were even attempted and old rural traditions without the taint of manufacture or the canker of artificiality were enthusiastically revived including the Morris dance and the maypole 30 These ideas also inspired various environmental groups in the UK such as the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds established in 1889 by Emily Williamson as a protest group to campaign for greater protection for the indigenous birds of the island 31 The Society attracted growing support from the suburban middle classes as well as support from many other influential figures such as the ornithologist Professor Alfred Newton By 1900 public support for the organisation had grown and it had over 25 000 members The garden city movement incorporated many environmental concerns into its urban planning manifesto the Socialist League and The Clarion movement also began to advocate measures of nature conservation 32 Original title page of Walden by Henry David Thoreau The movement in the United States began in the late 19th century out of concerns for protecting the natural resources of the West with individuals such as John Muir and Henry David Thoreau making key philosophical contributions Thoreau was interested in peoples relationship with nature and studied this by living close to nature in a simple life He published his experiences in the book Walden which argues that people should become intimately close with nature Muir came to believe in nature s inherent right especially after spending time hiking in Yosemite Valley and studying both the ecology and geology He successfully lobbied congress to form Yosemite National Park and went on to set up the Sierra Club in 1892 The conservationist principles as well as the belief in an inherent right of nature were to become the bedrock of modern environmentalism In the 20th century environmental ideas continued to grow in popularity and recognition Efforts were starting to be made to save some wildlife particularly the American bison The death of the last passenger pigeon as well as the endangerment of the American bison helped to focus the minds of conservationists and to popularise their concerns In 1916 the National Park Service was founded by US President Woodrow Wilson The Forestry Commission was set up in 1919 in Britain to increase the amount of woodland in Britain by buying land for afforestation and reforestation The commission was also tasked with promoting forestry and the production of timber for trade 33 During the 1920s the Commission focused on acquiring land to begin planting out new forests much of the land was previously used for agricultural purposes By 1939 the Forestry Commission was the largest landowner in Britain 34 During the 1930s the Nazis had elements that were supportive of animal rights zoos and wildlife 35 and took several measures to ensure their protection 36 In 1933 the government created a stringent animal protection law and in 1934 Das Reichsjagdgesetz The Reich Hunting Law was enacted which limited hunting 37 38 Several Nazis were environmentalists notably Rudolf Hess and species protection and animal welfare were significant issues in the regime 36 In 1935 the regime enacted the Reich Nature Protection Act Reichsnaturschutzgesetz The concept of the Dauerwald best translated as the perpetual forest which included concepts such as forest management and protection was promoted and efforts were also made to curb air pollution 39 In 1949 A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold was published It explained Leopold s belief that humankind should have moral respect for the environment and that it is unethical to harm it The book is sometimes called the most influential book on conservation Throughout the 1950s 1960s 1970s and beyond photography was used to enhance public awareness of the need for protecting land and recruiting members to environmental organisations David Brower Ansel Adams and Nancy Newhall created the Sierra Club Exhibit Format Series which helped raise public environmental awareness and brought a rapidly increasing flood of new members to the Sierra Club and to the environmental movement in general This Is Dinosaur edited by Wallace Stegner with photographs by Martin Litton and Philip Hyde prevented the building of dams within Dinosaur National Monument by becoming part of a new kind of activism called environmentalism that combined the conservationist ideals of Thoreau Leopold and Muir with hard hitting advertising lobbying book distribution letter writing campaigns and more The powerful use of photography in addition to the written word for conservation dated back to the creation of Yosemite National Park when photographs persuaded Abraham Lincoln to preserve the beautiful glacier carved landscape for all time The Sierra Club Exhibit Format Series galvanised public opposition to building dams in the Grand Canyon and protected many other national treasures The Sierra Club often led a coalition of many environmental groups including the Wilderness Society and many others After a focus on preserving wilderness in the 1950s and 1960s the Sierra Club and other groups broadened their focus to include such issues as air and water pollution population concern and curbing the exploitation of natural resources Post war expansion Edit See also Steady state economy Post war economic expansion and emerging ecological concerns In the United States and several other countries the boom was manifested in suburban development and urban sprawl aided by automobile ownership In 1962 Silent Spring by American biologist Rachel Carson was published The book cataloged the environmental impacts of the indiscriminate spraying of DDT in the US and questioned the logic of releasing large amounts of chemicals into the environment without fully understanding their effects on human health and ecology The book suggested that DDT and other pesticides may cause cancer and that their agricultural use was a threat to wildlife particularly birds 40 The resulting public concern led to the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency in 1970 which subsequently banned the agricultural use of DDT in the US in 1972 The limited use of DDT in disease vector control continues to this day in certain parts of the world and remains controversial The book s legacy was to produce a far greater awareness of environmental issues and interest into how people affect the environment With this new interest in environment came interest in problems such as air pollution and petroleum spills and environmental interest grew New pressure groups formed notably Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth US as well as notable local organisations such as the Wyoming Outdoor Council which was founded in 1967 In the 1970s the environmental movement gained rapid speed around the world as a productive outgrowth of the counterculture movement 41 The world s first political parties to campaign on a predominantly environmental platform were the United Tasmania Group of Tasmania Australia and the Values Party of New Zealand 42 43 The first green party in Europe was the Popular Movement for the Environment founded in 1972 in the Swiss canton of Neuchatel The first national green party in Europe was PEOPLE founded in Britain in February 1973 which eventually turned into the Ecology Party and then the Green Party Protection of the environment also became important in the developing world the Chipko movement was formed in India under the influence of Mhatmas Gandhi and they set up peaceful resistance to deforestation by literally hugging trees leading to the term tree huggers Their peaceful methods of protest and slogan ecology is permanent economy were very influential Another milestone in the movement was the creation of Earth Day Earth Day was first observed in San Francisco and other cities on 21 March 1970 the first day of spring It was created to give awareness to environmental issues On 21 March 1971 United Nations Secretary General U Thant spoke of a spaceship Earth on Earth Day hereby referring to the ecosystem services the earth supplies to us and hence our obligation to protect it and with it ourselves Earth Day is now coordinated globally by the Earth Day Network 44 and is celebrated in more than 192 countries every year 45 The UN s first major conference on international environmental issues the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment also known as the Stockholm Conference was held on 5 16 June 1972 It marked a turning point in the development of international environmental politics 46 By the mid 1970s many felt that people were on the edge of environmental catastrophe The back to the land movement started to form and ideas of environmental ethics joined with anti Vietnam War sentiments and other political issues These individuals lived outside normal society and started to take on some of the more radical environmental theories such as deep ecology Around this time more mainstream environmentalism was starting to show force with the signing of the Endangered Species Act in 1973 and the formation of CITES in 1975 Significant amendments were also enacted to the United States Clean Air Act 47 and Clean Water Act 48 In 1979 James Lovelock a British scientist published Gaia A new look at life on Earth which put forth the Gaia hypothesis it proposes that life on earth can be understood as a single organism This became an important part of the Deep Green ideology Throughout the rest of the history of environmentalism there has been debate and argument between more radical followers of this Deep Green ideology and more mainstream environmentalists 21st century and beyond Edit Environmentalism continues to evolve to face up to new issues such as global warming overpopulation genetic engineering and plastic pollution Research demonstrates a precipitous decline in the US public s interest in 19 different areas of environmental concern 49 Americans are less likely to be actively participating in an environmental movement or organisation and more likely to identify as unsympathetic to an environmental movement than in 2000 50 This is likely a lingering factor of the Great Recession in 2008 Since 2005 the percentage of Americans agreeing that the environment should be given priority over economic growth has dropped 10 points in contrast those feeling that growth should be given priority even if the environment suffers to some extent has risen 12 percent 50 Nevertheless a recent National Geographic survey indicated strong desire for commitment across a dozen countries indicating a majority were in favour of more than half of the Earth s land surface being protected 51 New forms of ecoactivism Edit Demonstrators in a tree at the Berkeley oak grove protest in 2008 Tree sitting is a form of activism in which the protester sits in a tree in an attempt to stop the removal of a tree or to impede the demolition of an area with the longest and most famous tree sitter being Julia Butterfly Hill who spent 738 days in a California Redwood saving a three acre tract of forest 52 Also notable is the Yellow Finch tree sit which was a 932 day blockade of the Mountain Valley Pipeline from 2018 to 2021 53 54 Sit ins can be used to encourage social change such as the Greensboro sit ins a series of protests in 1960 to stop racial segregation but can also be used in ecoactivism as in the Dakota Access Pipeline Protest 55 Before the Syrian Civil War Rojava had been ecologically damaged by monoculture oil extraction damming of rivers deforestation drought topsoil loss and general pollution The DFNS launched a campaign titled Make Rojava Green Again a parody of Make America Great Again which is attempting to provide renewable energy to communities especially solar energy reforestation protecting water sources planting gardens promoting urban agriculture creating wildlife reserves water recycling beekeeping expanding public transportation and promoting environmental awareness within their communities 56 The Rebel Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities are firmly environmentalist and have stopped the extraction of oil uranium timber and metal from the Lacandon Jungle and stopped the use of pesticides and chemical fertilisers in farming 57 The CIPO RFM has engaged in sabotage and direct action against wind farms shrimp farms eucalyptus plantations and the timber industry They have also set up corn and coffee worker cooperatives and built schools and hospitals to help the local populations They have also created a network of autonomous community radio stations to educate people about dangers to the environment and inform the surrounding communities about new industrial projects that would destroy more land In 2001 the CIPO RFM defeated the construction of a highway that was part of Plan Puebla Panama 58 Environmental movement EditMain article Environmental movement Before flue gas desulfurization was installed the air polluting emissions from this power plant in New Mexico contained excessive amounts of sulfur dioxide The environmental movement a term that sometimes includes the conservation and green movements is a diverse scientific social and political movement Though the movement is represented by a range of organisations because of the inclusion of environmentalism in the classroom curriculum 59 60 the environmental movement has a younger demographic than is common in other social movements see green seniors Environmentalism as a movement covers broad areas of institutional oppression including for example consumption of ecosystems and natural resources into waste dumping waste into disadvantaged communities air pollution water pollution weak infrastructure exposure of organic life to toxins mono culture anti polythene drive jhola movement and various other focuses Because of these divisions the environmental movement can be categorized into these primary focuses environmental science environmental activism environmental advocacy and environmental justice 61 Free market environmentalism Edit Main article Free market environmentalism Free market environmentalism is a theory that argues that the free market property rights and tort law provide the best tools to preserve the health and sustainability of the environment It considers environmental stewardship to be natural as well as the expulsion of polluters and other aggressors through individual and class action Evangelical environmentalism Edit Main article Evangelical environmentalism Evangelical environmentalism is an environmental movement in the United States in which some Evangelicals have emphasized biblical mandates concerning humanity s role as steward and subsequent responsibility for the care taking of Creation While the movement has focused on different environmental issues it is best known for its focus of addressing climate action from a biblically grounded theological perspective This movement is controversial among some non Christian environmentalists due to its rooting in a specific religion Preservation and conservation Edit Federal Register documents and literature related to US environmental regulations including the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act RCRA 1987 Main articles Conservation movement and Conservation in the United States Environmental preservation in the United States and other parts of the world including Australia is viewed as the setting aside of natural resources to prevent damage caused by contact with humans or by certain human activities such as logging mining hunting and fishing often to replace them with new human activities such as tourism and recreation 62 Regulations and laws may be enacted for the preservation of natural resources Organisations and conferences EditMain article List of environmental organizations Reef doctor work station in Ifaty Madagascar Environmental organisations can be global regional national or local they can be government run or private NGO Environmentalist activity exists in almost every country Moreover groups dedicated to community development and social justice also focus on environmental concerns Some US environmental organisations among them the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Environmental Defense Fund specialise in bringing lawsuits a tactic seen as particularly useful in that country Other groups such as the US based National Wildlife Federation Earth Day National Cleanup Day the Nature Conservancy and The Wilderness Society and global groups like the World Wide Fund for Nature and Friends of the Earth disseminate information participate in public hearings lobby stage demonstrations and may purchase land for preservation Statewide nonprofit organisations such as the Wyoming Outdoor Council often collaborate with these national organisations and employ similar strategies Smaller groups including Wildlife Conservation International conduct research on endangered species and ecosystems More radical organisations such as Greenpeace Earth First and the Earth Liberation Front have more directly opposed actions they regard as environmentally harmful While Greenpeace is devoted to nonviolent confrontation as a means of bearing witness to environmental wrongs and bringing issues into the public realm for debate the underground Earth Liberation Front engages in the clandestine destruction of property the release of caged or penned animals and other criminal acts Such tactics are regarded as unusual within the movement however On an international level concern for the environment was the subject of a United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm in 1972 attended by 114 nations Out of this meeting developed the United Nations Environment Programme UNEP and the follow up United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in 1992 Other international organisations in support of environmental policies development include the Commission for Environmental Cooperation as part of NAFTA the European Environment Agency EEA and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC Environmental protests Edit Climate activists blockade British Airports Authority s headquarters for day of action March Against Monsanto Vancouver Canada 25 May 2013 Main article List of environmental protests Notable environmental protests and campaigns include 2010 Xinfa aluminum plant protest Anti WAAhnsinns Festival Car Free Days Camp for Climate Action Campaign against Climate Change Climate Rush Cofan people oil drilling protest Ecuador Earth Day Earth First Earthlife Africa Global Climate Strikes 63 64 Global Day of Action Gurindji Strike Hands off our Forest Homes before Roads Kupa Piti Kungka Tjuta Love Canal protests March Against Monsanto Nevada Desert Experience Plane Mad Plane Stupid Qidong protest Save Manapouri Campaign Say Yes demonstrations Shifang protest Stop Climate ChaosEnvironmentalists EditMain article Environmentalist Notable advocates for environmental protection and sustainability include Edward Abbey author David Attenborough broadcaster naturalist John James Audubon naturalist Judi Bari environmentalist Frances Beinecke environmentalist and former president of the Natural Resources Defense Council David Bellamy botanist Wendell Berry farmer philosopher Murray Bookchin anarchist philosopher social ecologist Erin Brockovich environmental lawyer and activist David Brower writer activist Lester Brown environmental analyst author Carol Browner lawyer and activist Kevin Buzzacott Aboriginal activist Berta Caceres environmental and indigenous rights activist Helen Caldicott medical doctor Rachel Carson biologist writer Majora Carter urban revitalization strategist Prince Charles British Royal Family member Barry Commoner biologist politician Jacques Yves Cousteau explorer ecologist Herman Daly ecological economist and steady state theorist Peter Dauvergne political scientist Laurie David activist and producer Marina DeBris environmental artist Leonardo DiCaprio actor and environmentalist 65 Sylvia Earle marine biologist Paul R Ehrlich population biologist Hans Josef Fell German Green Party member Jane Fonda actor Josh Fox filmmaker environmental activist Mizuho Fukushima politician activist Peter Garrett musician politician Jane Goodall primatologist anthropologist and UN Messenger of Peace Lois Gibbs Founder of the Center for Health Environment and Justice Al Gore former Vice President of the United States Daryl Hannah activist James Hansen scientist Garrett Hardin ecologist ecophilosopher Denis Hayes environmentalist and solar power advocate Julia Butterfly Hill activist Robert Hunter journalist co founder and first president of Greenpeace Tetsunari Iida sustainable energy advocate Lisa P Jackson chemical engineer and former administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency Naomi Klein writer activist Winona LaDuke environmentalist Aldo Leopold ecologist A Carl Leopold plant physiologist James Lovelock scientist Amory Lovins energy policy analyst Hunter Lovins environmentalist Caroline Lucas politician Wangari Maathai activist and Nobel laureate Jarid Manos CEO of the Great Plains Restoration Council Xiuhtezcatl Martinez environmental activist hip hop artist Bill McKibben writer activist David McTaggart activist Chico Mendes activist Joni Mitchell musician environmental activist George Monbiot journalist John Muir naturalist activist Ralph Nader activist Gaylord Nelson politician Alan Pears environmental consultant and energy efficiency pioneer Gifford Pinchot first chief of the USFS Jonathon Porritt politician John Wesley Powell second director of the USGS Barbara Pyle documentarian and executive producer of Captain Planet and the Planeteers Phil Radford environmental clean energy and democracy advocate Greenpeace Executive Director Bonnie Raitt musician Theodore Roosevelt former President of the United States Habiba Sarobi politician and activist E F Schumacher author of Small Is Beautiful Vandana Shiva ecofeminist and activist Marina Silva politician and activist Alicia Silverstone activist and author of The Kind Diet Lauren Singer activist and entrepreneur Swami Sundaranand Yogi photographer and mountaineer Cass Sunstein environmental lawyer David Suzuki scientist broadcaster Henry David Thoreau writer philosopher Greta Thunberg environmentalist Stewart Udall former United States Secretary of the Interior Jo Valentine politician and activist Dominique Voynet politician and environmentalist Christopher O Ward water infrastructure expert Alice Waters activist and restaurateur Gabriel Willow environmental educator naturalist Howard Zahniser author of the 1964 Wilderness Act Assassinations Edit Early American game warden Guy Bradley who was killed in 1905 while attempting to stop a bird poacher near Flamingo Florida See also List of environmental activists assassinated Every year more than 100 environmental activists are murdered throughout the world 66 Most recent deaths are in Brazil where activists combat logging in the Amazon rainforest 67 116 environmental activists were assassinated in 2014 68 and 185 in 2015 66 This represents more than two environmentalists assassinated every week in 2014 and three every week in 2015 69 70 More than 200 environmental activists were assassinated worldwide between 2016 and early 2018 71 A 2020 incident saw several rangers murdered in the Congo Rainforest by poaching squads Occurrences like this are relatively common and account for a large number of deaths 72 In popular culture EditFurther information Climate change in popular culture and Environmentalism in music The U S Forest Service created Smokey the Bear in 1944 he appeared in countless posters radio and television programs movies press releases and other guises to warn about forest fires 73 The comic strip Mark Trail by environmentalist Ed Dodd began in 1946 it still appears weekly in 175 newspapers The children s animated show Captain Planet and the Planeteers created by Ted Turner and Barbara Pyle in 1989 to inform children about environmental issues The show aired for six seasons and 113 episodes in 100 countries worldwide from 1990 to 1996 74 In 1974 Spokane Washington became the smallest city ever to host a World s Fair From Saturday 4 May to Sunday 3 November 1974 Spokane hosted Expo 74 the first world s fair to focus on the environment The theme of Expo 74 was Celebrating Tomorrow s Fresh New Environment FernGully The Last Rainforest is an animated motion picture released in 1992 which focuses exclusively on the environment The movie is based on a book under the same title by Diana Young In 1998 a sequel FernGully 2 The Magical Rescue was introduced Miss Earth is one of the Big Four international beauty pageants The other three are Miss Universe Miss International and Miss World Out of these four beauty pageants Miss Earth is the only international beauty pageant that promotes environmental awareness The reigning titleholders dedicate their year to promote specific projects and often address issues concerning the environment and other global issues through school tours tree planting activities street campaigns coastal clean ups speaking engagements shopping mall tours media guesting environmental fair storytelling programs eco fashion shows and other environmental activities The Miss Earth winner is the spokesperson for the Miss Earth Foundation the United Nations Environment Programme UNEP and other environmental organizations The Miss Earth Foundation also works with the environmental departments and ministries of participating countries various private sectors and corporations as well as Greenpeace and the World Wildlife Foundation WWF Another area of environmentalism is to use art to raise awareness about misuse of the environment 75 76 77 One example is trashion using trash to create clothes jewelry and other objects for the home Marina DeBris is one trashion artist who focuses on ocean and beach trash to design clothes and for fund raising education Criticism and alternative views EditWhen environmentalism first became popular during the early 20th century the focus was wilderness protection and wildlife preservation These goals reflected the interests of the movement s initial primarily white middle and upper class supporters including through viewing preservation and protection via a lens that failed to appreciate the centuries long work of indigenous communities who had lived without ushering in the types of environmental devastation these settler colonial environmentalists now sought to mitigate The actions of many mainstream environmental organizations still reflect these early principles 78 Numerous low income minorities felt isolated or negatively impacted by the movement exemplified by the Southwest Organizing Project s SWOP Letter to the Group of 10 a letter sent to major environmental organizations by several local environmental justice activists 79 The letter argued that the environmental movement was so concerned about cleaning up and preserving nature that it ignored the negative side effects that doing so caused communities nearby namely less job growth 78 In addition the NIMBY movement has transferred locally unwanted land uses LULUs from middle class neighborhoods to poor communities with large minority populations Therefore vulnerable communities with fewer political opportunities are more often exposed to hazardous waste and toxins 80 This has resulted in the PIBBY principle or at least the PIMBY Place in minorities backyard as supported by the United Church of Christ s study in 1987 81 As a result some minorities have viewed the environmental movement as elitist Environmental elitism manifested itself in three different forms Compositional Environmentalists are from the middle and upper class Ideological The reforms benefit the movement s supporters but impose costs on nonparticipants Impact The reforms have regressive social impacts They disproportionately benefit environmentalists and harm underrepresented populations 82 Many environmentalists believe that human interference with nature should be restricted or minimised as a matter of urgency for the sake of life or the planet or just for the benefit of the human species 83 whereas environmental skeptics and anti environmentalists do not believe that there is such a need 84 One can also regard oneself as an environmentalist and believe that human interference with nature should be increased 85 Nevertheless there is a risk that the shift from emotional environmentalism into the technical management of natural resources and hazards could decrease the touch of humans with nature leading to less concern with environment preservation 86 Increasingly typical conservation rhetoric is being replaced with restoration approaches and larger landscape initiatives that seek to create more holistic impacts 87 In the 2000s American author film director medical graduate and intellect Michael Crichton criticized environmentalism as being religiously motivated rather than grounded in empirical evidence arguing that climate change was a natural part of Earth s history and had been occurring long before humans dominated the planet Also claiming to argue from his minor education in anthropology he stated that religion was a part of human social make up and that if it was suppressed it would simply re emerge in another form With the decline of Christianity and Church attendance in the Western world environmentalism has become more popular according to him which he termed as the religion of urban atheists 88 89 90 91 Others seek a balance that involves both caring deeply for the environment while letting science guide human actions affecting it Such an approach would avoid the emotionalism which for example anti GMO activism has been criticized for and protect the integrity of science Planting trees for another example can be emotionally satisfying but should also involve being conscious of ecological concerns such as the effect on water cycles and the use of nonnative potentially invasive species 92 See also EditOutline of environmentalism Anti environmentalism Climate movement Conservation movement Ecomodernism Human ecology Human impact on the environment Nature conservation Radical environmentalism Religion and environmentalism Sustainability List of climate scientists List of women climate scientists and activistsReferences Edit Environmentalism Definition and More from the Free Merriam Webster Dictionary Merriam webster com 13 August 2010 Retrieved 20 June 2012 Cat Lincoln Spring 2009 Light Dark and Bright Green Environmentalism Green Daily Archived from the original on 25 April 2009 Retrieved 2 November 2009 Bowen Frances and J Alberto Aragon Correa Greenwashing in corporate environmentalism research and practice The importance of what we say and do 2014 107 112 Rowell Andrew 1996 Green Backlash Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 12828 5 Robert Gottlieb Forcing the Spring The Transformation of the American Environmental Movement 2005 PTI 20 April 2016 Lord Mahavir was a great environmentalist Fadnavis Times of India Retrieved 29 April 2019 Long Jeffery D 2013 Jainism An Introduction I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 85773 656 7 via Google Books Jainism Introduction fore yale edu Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology Aboul Enein H Yousuf Zuhur Sherifa 2004 Islamic Rulings on Warfare Strategic Studies Institute US Army War College p 22 ISBN 978 1 58487 177 4 Gari L November 2002 Arabic Treatises on Environmental Pollution up to the End of the Thirteenth Century Environment and History 8 4 475 88 doi 10 3197 096734002129342747 S2CID 85197649 David Urbinato Summer 1994 London s Historic Pea Soupers U S Environmental Protection Agency Archived from the original on 2 October 2006 Retrieved 2 August 2006 Deadly Smog PBS 17 January 2003 Retrieved 2 August 2006 In the Fourth Year Anticipations of a World Peace London Chatto amp Windus p 100 Fleming James R Bethany R Knorr History of the Clean Air Act American Meteorological Society Retrieved 14 February 2006 Harold L Platt Shock cities the environmental transformation and reform of Manchester and Chicago 2005 excerpt Guerin Daniel 1970 Anarchism From Theory to Practice New York Monthly Review Press p 134 Iain McKay Objectivity and Right Libertarian Scholarship 20 January 2009 http anarchism pageabode com anarcho caplan html London s Great Smog 60 Years On 10 December 2012 Retrieved 17 December 2012 G Baeyens M L Martinez 2007 Coastal Dunes Ecology and Conservation Springer p 282 Makel Jo 2 February 2011 Protecting seabirds at Bempton Cliffs BBC News Odata Toshihiro 1994 牧口常三郎 人生地理学 の地理学史上の再評価 A Reappraisal of Tsunesaburo Makiguchi s Jinsei Chirigaku in the History of Geography in Japan Chiri Kagaku Geographical Sciences in Japanese 49 4 197 212 doi 10 20630 chirikagaku 49 4 197 Nature conservation in Britain ca 1870 1945 Archived from the original on 22 January 2013 Retrieved 17 December 2012 Canon Hardwicke Drummond Rawnsley Archived 6 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine Visitcumbria com accessed 17 May 2009 Purchase Graham 4 December 2013 Green Flame Kropotkin and the Birth of Ecology zabalazabooks net A Proposed National Trust The Times 17 July 1894 p 12 Parliamentary Committees The Times 26 July 1907 p 4 An Act to incorporate and confer powers upon the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty Archived 2 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine The National Trust accessed 4 June 2012 Gould Peter C 1988 Early Green Politics Brighton Harvester Press pp 15 19 and Wall Derek 1994 Green History A Reader London Routledge pp 9 14 Jan Marsh 1982 Back to the Land The Pastoral Impulse in England 1880 1914 Quartet Books ISBN 978 0 7043 2276 9 Back to nature movement nothing new dates back to 1880 Christian Science Monitor 15 December 1983 Retrieved 17 December 2012 Our History RSPB Retrieved 28 August 2020 Gould 1988 pp 16 23 24 36 38 84 86 Forestry Commission a brief history PDF Woodland Trust Retrieved 11 April 2012 permanent dead link Sylvie Nail 2008 Forest Policies and Social Change in England Springer p 332 ISBN 978 1 4020 8364 8 Thomas R DeGregori 2002 Bountiful Harvest Technology Food Safety and the Environment Cato Institute p 153 ISBN 978 1 930865 31 0 a b Martin Kitchen 2006 A History of Modern Germany 1800 2000 Blackwell Publishing p 278 ISBN 978 1 4051 0040 3 Hartmut M Hanauske Abel Not a slippery slope or sudden subversion German medicine and National Socialism in 1933 BMJ 1996 pp 1453 1463 7 December kaltio fi Retrieved 15 August 2007 Jonathan Olsen How Green Were the Nazis Nature Environment and Nation in the Third Reich review Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Technology and Culture Volume 48 Number 1 January 2007 pp 207 08 Carson Rachel 1962 Silent Spring Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 8093 2218 3 page needed Opinion In Praise of the Counterculture The New York Times 11 December 1994 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 February 2023 Dann Christine The development of the first two Green parties New Zealand and Tasmania From Earth s last islands The global origins of Green politics Global Greens Archived from the original on 15 May 2011 Retrieved 4 August 2011 Bevan RA 2001 Petra Kelly The Other Green New Political Science vol 23 no 2 November pp 181 202 Resource temporarily unavailable Earthday net Retrieved 22 April 2011 Earth Day 2019 Everything you need to know abcnews go com 22 April 2019 John Baylis Steve Smith 2005 The Globalization of World Politics 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 454 55 Clean Air Act Extension of 1970 84 Stat 1676 Pub L 91 604 31 December 1970 Pub L 95 217 Archived 29 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine 27 December 1977 McCallum M L amp G W Bury 2013 Google search patterns suggest declining interest in the environment Biodiversity and Conservation 22 6 1355 1367 doi 10 1007 s10531 013 0476 6 S2CID 15593201 a b Environment Gallup Historical Trends Gallup com 20 April 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2013 Many people want to set aside half of Earth as nature Animals 17 September 2019 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Fountain Henry 18 June 2006 Rising Above the Environmental Debate The New York Times Hammack Laurence 12 November 2020 Judge orders tree sitters down after more than 2 years The Roanoke Times Dhillon Matt 16 April 2021 Last Tree sitters Removed from Path of Mountain Valley Pipeline The Appalachian Voice Mele Christopher 2016 Veterans To Serve as Human Shields for Dakota Pipeline Protestors The New York Times Building Autonomy Through Ecology in Rojava unicornriot ninja 28 February 2018 Gobierno Autonomo I Cuaderno de texto de primer grado del curso de La Libertad segun l s Zapatistas 19 Denham Diana 2008 Teaching Rebellion Stories from the Grassroots Mobilisation in Oaxaca Craig Kridel 2010 Encyclopedia of Curriculum Studies Sage Publications Inc p 341 ISBN 978 1 4129 5883 7 Retrieved 16 April 2010 Jennifer Sinsel 15 April 2010 Earth Day Activities Lesson Planet Retrieved 16 April 2010 American Environmental Justice Movement www iep utm edu Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 15 April 2018 Cunningham William P et al 1998 Environmental encyclopedia Gale Research ISBN 978 0 8103 9314 1 Climate crisis 6 million people join latest wave of global protests TheGuardian com 27 September 2019 Greta Thunberg is leading kids and adults from 150 countries in a massive Friday climate strike 17 September 2019 Leonardo DiCaprio World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 31 January 2016 a b Holmes Oliver 20 June 2016 Environmental activist murders set record as 2015 became deadliest year the Guardian Retrieved 15 April 2018 Ulmanu Monica Evans Alan Brown Georgia May 2018 37 environmental defenders have been killed so far in 2018 The Guardian Retrieved 26 May 2018 Map 116 environmental activists were killed in just one year Grist org 5 March 2016 Retrieved 25 September 2016 Stout David 20 April 2015 Environmental Activists Killed in Record Numbers in 2014 Time com On Dangerous Ground Killings of land and environmental defenders in 2015 Global Witness 20 June 2016 Cambodian forest defenders killed after confronting illegal loggers The Guardian 31 January 2018 Retrieved 2 February 2018 Dahir Abdi Latif 25 April 2020 12 Rangers Among 17 Killed in Congo Park Ambush The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Ellen Earnhardt Morrison Guardian of the Forest A History of Smokey Bear and the Cooperative Forest Fire Prevention Program 1995 Barbara Pyle with Ted Turner created the animated action series Captain Planet and the Planeteers www barbarapyle com Archived from the original on 6 August 2017 Retrieved 15 April 2018 Washed Up Art Exhibition Raises Awareness of Plastic Pollution Wilson College 4 April 2016 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Unmasking Pollution with Climate Art UN Climate Change Climate Action United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Retrieved 2 October 2017 Cerini Marianna 7 December 2016 How limited edition sneakers designed by Kanye West are helping people breathe in China CNN CNN Retrieved 2 October 2017 a b Sandler R amp Phaedra P 2007 Environmental justice and environmentalism pp 27 55 SWOP Letter to the Group of 10 Southwest Organizing Project N p Web 7 May 2013 lt 1 gt Archived 14 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine Gerrard Michael B 1993 1994 The Victims of NIMBY Fordham Urban Law Journal New York NY Roberts R Gregory October 1998 Environmental Justice and Community Empowerment Learning from the Civil Rights Movement PDF American University Law Review Washington D C Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2009 Morrison Denton September 1986 Environmentalism and elitism a conceptual and empirical analysis Environmental Management New York 10 5 581 589 Bibcode 1986EnMan 10 581M doi 10 1007 BF01866762 S2CID 153561660 Huesemann Michael H and Joyce A Huesemann 2011 Technofix Why Technology Won t Save Us or the Environment New Society Publishers Gabriola Island British Columbia ISBN 0 86571 704 4 464 pp Bakari Mohamed El Kamel Globalization and Sustainable Development False Twins New Global Studies 7 3 23 56 Neil Paul Cummins An Evolutionary Perspective on the Relationship Between Humans and Their Surroundings Geoengineering the Purpose of Life amp the Nature of the Universe Cranmore Publications 2012 Vasconcelos Vitor Vieira 2011 The Environment Professional and the Touch with Nature Qualit s pp 1 10 via Pt scribd com Mason Matthew Conservation History and Future EnvironmentalScience org Crichton Michael Environmentalism as religion speech to the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco CA 2003 Berry Evan Religious environmentalism and environmental religion in America Religion Compass 7 10 2013 454 466 Garreau Joel Environmentalism as Religion The New Atlantis 28 2010 61 74 Nelson Robert H Environmental religion a theological critique Case W Res L Rev 55 2004 51 Das Dibakar September October 2020 When Environmentalism Clashes with Science Skeptical Inquirer Vol 44 no 5 Amherst New York Center for Inquiry pp 54 55 Further reading EditBorowy Iris Before UNEP who was in charge of the global environment The struggle for institutional responsibility 1968 72 Journal of Global History 14 1 2019 87 106 Daynes Byron W and Glen Sussman eds White House Politics and the Environment Franklin D Roosevelt to George W Bush Texas A amp M University Press 2010 300 pages evaluates how 12 presidents helped or hindered the cause of environmental protection Johnson Erik W and Scott Frickel 2011 Ecological Threat and the Founding of U S National Environmental Movement Organizations 1962 1998 Social Problems 58 Aug 2011 305 29 Lear Linda 1997 Rachel Carson Witness for Nature New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 0 8050 3428 8 Martell Luke Ecology and Society An Introduction Polity Press 1994 John McCormick 1995 The Global Environmental Movement John Wiley London 312 pp ISBN 9780471949404 OCLC 33832322 de Steiguer J Edward 2006 The Origins of Modern Environmental Thought University of Arizona Press Tucson 246 pp ISBN 9780816524617 Tooze Adam Democracy and Its Discontents The New York Review of Books vol LXVI no 10 6 June 2019 pp 52 53 56 57 Democracy has no clear answer for the mindless operation of bureaucratic and technological power We may indeed be witnessing its extension in the form of artificial intelligence and robotics Likewise after decades of dire warning the environmental problem remains fundamentally unaddressed Bureaucratic overreach and environmental catastrophe are precisely the kinds of slow moving existential challenges that democracies deal with very badly Finally there is the threat du jour corporations and the technologies they promote pp 56 57 Verweij Marco Thompson Michael eds 2006 Clumsy Solutions for a Complex World Governance Politics and Plural Perceptions Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 00230 2 Vogel David California Greenin How the Golden State Became an Environmental Leader 2018 280 pp online review Woodhouse Keith M The Politics of Ecology Environmentalism and Liberalism in the 1960s Journal for the Study of Radicalism Volume 2 Number 2 2009 pp 53 84 World Bank 2003 Sustainable Development in a Dynamic World Transforming Institutions Growth and Quality of Life World Development Report 2003 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and Oxford University Press External links EditEnvironmentalism at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Environment at Curlie Westland A Canadian television series 1984 2007 on a broad range of environmental issues from the UBC Library Digital Collections The Directory of Environmental Websites Portals Earth sciences Ecology Environment Philosophy Politics Renewable energy Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Environmentalism amp oldid 1141359918, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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