Authors: Simon Dresner
ISBN-13: 9781844074969, ISBN-10: 184407496X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Earthscan Publications Ltd.
Date Published: September 2008
Edition: 2nd Edition
Simon Dresner is a research fellow and lecturer at the University of Surrey. He is coordinator of a five-nation European research project on tax reform.
At a time of increasingly rapid environmental deterioration, sustainability is the most important issue facing the world today. Can we create a sustainable society? What would that mean? How should we go about doing it? How can we bring about such a profound change in the way things are organized? This book tackles these questions directly. It goes beyond rhetoric about "sustainable development" to explain the deeper issues in a way that is accessible and interesting to the non-specialist reader. It covers the development of the concept of sustainability within its broader historical context; the contemporary debates about what sustainability implies and how to achieve it; and the obstacles to reaching the goal and prospects for overcoming them.This book will be invaluable to students, academics and activists concerned with the topics of sustainability and sustainable development.
Introduction 1
Pt. I Past
1 Progress and its Discontents 9
2 From Muir to Meadows 21
3 Sustainability Emerging 31
4 From Rio to Kyoto and Later Disappointments 41
Pt. II Present
5 What Does 'Sustainable Development' Mean? 69
6 Taking Sustainability into Economics 81
7 'Putting a Price on the Planet' 115
8 The Ethics of Sustainability 129
Pt. III Future
9 The End of Sustainability? 147
References 181
Bibliography 191
Index 197