General Introduction: An Interdisciplinary Experiment |
|
1 | (8) |
I. PRAGMATISM AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL PHILOSOPHY |
|
9 | (96) |
|
The Constancy of Leopold's Land Ethic |
|
|
13 | (17) |
|
Thoreau and Leopold on Science and Values |
|
|
30 | (17) |
|
Integration or Reduction: Two Approaches to Environmental Values |
|
|
47 | (31) |
|
Convergence Corroborated: A Comment on Arne Naess on Wolf Policies |
|
|
78 | (10) |
|
Pragmatism, Adaptive Management, and Sustainability |
|
|
88 | (17) |
II. SCIENCE, POLICY, AND POLICY SCIENCE |
|
105 | (60) |
|
What Is a Conservation Biologist? |
|
|
107 | (3) |
|
Biological Resources and Endangered Species: History, Values, and Policy |
|
|
110 | (20) |
|
Leopold as Practical Moralist and Pragmatic Policy Analyst |
|
|
130 | (6) |
|
Improving Ecological Communication: The Role of Ecologists in Environmental Policy Formation |
|
|
136 | (29) |
III. ECONOMICS AND ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTANABILITY |
|
165 | (112) |
|
Sustainability, Human Welfare, and Ecosystem Health |
|
|
168 | (15) |
|
Economists' Preferences and the Preferences of Economists |
|
|
183 | (18) |
|
Evaluating Ecosystem States: Two Competing Paradigms |
|
|
201 | (24) |
|
Sustainability: Ecological and Economic Perspectives, with Michael A. Toman |
|
|
225 | (24) |
|
The Evolution of Preferences: Why `Sovereign' Preferences May Not Lead to Sustainable Policies and What to Do about It, with Robert Constanza and Richard C. Bishop |
|
|
249 | (28) |
IV. SCALING SUSTAINABILITY: ECOLOGY AS IF HUMANS MATTERED |
|
277 | (96) |
|
Context and Hierarchy in Aldo Leopold's Theory of Environmental Management |
|
|
280 | (8) |
|
Scale and Biodiversity Policy: A Hierarchical Approach, with |
|
|
288 | (17) |
|
|
Ecological Integrity and Social Values: At What Scale? |
|
|
305 | (23) |
|
Change, Constancy, and Creativity: The New Ecology and Some Old Problems |
|
|
328 | (17) |
|
Democracy and Sense of Place Values in Environmental Policy |
|
|
345 | (28) |
|
V. SOME ELEMENTS OF A PHILOSOPHY OF SUSTAINABLE LIVING |
|
373 | (84) |
|
Caring for Nature: A Broader Look at Animal Stewardship |
|
|
375 | (21) |
|
Can There Be a Universal Earth Ethic? A Reflection on Values for the Proposed Earth Charter |
|
|
396 | (24) |
|
Intergenerational Equity and Sustainability |
|
|
420 | (37) |
VI. VALUING SUSTAINABILITY: TOWARD A MORE COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO ENVIRONMENTAL EVALUATION |
|
457 | (92) |
|
Commodity, Amenity, and Morality: The Limits of Quantification in Valuing Biodiversity |
|
|
460 | (7) |
|
The Cultural Approach to Conservation Biology |
|
|
467 | (11) |
|
Evaluation and Ecosystem Management: New Directions Needed? |
|
|
478 | (15) |
|
What Do We Owe the Future? How Should We Decide? |
|
|
493 | (21) |
|
Environmental Values and Adaptive Management, with Anne Steinemann |
|
|
514 | (35) |
Index |
|
549 | |