Chapter 1 Understanding Our Environment
Chapter 1 Understanding Our Environment
Understanding
Our
Environment
1
Outline
• Introduction
• Historical Perspective
Pragmatic Resource Conservation
Global Interconnections
• Current Conditions
• A Divided World
• Sustainable Development
• Indigenous People
2
Introduction
• Environment:
Physical circumstances or conditions that
surround an organism or groups of organisms
The complex of social or cultural conditions
that affect an individual or community
3
• Introduction
Environmental Science: Systematic study
of our environment and our proper place in it
Interdisciplinary
the Humanities
Mission oriented – trying to not only understand
4
Environmental Science is Interdiscipimary
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Historical Perspective
• Four Distinct Stages
1. Pragmatic Resource Conservation
2. Ethical/Moral & Aesthetic Nature Preservation
3. Concern about Health and Ecological Damage
4. Global Environmental Citizenship
Not mutually exclusive; parts of each persist
today in the environmental movement.
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1. Pragmatic Utilitarian Resource Conservation
• George Perkins Marsh – wrote Man and Nature
published in 1864 re: a warning about
environmental damage in the western states
Influenced the creation of National Forest
Reserves in 1873
Influenced Theodore Roosevelt and his
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1. Pragmatic Utilitarian Resource Conservation
• President Theodore Roosevelt & Gifford Pinchot
Incorporated the Forest Service with the
Department of Agriculture.
Established framework of nat’l park, forest,
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1. Pragmatic Utilitarian Resource Conservation
• Gifford Pinchot
First head of the Forestry service under
Roosevelt.
Used utilitarian conservation – “use the forest for
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2. Ethical & Aesthetic Nature Preservation
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2. Ethical & Aesthetic Nature Preservation
• Aldo Leopold – Founder: Wilderness Society
• Wrote book: A Sand County Almanac
• “We abuse land because we regard it as a
commodity belonging to us. When we see land
as a community to which we belong, we may
begin to use it with love and respect.”
• His views became known
as the “land ethic”
•Ecocentric Belief
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3. Modern Environmental Movement
• Industrial explosion of WW II added new concerns
to the environmental agenda.
Rachel Carson – wrote Silent Spring (1962)
awakened the public to the threat of pollution,
pesticides (DDT) and toxic chemicals to humans
and other species.
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3. Modern Environmental Movement
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3. Modern Environmental Movement
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3. Modern Environmental Movement
Wangari Maathai -won the Nobel Peace
Prize for Environmental Action (2004).
1977- Founded the Green Belt Movement in
Kenya to organize women and restore the
environment. Now 600 grassroots organizations
exist in Kenya & 30+ million trees were planted!
Recycling
Wilderness protection
Global Warming
Mass extinction
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Global Interconnections
4. Global Environmentalism
• Increased technology has greatly expanded
international communications.
Daily events now reported worldwide instead of
locally or regionally
Idea of Earth as a Global Village – we are all
interconnected.
International cooperation will be necessary
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Current Conditions
• Human Population > 7.4+ billion
Water quantity and quality issues may be the
most critical issues in the 21st century.
Food is inequitably distributed across the globe
and 2/3 of agricultural lands show signs of
degradation.
Fossil fuel reserves are diminishing and the
burning of fossil fuels causes pollution and
global warming.
Air quality has worsened in many areas,
especially southern Asia and India.
Loss of biodiversity at a rapid rate - Extinctions
19
Signs of Hope
• Progress has been made on many fronts:
Population has stabilized in most industrialized
countries.
Incidence of life-threatening diseases has been
reduced in most countries.
Deforestation has slowed and habitat protection
has increased in some areas.
Progress is being made in transition to
renewable energy sources.
Democracy is spreading, which allows decision
making by local people who know the land rather
than by a centralized bureaucracy.
20
An Inequitable World
• World Bank estimates more than 1.4 billion people
live in extreme poverty earning < US$1.25 per day.
21
Quality of Life Indicators
• About 1/5 of the
world’s population
lives in countries
with per capita
income > $25,000
per year (U.S.).
The other 4/5 lives
in middle or low
income countries.
• This gap affects
many quality of life
indicators.
*Chart updated from the 12th edition textbook
22
Is There Enough for Everyone?
• Rich nations consume an inordinate share of the
world’s resources and produce an unsustainable
amount of pollution.
BUT
• The worldwide gap between rich and poor has
widened.
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Sustainable Development
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Sustainable Development
Many ecologists view continual growth as impossible in
the long run due to limits imposed by non-renewable
resources and the capacity of the biosphere to absorb
wastes. Others argue that through the use of technology
and social organization, we can manage to meet our
needs and provide long-term (but not infinite) growth.
26
Role of International Aid
• President John F. Kennedy:
“A rising tide lifts all boats”
The US currently donates 18 cents per citizen
per day to foreign nations.
• Canadian Prime Minister Chretien:
“Aid to developing countries isn't charity; its an
investment, It will make us safer, and when
standards of living increase in those countries,
they’ll become customers who will buy tons of
stuff from us.”
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Indigenous People
• Indigenous (native) people are often the least
powerful, most neglected people in the world.
At least half the world’s 6,000 distinct languages
are dying .
Indigenous homelands may harbor a vast
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Cultural & Biological Hotspots
Papua
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Critical Thinking – Discussion Questions
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