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Selected Sources
..Rights and Responsibilities of
Sustainable Development
Compiled by Marlene Roy and Jeffrey Turner - Information for
Sustainable Development Project
Published by the International Institute for Sustainable
Development
Books and Articles
Adams, Patricia. Probe International. Governments must start respecting the environmental rights of their people if the environment is to be protected : striking a balance - the environment and development in Latin America and the Caribbean. Toronto: Probe International, 1990. 4 p.
Conference: Seminar on Global Development and the Environment (1990:
Montreal, Canada)
Agarwal, Anil, Narain, Sunita. Towards a green world:
should global environmental management be built on legal conventions or
human rights? New Delhi: Centre for Science and Environment, 1992. 204
p.: ill.
Contents: Global environmental governance in a world of inequality and
poverty (Ozone Treaty, Basel Convention, Climate Convention, Biodiversity
Convention, Forest Convention); Greening of aid, trade and debt: policing
the Third World's environment; Western green politics: asserting
participatory democracy without global equity; State of the South:
degraded lands and desperate finances; Action framework: building blocks
for global environmental democracy.
Anderson, Nancy W. (ed). Agenda 21 [twenty-one]: moving into the 21st [twenty-first] century: a record of proceedings... March 20-21, 1993. Medford, MA: Tufts University, 1993. 223 p.
Conference: New England Environment Conference on Agenda 21 (1993 :
Medford, MA)
Contents: (Selected): The corporate response to Agenda 21: the Earth Summit challenge; Media coverage of environmental issues; From cold war to peace: conversion, jobs for the environment; Northern forests: a
panel discussion; Business, ethics and the environment;
Indigenous rights after Rio: native peoples and sustainable development;
Population issues; The environmental impacts of conventional agriculture;
Greening the debate: the roles of environmentalists in elections; A
world-wide network of environmental lawyers; Corporation actions to
improve the environment; The urban environment: the complexity of the
problems; Renewable energy and building design; Local and regional
sustainable development; Citizen participation in lake protection;
Watersheds and their importance; The growth of organic farming; Making
universities environmentally responsible; Careers in the environmental
field.
Abstract: The paper provides a record of the proceedings of the March
1993 conference on Agenda 21 organized by the New England Environmental
Network.
Bauer, Jan. Report of NGO expert meeting on the mandate of
the special rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and
consequences. Montreal: International Centre for Human Rights and
Democratic Development, 1994. 45 p.
Contents: Introduction; Overview of developments leading to the
appointment of the special rapporteur on violence against women; Summary
of the scope of the mandate; Normative framework of the mandate of the
special rapporteur; Building the mandate; Documenting violence against
women; The potential for cooperative relationships.
Abstract: Summarizes oral and written commentaries provided by
participants as well as points raised in general discussion.
Benjamin, Medea and Andrea Freedman. Bridging the global
gap: a handbook to linking citizens of the first and third worlds: a
project of Global Exchange. Washington, D.C.: Seven Locks Press, 1989.
338 p.
Contents: Travel with a purpose; Partners with people; Aid: from
charity to solidarity; Championing human rights; Fair trade: buying and
selling for justice; The buck stops here: consumer and corporate
accountability; Government by the people; Money matters; Internationalism
today and tomorrow.
Abstract: First major work on the growing internationalist movement
that is focusing national attention on the interdependence of nations and
on the connections between local and international struggles.
Berger, Thomas R. A long and terrible shadow: white values,
native rights in the Americas 1492-1992. Vancouver: Douglas &
McIntyre, 1991. 183 p.
Berkes, Fikret and Carl Folke. Linking social and ecological systems for resilience and sustainability: background paper and framework. Winnipeg: The Authors, 1994. 16 p.
Notes: Place of publication assumed
Conference: Property Rights and the Performance of Natural Resource
Systems Subproject 9 Workshop (1994 : Stockholm, Sweden)
Beversluis, Joel D. (ed) A sourcebook for Earth's community
of religions. Grand Rapids, Michigan: CoNexus Press, 1995. 366 p.
Contents: Making the connections; African traditional religions; The Baha'i faith; Buddhism; Christianity; Confucianism; First Peoples and native traditions; Hinduism; Humanism; Islam; Jainism; Judaism;
Shinto; Sikhism; Spiritual, esoteric and evolutionary philosophies;
Taoism; The Unification Church; Wicca and nature spirituality;
Zoroastrianism; Joining the sacred community; Legacies of the parliaments;
The 1993 parliament of the world's religions; A global ethic; Religions
united?; Toward spiritual concord; Interfaith dialogue; Facing
intolerance, violence and other evils; Religions and good governance; The
United Nations at 50; Earth Day, every day; Human rights and religions
freedom; Hunger; Population; Values and social development; Weapons and
disarmament; A culture of peace; The next generations; Women are speaking
out; Science and religion; Voices of dispossessed and indigenous peoples;
What do we do now?; Service organizations and resource centers; Print,
audio and video resources; A global brain.
Abstract: The book presents religions, spiritual and humanistic
philosophies, and indigenous views and how they can help modern societies
resolve global issues such as environmental destruction, population
pressures, hunger and interreligious conflict. It contains more than 300
articles, essays and quotations and nearly 400 resource listings.
Bhaskar, V. and Andrew Glyn. The north, the south and the
environment: ecological constraints and the global economy. London:
Earthscan Publications Ltd., 1995. 263 p.
Contents: Introduction; Environmental sustainability and the growth of
GDP: conditions for compatibility (Ekins and Jacobs); Northern growth and
environmental constraints (Glyn); Can the north stop consumption growth?
Escaping the cycle of work and spend (Amalric); Population growth and the
environmental crisis: beyond the "obvious" (Bhaskar);
Distributive justice and the control of global warming (Bhaskar);
Enclosing the global commons: global environmental negotiations in a
north-south conflictual approach (Lipietz); Environmental policies and
north-south trade: a selected survey of the issues (Sen); The Korean model
of development and its environmental implications (You); National
development and local environmental action - the case of the River Narmada
(Sen); Economics and ecosystems: the case of Zimbabwean peasant households
(Cavendish); Development after ecology (Sutcliffe).
Abstract: This book analyses the impact of environmental constraints on the patterns of development in both the North and the South, and on the relations between the two. Current inequalities in the distribution of income, resource use and consumption mean that constraints will have very different implications around the world. Experts from the North and the South assess the kinds of economic institutions, government policies and international arrangements which are needed in order to achieve sustainable development in
both the industrial and developing world, and a just and economically
viable relationship between them.
Blackburn, J. Walton and Willa Marie Bruce (eds). Mediating
environmental conflicts: theory and practice. Westport, CT: Quorum
Books, 1995. 309 p.
Contents: Introduction; Mediation and the new environmental agenda
(Reed); Environmental mediation: what do we know and how do we know it?
(O'Leary); Mediating environmental disputes: borrowing ideas from a law
and economics perspective (Maida); Training environmental mediators: a
community-based approach (Allen); Midwest energy utilities (Dworkin and
Jordan); The problems of designing environmental mediation for small
communities (Klase); Beyond the limits: dispute resolutions of intractable
environmental conflicts (Burgess and Burgess); Evaluating ADR as an
approach to citizen participation in siting a low-level nuclear waste
facility (Clary and Hornney); Negotiating community consensus in preparing
environmental impact statements (Richardson); Consensus building to write
environmentally responsive rules for Maine's new transportation policy
(Bogdonoff); The ethics of environmental mediation (Stephens et al);
Assuring justice in cross-cultural environmental mediation (Blackford and
Matunga); Regulatory negotiation: learning from experiences at the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (Ryan); Environmental mediation: keys to
success at the local government level (Wood and Guy); Mediating the Idaho
wilderness controversy (Baird et al); The inland northwest field burning
summit: a case study (Mangerich and Luton); Environmental mediation theory
and practice: challenges, issues and needed research and theory
development (Blackburn).
Abstract: Provides an examination of environmental mediation by 28
experts from diverse perspectives as well as stresses the need for
mediated dispute resolution as an alternative to litigation. Case studies
analyze nuclear waste siting, highway design, wilderness designation,
field burning, and Environmental Impact Statement development.
Boyce, James K. "Equity and the environment: social
justice today as a prerequisite for sustainability in the future."
Alternatives, 21(1) : 12-17. (s.l.): Alternatives, 1995. 5 p.
British Columbia. The provincial land use strategy. Victoria:
Commission on Resources and Environment, 1994. 4 v. in 1
Contents: v.1 A Sustainability Act for British Columbia: consolidating
the progress, securing the future. v.2 Planning for sustainability:
improving the planning delivery system for British Columbia. v.3 Public
participation: rights and responsibilities, Community Resource Boards. v.4
Dispute resolution: developing a comprehensive system, ensuring fairness
and effectiveness.
British Columbia. Vancouver Island land use plan.
Victoria: Commission on Resources and Environment, 1994. 2 v.
Contents: v.1 (selected): Overview; Summary of key recommendations;
Purpose and design of regional planning negotiations; Vancouver Island,
past and present; Aboriginal rights on Vancouver Island; The Vancouver
Island land use negotiation table; A land use plan for Vancouver Island;
Recommendations.
Abstract: This report recommends a Land Use Plan for Vancouver Island.
The plan is intended to help end long-standing uncertainty and conflict
over resource and environmental issues. The plan draws on provincial
government policy leadership, technical inventory and impact analyses, and
intensive public participation. It recommends broad-scale land use
designations, and economic transition strategy, and directions for
implementation and monitoring. The appendices are presented in Volume 2.
Bromley, Daniel W. (ed). The handbook of
environmental economics. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 1995.
705 p.
Contents: Choices without prices without apologies (Vatn and Bromley); Benefits, costs and the safe minimum standard of conservation (Randall and Farmer); The environment and property rights issues (Schmid); Zoning and the urban environment (Fischel); Public policies for land conservation (Hodge); Intergenerational choices under global environmental change (Howarth and Norgaard); Neoclassical economic growth theory and sustainability (Toman et al); Measuring sustainable development (Pearce and Atkinson); Nonrenewable resource supply: theory and practice (Toman and Walls); Empirical consequences of the Hotelling Principle (Berck); Recycling programs (McClain); Nonconvexities and the theory of
external costs (Burrows); Liability and penalty structures in policy
design (Segerson); A bargaining framework for the global commons (Bromley
and Cochrane); Transferable discharge permits and global warming
(Tietenberg); Trade, pollution, and environmental protection (Runge);
Optimal timber management policies (Montgomery and Adams); Bioeconomic
models of the fishery (Conrad); Management regimes in ocean fisheries
(Rettig); Privatization open access fisheries: individual transferable
quotas (Anderson); Regulation, imperfect markets and transaction costs:
the elusive quest for efficiency in water allocation (Colby); Issues in
the conjunctive use of surface water and groundwater (Provencher);
Minerals policy (Gordon); Valuation of environmental quality under
certainty (Bishop and Woodward); Environmental valuation under uncertainty
(Ready); Quasi-option value (Graham-Tomasi); Evaluating changes in risk
and risk perceptions by revealed preference (Freeman); Contingent
valuation (Bishop et al); Travel cost models (Bockstael); Hedonic pricing
methods (Freeman)
Abstract: Provides a comprehensive set of materials on environmental
and natural resource economics based on 30 specially commissioned pieces
by leading authorities in the field.
Brown, Peter G. Restoring the public trust: a fresh vision
for progressive government in America. Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1994.
176 p.
Contents: Loss of faith in government and the crisis in political theory: The sources of disillusion, Justifying the conservative revolution, What's wrong with the Right, The failure of market failures;
Restoring the public trust: The public trust, Restoring government and
preserving persons, How to stop wasting our children's heritage, Paying
for a sustainable responsible society
Abstract: Analyzes the limits inherent in the free market approach to
public policy, and offers a concept of government rooted in trusteeship
Bryant, Bunyan (ed). Environmental justice:
issues, policies, and solutions. Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1995.
278 p.
Contents: Introduction, 1 - Issues and potential policies and solutions
for environmental justice: an overview (Bryant); 2 - Environmental justice
and the professional (Bailey, Alley, Faupel, Solheim); 3 - Health-based
standards: what role in environmental justice? (Head); 4 - Environmental
equity justice centers: a response to inequity (Wright); 5 -
Environmentalists and environmental justice policy (Ferris, Hahn-Baker); 6
- Residential segregation and urban quality of life (Bullard); 7 - The net
impact of environmental protection on jobs and the economy (Bezdek); 8 -
Toward a new industrial policy (Hamilton); 9 - Environmental equity and
economic policy: expanding the agenda of reform (Wolcott, Drayton, Kadri);
10 - Minorities and toxic fish consumption: implications for point
discharge policy in Michigan (West, Fly, Marans, Larkin, Rosenblatt); 11 -
Indigenous nations: summary of sovereignty and its implications for
environmental protection (Goldtooth); 12 - Toward a democratic community
of communities: creating a new future with agriculture and rural America
(Ostendorf, Terry); 13 - Sustainable agriculture embedded in a global
sustained future: agriculture in the United States and Cuba (Perfecto); 14
- Rethinking international environmental policy in the late Twentieth
Century (Buttel); 15 - Summary (Bryant); Appendix 1 - Executive order
12898, February 11, 1994 federal actions to address environmental justice
in minority populations and low-income populations, Appendix 2 - Executive
summary of the recommendations: from the symposium on health research and
needs to ensure environmental justice.
Campiglio, Luigi. The environment after Rio: international law and economics. International environment law and policy series. Boston: Kluwer Publishers, 1994. 285 p.
Notes: Edited by Luigi Campiglio and others. Includes references
Contents: (Selected): Rio Conference between policy and law; Role of the United States; Role of the European Communities; Role of the Developing Countries; Declarations and Conventions adopted in Rio:
Legal protection of the world's forests after Rio '92, Framework Convention on Climate Change, Convention on Biological Diversity; Prospects for the future in the light of Agenda 21 and of the
evolving principles of international environmental law: Polluter pays principle in the early 1990s, Management of water resources, Protection of the oceans in Agenda 21 and international environmental law, Protection of mountain areas in the instruments adopted at the Rio Conference; Environment: development and interdependence: Is there anything new in the concept of sustainable development? (Hammond), Economic growth, technical progress and the environment (Musu, Role of technology), North
South trade, property rights and the dynamics of the environment
(Chichilnisky), Global environmental change, rationality and ethics
(Zamaagni), Externalities, market incentives and efficiency), Poverty and
the environment: is there a trade-off (Dasgupta), GDP and pollution, Net
national product and sustainable development, Environmental degradation
and children as producer goods), Urbanization, energy and environment: for
a global approach (Allal), Are international institutions in favour of the
environment? (Berthelot)
Abstract: Proceedings from a congress in Courmayeur, Italy, 1993. Aims
to identify trends of international environmental policy and to work out
priorities that the various countries have to deal with in the future.
Canada. Convention on the Rights of the Child: first report of Canada. Ottawa: Canadian Heritage, 1994. 262 p.
Notes: Canada ratified the Convention on December 13, 1991
Conference: Convention on the Rights of the Child (1991)
Abstract: Report prepared for submission to the United Nations under the terms of the Convention of the Rights of the Child, and outlines measures adopted before Dec 31 1992 by all governments in Canada to
implement the Convention, and relevant case law.
Canada. Reviewing CEPA: the issues. Hull: CEPA Office, Environment Canada, 1994. v. in box
Notes: CEPA review undertaken as per the provision in the Canadian
Environmental Protection Act (1988) which stated that a Parliamentary
Committee had to review the act in 5 years. Review currently (Winter 1994)
being undertaken by the Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable
Development. Text in English and French, some vols. (e.g.v.10) have
separate French eds. Some vols. have second copies. Vol.19 is titled Issue
elaboration paper. Vols. not pub. Sequentially.
Contents: CEPA Review: The Government Response - environmental protection legislation designed for the future - a renewed CEPA. A proposal; An overview of the issues; 1. Sustainable development in Canada 2. Biodiversity. 3. The ecosystem approach. 4. Coastal zone management in Canada. 6. Environmental protection of Indian lands. 7. Pollution prevention. 8. Economic instruments. 9. Community right
to know. 10. Public participation for environmental protection. 11. Environmental emergencies. 13. Negotiated settlements : an enforcement option. 14. Administrative monetary penalties : their
potential use in CEPA. 15. Inspectors' powers and provisions governing official analysts in the Canadian Environmental Protection Actio (CEPA). 16. Guidance document on the options evaluation process. 17. Federal intergovernmental co-operation on environmental management : a comparison of developments in
Australia and Canada. 18. CEPA and the precautionary
principle/approach. 19. Globalization of environmental protection and
national accountability; Green indeed: Charles Caccia has produced solid
proposals for the federal government to take the lead in saving the
environment
Canada. Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. Bridging
the cultural divide: a report on Aboriginal People and criminal justice in
Canada. Ottawa: Canada Communications Group, 1996. 315 p.
Contents: (Selected) Introduction; 1 - Aboriginal concepts of law and
justice - the historical realities; 2 - Current realities : the failure of
the justice system, the right of self-government and the authority to
establish Aboriginal justice systems, the case for Aboriginal control of
justice; 3 - Current aboriginal justice initiatives : Aboriginal policing,
indigenization, Indian Act provisions, Diversion programs and related
initiatives, elders panels and sentencing circles, young offender
initiatives, Aboriginal initiatives in Canadian prisons, two case studies,
conclusions; 4 - Creating conceptual and constitutional space for
Aboriginal justice systems : Aboriginal justice systems - back to the
future, Jurisdiction, application of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms to Aboriginal justice systems, ensuring the safety of women and
children in Aboriginal justice systems; 5 - Reforming the existing justice
system; 6 - Summary of major findings, conclusions and recommendations.
Abstract: This report reviews the historical and contemporary record of
Aboriginal people's experience in the criminal justice system to secure a
better understanding of what lies behind their over-representation there.
Besides providing a framework for understanding this document also
provides a framework for change. This framework has two inter-related
dimensions. The first dimension is the reform of the existing criminal
justice system to make it more respectful of and responsive to the
experience of Aboriginal people; the second dimension is the establishment
of Aboriginal justice systems as an exercise of the Aboriginal right of
self-government. This second dimension is the primary focus of the report.
Canada. Status of Women Canada. Canada's national report
to the United Nations for the fourth World Conference on Women.
Ottawa, Canada: 1995. 85 p.
Contents: Review and appraisal at the national level; Changes since the early 1980s; Mechanisms at all levels to promote the advancement of women; Awareness of, and commitment to, internationally and
nationally recognized women's human rights; Poverty; Women's access to, and participation in, the definition of economic structures and policies and the productive process itself; Access to education,
health, employment and other means to maximize awareness of women's human rights and the use of the capacities; Violence against women; Effects on women of continuing national and international armed or
other kinds of conflict; Use of mass media to promote women's positive
contributions to society; Adequate recognition and support for women's
contribution to managing natural resources and safeguarding the
environment; Review and appraisal of international support; Future
strategic goals and objectives.
Abstract: This report provides information on Canada's national and international activities and accomplishments that address the needs of Canadian women and that will bring them closer to equality with
men.
Canada. Parliament. House of Commons Standing Committee on
Environment and Sustainable Development. It's about our health! -
towards pollution prevention: CEPA revisited - report of the House of
Commons Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable Development.
Ottawa, Ontario: Canada Communication Group - Publishing, Public Works,
and Government Services Canada, 1995. 357 P.
Contents: Chapter 1 - The federal role in environmental protection: introduction, elements of the federal role, conclusion; Chapter 2 - The Canadian Environmental Protection Act - history and description; Chapter 3 - The need for change : the environmental record, achievements under CEPA, the challenge confronting CEPA; Chapter 4 - Guiding principles for an effective CEPA : a new approach, sustainable development, pollution prevention, ecosystem approach, biological diversity, precautionary principle, user/producer responsibility; Chapter 5 - The assessment of substances : introduction, risk assessment under the present
definition of toxic, substances covered under CEPA, new substances, continuing information requirements for substances under CEPA; Chapter 6 - Preventing toxic substances pollution : managing substances declared or deemed toxic under CEPA, additional means by which CEPA can promote pollution prevention in Canada; Chapter 7 - Ocean dumping and coastal zone management : ocean dumping, coastal zone management; Chapter 8 - Regulation of nutrients, products of biotechnology, and other substances : nutrients, products of biotechnology, other substances; Chapter 9 - International commitments; Chapter 10 - Environmental emergencies : introduction, current provisions in CEPA, other federal legislation affecting
environmental emergencies, voluntary ininiatives, the nature of the problem, proposed improvements; Chapter 11 - Putting the federal house in order : existing authority under part IV, problems with part IV, changes needed under part IV; Chapter 12 - Aboriginal peoples and environmental protection : introduction, environmental protection measures under the Indian Act and CEPA, toward an environmental protection regime for aboriginal peoples; Chapter 13 - The North : background, contamination from afar, waste disposal, arctic science, institutional arrangements, conclusion; Chapter 14 - Improved public participation and citizens' rights : introduction, a public registry, the right to notice and comment and appeal, the National Pollutant Release Inventory, confidentiality of information, whistleblower protection, the right of citizens to request an investigation, the right to citizens to sue, the right of citizens to prosecute, the creation of an
environmental fund, participant funding, an environmental bill of rights; Chapter 15 - Enforcement : introduction, the present situation, the need for improved enforcement, additional enforcement options, improved enforcement powers, miscellaneous issues; Chapter 16 - The administration of CEPA : management and resources, Federal-Provincial harmonization under CEPA, administrative agreements under the fisheries act, parliamentary review; Chapter 17 - Conclusion : the way forward, implementing
change, parting thoughts; Recommendations; Glossary; Appendix A - Witnesses; Appendix B - Briefs; Appendix C - Site visits; Request for government response; Report on the CEPA review dissenting
opinion of the official opposition; Minutes of proceedings
Abstract: This report reviews the provisions of the Canadian
Environmental Protection Act (CEPA). The history of CEPA, the framework of
the act, issues surrounding its implementation, enforcement, and
administration are discussed. Improving public participation under CEPA
and the issues surrounding the implementation of CEPA on aboriginal lands
are also discussed. The role of CEPA in helping Canada fulfill its
international obligations in respect of the environment is considered.
Recommendations that include amendments to CEPA are given in each of these
areas and others.
Canadian Bar Association. Sustainable Development
Committee. Sustainable development in Canada: options for law
reform. Ottawa: CBA, 1990. 316 p.
Contents: (Selected): Background issue papers to proposed federal and international environmental law reforms: The environment, sustainable development and the limits of constitutional jurisdiction, by H. Scott Fairley. Principles of environmental assessment at the federal level, by Roger Cotton and Glen Bell. Public access to environmental justice, by Franklin Gertler and others. The Nuclear Liability Act: nuclear power versus legal rights, by David Poch. Spending green: federal expenditure reform and sustainable development, by Ted Schrecker. Reducing solid waste, by Steven Shrybman. Toward a national pollution prevention strategy: principles for reform to address the problem of toxic contamination of the Canadian environment, by Paul Muldoon. Federal pesticide regulation, by Toby Vigod. The international regulation
of atmospheric pollution, by Moira L. McConnell. Sustainable development and marine environmental protection, by Moira L. McConnell and David VanderZwaag. Water diversion/exports and sustainable development, by J. Owen Saunders. International water resources: Canada-United States of America, by Charles B. Bourne. Federal law reform proposals for sustainable forestry, by Monique Bass. International regulation of fisheries, by Richard Paisley. The federal government's role in the protection of endangered
species, by Ronald I. Orenstain. Migratory birds, by Andrew R. Thompson
and Nancy A. Morgan. Sustainable development in Canada's north, by Stephen
D. Hazell. International law reform and the protection of the Arctic, by
Nigel Bankes. International regulation of the Antarctic, by Maurice
Copithorne and Deborah Overhoff. The rule of law and sustainable
development, by Linda F. Duncan. The new international environmental
protection law: the enforcement role of the International Court of
Justice, by Edward McWhinney. Tanker traffic and oil spills, by David
Anderson.
Collins, Sheila D. (et al ) . Jobs for all: a plan for the
revitalization of America. New York: Apex Press, 1994. 134 p.
Contents: Jobs for all; Adequate income for all; Rights of workers;
Community investment, preservation and support (Corporate citizenship,
Public regulation of private capital, Local job and economic development,
Community federalism); Military conversion; Environmental preservation and
sustainability (Defining sustainable growth and development, Environmental
protection and job creation, Public policy support for environmental
sustainability, Planning for conversion to an environmentally sustainable
economy); Fair trade and economically viable local production for local
consumption; Democratic planning and industrial policy; Rebuilding the
nation's cities (Financing the cities, Integrated policy response to urban
poverty); Sound government finance (Gaining a realistic perspective on the
deficit); Lifelong learning
Abstract: Analyzes the impact of domestic and global economic restructuring on American workers, families and communities, and proposes an comprehensive program, with 11 principles, of jobs for all as a
solution to social, economic and environmental problems
Conca, Ken, Michael Alberty and Geoffrey D. Dabelko (eds).
Green planet blues: environmental politics from Stockholm to Rio.
Boulder, Co: Westview Press, 1995. 328 p.
Contents: Two decades of global environmental politics (Conca et al); The limits to growth (Meadows et al); Environment and development: the case of the developing countries (Augusto and Castro); The tragedy
of the commons (Hardin); No tragedy of the commons (Buck); The tragedy of the commons: twenty-two years later (Geeny et al); The scarcity society (Ophuls); Laws, states and super-states: international law and the environment (Johnston); The shadow ecologies of western economics (MacNeill); Global technopolitics
(Pirages); The green revolution: the American environmental movement 1962-1992 (Sale); The emergence of the environmental movement in Eastern Europe and its role in the revolutions of 1989 (Fisher); Fight for the forest (Gross); Ozone diplomacy (Benedick); Ozone layer depletion and global warming (Rowlands); Skinning scientific cats (Jasanoff); Global warming in an unequal world: a case of environmental colonialism (Agarwal and Narain); Appraising the Earth Summit: how should we judge UNCED's success? (Haas et al); The case for free trade (Bhagwati); The perils of free trade (Daly); The emperor's new clothes: the World Bank and environmental reform (Rich); The role of the World Bank (Piddington); Towards
sustainable development; Whose common future? (Lohman); Sustainable development: a critical review (Lele); Environmental scarcities and violent conflict (Homer-Dixon); Environmental security: how it
works (Myers); The case against linking environmental degradation and
national security (Deudney); For whose benefit? redefining security
(Saad); The need for eco-justice (Kelly); Statement to UNCED (Mohamad);
Women, poverty and population: issues for the concerned environmentalist
(Sen); Two agendas on Amazon development (COICA).
Abstract: The book begins with a discussion of some of the dominant
paradigms and controversies that shaped debate at the time of the
Stockholm Conference, and during the conference itself. The material in
Part I focuses in particular on the two most provocative and influential
ideas of the Stockholm era: first the notion that there are inherent "limits
to growth" on a planet of finite natural resources and limited
ecological resilience; and second, the claim that self-interested
individual behavior often adds up to a global tragedy of the commons. The
second part examines how the structure of the international system shapes
the types of problems we face and the types of solutions we can imagine.
Parts III and IV then turn to examine the challenges of international
cooperation and institutional reform. The volume concludes with three
powerful and controversial new paradigms that crystallized in the two
decades between Stockholm and Rio: sustainable development, environmental
security and ecological justice.
Connell, John and Richard Howitt (eds.). Mining and
indigenous peoples in Australia. Sydney: Sydney University Press,
1991. 205 p.
Contents: (Selected): Land rights, labour relations and fertility in
the Soroako Nickel Project, Sulawesi; Aborigines and gold mining in
central Australia; Coromandel gold: conquest and conservation; Conflict
over Waikato coal: Maori land rights
Cornell University, American Indian Program and Plenty Canada. Indigenous economics: toward a natural world order. Akwe:kon Journal 9 (Summer 1992). Ithaca, NY: Akwe:kon Press, 1992. 112 p.
Notes: Includes bibliography
Contents: First words; Indigenous perspectives on international development (Brascoup); The search for lessons (Barreiro); Guatemala: Mayan approaches emerge; Indian economic development: the US experience of an evolving Indian sovereignty (Mohawk); Investing in indigenous knowledge (Adamson); Indigenous environmental perspectives: a North American primer (LaDuke); Documenting Dene traditional
environmental knowledge (Johnson); Indian rights and environmental protection (Wiggins); Interviews with Sam Mercado (Johnson and Cornell); PANA PANA: a Miskito development and environmental
organization; Banana gold: problem or solution?
Abstract: Reports on a process of Native thinking about environment and development. The articles emerge from a series of discussions by Native governments, organizations and networks over the past few
years.
Dakers, Sonya. Animal rights campaigns: their impact in
Canada. Ottawa: Research Branch - Library of Parliament, 19 p.
Abstract: This review describes how the anti-sealing campaign adversely
affected the livelihoods of sealers in Labrador and Newfoundland and of
the Inuit in northern Canada, who hunted only adult seals. It then
outlines how a similar campaign might affect trapping and fur ranching in
this country. Also touched on are two other activities (animal research
and factory farming) that have been attracting sporadic but
well-publicized attention from various animal rights groups and seem
likely to be the next targets of animal rights campaigns in this country.
Deardorff, Allan and Robert Stern. Analytical and
negotiating issues in the global trading system. Ann Arbour, MI:
University of Michigan Press, 1994. 629 p.
Contents: Introduction and overview; Multilateral trade negotiations
and preferential trading arrangements (Deardorff and Stern); On the
importance and extent of rent sharing in the multi-fibre arrangement:
evidence from U.S.-Hong Kong trade in apparel (Krishna and Tan); Reforming
the European Community's common agricultural policy: who stands to gain?
(Hertel et al); Do rules control power? GATT articles and arrangements in
the Uruguay Round (Finger and Dhar); The trade effects of antidumping
investigations: theory and evidence (Staiger and Wolak); Quid pro Quo
restraints and spurious injury: subsidies and the prospect of CVDs
(Leidy); Optimal pursuit of safeguard actions over time (Mayer); GATT,
dispute settlement and cooperation (Kovenock and Thursby); Trade-related
intellectual property rights: issue and exploratory results (Maskus and
Konan); TRIMS, policy change and the role of the GATT (Mutti); Conceptual
and political economy issues in liberalizing international transactions in
services (Hoekman); Fair trade, reciprocity and harmonization: the new
challenge to the theory and policy of free trade (Bhagwati)
Abstract: Contributors address the principles of the global trading system in an analytical manner. Topics covered include: multilateral trade negotiations and preferential arrangements; rent sharing; reforming
the European Community's common agricultural policy; GATT articles and
arrangements; antidumping investigations; intellectual property rights;
among others.
Dommen, Edward. How just is the market economy? Geneva:
The Author, 1993. 21 p.
Contents: What the market is; The convenience of the market; Aspects of
the market which raise ethical problems; Kinds of justice; Conclusion
Abstract: The paper is intended to stimulate reflection on economic
ethics in general by exploring the ethics of a particularly important part
of the economy: the market.
Earth Ethics Research Group, Inc. Proceedings. New York: Earth Ethics Research Group, Inc., 1994. 392 p.
Conference: Ethical Dimensions of the United Nations Program on
Environment and Development, Agenda 21 (1994 : New York)
Contents: Use value only? (Aiken); Ethical questions embedded in biodiversity provisions of Agenda 21 (Barahona); Judging the United Nations Agenda 21 industrial pollution prevention provisions: an ethical
and policy analysis (Blomquist); Confronting environmental racism: waste trade and Agenda 21 (Bullard); The ethical concept of corporate environmental responsibility (Dion); Summary of remarks (Duchin); Ethics and Agenda 21: research on the values within sustainable development (Farrel); Seeing the environment through Islamic eyes (Hamed); Redefining wealth and progress (Henderson); The ethical implications of a global climate change - a Third World perspective (Heredia); Agenda 21 and the limits of technological rationality (Heyd); Understanding the rhetorical nature of science in the implementation of Agenda 21 (Junker) ; Sustainable development and imperialism: ethical reflections on Agenda 21
(Katz); Environmental decisions as human decisions: the appropriate role of science as revealed by looking at the atmosphere (Landen); Agenda 21 and protection of the atmosphere: the status of science
(Lemons); Can economics provide an ethically-sensitive framework for environmental choices? (Meyer and Chilton); Biological diversity as habitat protection (O'Neil); Ethical questions embedded in water resource provisions of UN Agenda 21 (Ott); Free trade and sustainable development - the moral basis of Agenda 21 and its problems (Paden); A perspective on some emerging ethical dilemmas in water resources management (Priscoli); Agenda 21: biodiversity and responsible land use planning and management:
economic, legal, scientific and ethical implications of modernist,
post-modernist and universalist environmental philosophies (Quinn and
Petrick); Environmental protection and an equitable international order:
ethics after the Earth Summit (Rolston); Say what you mean! the undefined
in Agenda 21 (Rothenberg); Biodiversity and Agenda 21: ethical
considerations (Sagoff); Ethical questions embedded in the nuclear waste
disposal provisions of Agenda 21 (Singh); Biodiversity and intellectual
property rights: an ethical analysis (Traylor); The role of religion in
forming an environmental ethics (Tucker); Ecofeminism and Agenda 21: a
philosophical view on taking empirical data seriously (Warren); Who can
save the Earth? Agenda 21 and professional expertise (Weir); Ethical
issues in toxic waste export (Weiss); Ecosystem integrity and Agenda 21
science, sustainability and public policy (Westra)
Edwards, David. Free to be human: intellectual self-defence
in an age of illusions. Dartington, GB: Green Books, 1995. 288 p.
Contents: Beyond totalitarianism: Noam Chomsky and the propaganda model of media control; Extending the scope of the propaganda model; Killing the dream of religious truth; Killing the dream of right conduct;
The desolated day-tripper; Beyond "success" - Tolstoy's
Confession; The wound outside; Joining the two wounds: personalizing the
global, globalizing the personal; A chest of tools for intellectual
self-defense.
Abstract: Influential writers such as Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman have shown that the corporately controlled mass media of Western democracies serve as a giant filter system favouring powerful state
and business interests: what we receive as 'objective news' about
domestic politics, human rights and environmental issues, is in fact an
extremely partial and biased view of the world. The author shows how the
same filter system distorts our understanding of many personal, ethical
and spiritual issues, ensuring that we remain passive, conformist,
confused and uninformed - and willing to accept the irrational values of
corporate consumerism.
Emond, D. Paul (comp.) Dalhousie University. Environmental
Management Development in Indonesia Project, Indonesia. Ministry of State
for Population and Environment. Environmental law: resource
materials for the study of environmental law in Indonesia and Canada, v.1.
Halifax: EMDI Project, 1990. 1 v. in various pagings.
Contents: (Selected): A. The rise of environmental awareness 1. Global: M.K. Tolba, "Environment and development explained"; M.K. Tolba, "Combining the best of the old with the best of the new"; D.M.
Johnston ,"Systemic environmental damage: the challenge to international law and organization"; J.W. MacNeill, "Environmental management"; H. Versteed ,"The protection of endangered species: a Canadian perspective". 2. Regional: P. Grennfelt, "Sources and distribution of acidifying compounds"; E. Gold, "The pollution business"; E. Gold, "The development of marine pollution responsibilities"; M. Mellon et al. "The regulation of toxic and oxidant air pollution in North America"; P. Dupuy, "Normative and institutional proposals for the integrated management of international hydrographic basins". 3. National: M.Askin, "Protection of Indonesian living marine resources: Legislation and resource management"; A.J. Whtiten et al.,"The ecology of Sumatra". 4. Local: E.A.Ripley et al.,"Environmental impact of mining in Canada". B. Nature of the problem: 1. Introduction: Economic Council of Canada, "Reforming regulation"; C.P. Stevenson, "Environmental risk management"; B. Commoner, The closing circle: man, nature and technology. 2. Pollution: American Association for the Advancement of Science, Air conservation
publication 80. 3. Resource use: W. Ophuls,"The scarcity society". C. Causes of environmental disruption: U.S. Council on Environmental Quality,"Environmental quality: first annual report".
1. Technology. World Commission on Environment and Development: Our common future. 2. Population and affluence: P.R. Ehrlick, "Review of Commoner, The closing circle"; J.W. Forrester, "World dynamics".
3. Economic incentives: Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, First report; Peter Victor, "Economics and the challenge of environmental issues"; P. Usher," Property rights: the basis of wildlife management". 4.Politics: W. Ophuls, "Ecology and the politics of scarcity"' O.P. Dwivedi, "Political science and the environment"
Emond, D. Paul. (comp.) Dalhousie University.Environmental
Management Development in Indonesia Project, Indonesia. Ministry of State
for Population and Environment. Environmental law: resource
materials for the study of environmental law in Indonesia and Canada, v.2.
Halifax: EMDI Project, 1990. 1 v. in various pagings
Contents: (Selected) D.: Economic analysis 1) Introduction : W. Leiss, The dominion of nature; R.B. Stewart and J.E. Krier, Environmental law and policy. 2) Limitations : U.S. Council on Environmental
Quality, "Environmental quality: Fourth annual report"; J. Passmore, "Man's responsibility for nature"; C.D. Stone, "Should trees have standing: toward legal rights for natural objects". 11) Process for solving environmental problems: A. The Judicial Process: 1) J.L. Sax,"Environment and the courts of law"; 2) Nuisance and defences: J.P.S. McLaren, The common law nuisance actions and the environmental battle-well tempered swords or broken reeds"; R.J. Rolls, "Due diligence defence environmental law: bringing and
defending actions"; 3) Strict liability; 4) Rights of water
quality and flow; 5) Public nuisance/public trust; 6) Remedies
Environment Liaison Centre International. Justice between peoples - justice between generations: synthesis of citizens' movements' responses to environment and development challenges, and Agenda Ya Wananchi - draft citizens action plan for the 1990s. Nairobi: ELCI, 1991. 43 p.
Notes: Prepared for Roots of the Future, a global NGO conference in relation to the 1992 Earth Summit, Paris 17-20 December '91
Conference: Roots of the Future Conference (1991 : Paris)
European Parliament, Environment and Development Resource Centre.
Striking a green deal: a comprehensive international conference on "Europe's
role in environment and south-north trade relations". Brussels:
EDRC, 1993. various p.
Contents: Green protectionism: does the end justify the means? (Henandez); Green protectionism: differentiating environmental protection from trade protectionism (Arden-Clarke); How a log export ban became an unfair trade practice: it's resources, stupid! (Shrybman); Natural fibres as environmentally intelligent trade products (Braungart et al); International agreements to deal with environmental
externalities of primary commodity exports (Kox); Trade and desertification (Greijn); Transferring patent rights for sound technologies to an international organization (Aydin); Technological cooperation, technology transfer and environmentally sustainable development (Barnett); Towards an alternative trade and development paradigm (Morales); Guiding principles in the environment and trade interface (Ferretti and Hudson); Democratizing international trade and financial policy: proposal for a feasibility study (McCoy); Constraints to a just global trading system: a southern perspective (Odhiambo); Trade among the
member states of the economic community of West African States and its
effect on the environment (Chaytor); Environmental impacts of trade
evolution in ECOWAS countries (Fall); Environmental opportunities in
regional trade cooperation among developing countries (Jordan); MERCOSUR
and trade blocks in Latin America: the relationship trade and environment
(Onestini); The multilateral trade organization: a revised prospective
(Cameron and Ward); The Lome IV Convention, the Maastricht Treaty and
NAFTA: trade agreements with an environmental twist (Dixson-Decleve); The
role of major groups in implementing Agenda 21: focus on the potential
role and contributions of the private sector (Aydin); The world in the
round; Changing western consumer lifestyle (Davison); Environmental
standards, competition and the international trading system (Flanders)
Abstract: Contains a collection of papers presented at the
international conference "Striking a Green Deal", held in
Brussels, November 1993.
Eyles, John. Social indicators, social justice and social
well-being. CHEPA working paper series no.94-1. Hamilton, ON: McMaster
University, 1994. 108 p.
Faber, Daniel. Environment under fire: imperialism and the
ecological crisis in Central America. New York: Monthly Review, 1993.
301 p.
Contents: Introduction: environment under fire; A legacy of ecological imperialism; Poverty, injustice and the ecological crisis; Poisoning for profit; Revolution in the rainforest; The Nicaraguan revolution and the liberation of nature; War against nature: militarization and the impact of U.S. policy; Conclusion: the
struggle for social and ecological justice.
Abstract: The author explains in a theoretical and empirical detailed fashion, the roots of Central America's current social and ecological crisis - a crisis he views as grounded in decades of U.S. promoted development policies that have favored production for export over production for local needs, the intensive exploitation of natural resources for profit over the sustainable use of these assets, and the interests of wealthy landowners and U.S. based multinational corporations and banks over the interests of the
popular classes that make up the majority of Central Americans. In doing so, the author hopes to demonstrate the responsibility that U.S. environmentalists must assume to help end the social and
ecological devastation of Central America.
Family Care International. Action for the 21st.
(twenty-first) century: reproductive health and rights for all. New
York: Family Care International, 1994. 45 p.
Contents: Enabling conditions for reproductive health; Affirming reproductive health & reproductive rights; Championing reproductive health for all; Ensuring coverage, utilization & quality of reproductive
health services; Mobilizing the resources for action
Abstract: This report synthesizes the fundamental reproductive health recommendations contained in the ICPD Programme of Action, endorsed at the International Conference on Population and Development held
in Cairo in September 1994. It outlines the who, what, and how of
achieving universal reproductive health and rights within the next two
decades.
Finkel, Adam M. and Dominic Golding (eds). Worst
things first: the debate over risk-based national environmental priorities.
Washington: Resources for the Future, 1994. 348 p.
Contents: Should we - and can we - reduce the worst risks first? (Finkel); Rationalism and redemocratization: time for a truce (Rivlin); EPA's vision for setting national environmental priorities (Habicht); An overview of risk-based priority setting at EPA (Kent and Allen); Integrating science, values and democracy through comparative risk assessment (Lash); A proposal to address, rather than rank
environmental problems (O'Brien); Current priority setting methodology: too little rationality or too much? (Hattis and Goble); Quantitative risk ranking: more promise than the critics suggest (Morgan); Paradigms, process and politics: risk and regulatory design (Hornstein); Is reducing risk the real objective
of risk management (Belzer); State concerns in setting environmental priorities: is the risk-based paradigm the best we can do?; The States: the national laboratory for the risk-based paradigm? (Mehan); Working group discussions; Pollution prevention: putting comparative risk assessment in its place (Commoner);
Hammers don't cut wood: why we need pollution prevention and comparative risk assessment (Graham); Unequal environmental protection: incorporating environmental justice in decision making (Bullard); Risk-based priorities and environmental justice (Nichols); An innovation-based strategy for the environment
(Ashford); Promoting innovation "the easy way" (Wilson);
Summary of closing panel discussion; Recurring themes and points of
contention (Finkel and Golding); Afterthoughts (Finkel)
Abstract: EPA representatives describe the agency's plans for pursuing
risk-based planning, while analysts suggest ways to improve its methods,
process and implementation. Advocates of alternative paradigms, which give
risk assessment little or no role, also present their arguments.
Franke, Richard W. and Barbara H. Chasin. "Kerala State: a
social justice model." Multinational Monitor (July/Aug 1995)
: 25-28. Washington, DC: Essential Information, 1995. 4 p.
Abstract: Discusses the Kerala State in southwest India as a social
justice model which shows that Third World people can make their lives
better in the absence of industrialization or large-scale economic growth.
Global Forum on Environment and Poverty (1993 : Dhaka). International Workshop on Environment and Poverty July 22 -24, Dhaka. Dhaka,IN: GFEP, 1993. v. in box
Notes: Includes miscellaneous conference papers
Contents: (selected) Justice as a key element of sustainable
development: poverty, power, and political ecology in an inequitable world
(Thrupp)
Goldman, Benjamin A. and Laura Fitton. Toxic wastes and
race revisited : an update of the 1987 report on the racial and
socioeconomic characteristics of communities with hazardous waste sites.
Washington, D.C.: Center for Policy Alternatives, 1994. 27 p.
Gowdy, John M. Coevolutionary economics: the economy, society and the environment. Natural resource management and policy series. Boston, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994. 246 p.
Notes: Includes references
Contents: The economy, economics and the environment; The bioethics of
hunting and gathering societies; Equality and environmental sustainability
in agricultural societies; Markets, property rights and biodiversity;
Evolutionary theory and economic theory; Selection and coevolution in
industrial economics; Economic growth versus the environment; Progress,
Economy and environment: toward a declining state.
Abstract: This book discusses the human economy and its coevolutionary relationship with the natural world. This relationship is examined in three broad types of societies, hunter-gatherers; agriculturalists, and modern market economies. The broad themes that unite the chapters of this book are coevolution,
self-organization, punctuated equilibrium, and a critique of the notion
of progress in economic and social history. The book also presents a
system classifying selection processes in the economy. It argues that
selection for reasons of efficiency is only one of several reasons for
firm survival. A major conclusion of the book is that the institution of
the market economy is incompatible with ecological sustainability. There
is a basic conflict between the self-organizing principles of markets and
the self-organizing principles of ecosystems.
Hanna, Susan and Mohan Munasinghe (eds). Property rights and the environment: social and ecological issues. Washington, D.C.: World Bank, 1995. 164 p.
Notes: Includes references Companion volume 'Property Rights in a
Social and Ecological Context: Case Studies and Design Applications' by
the same editors is also available.
Contents: An introduction to property rights and the environment
(Hanna, Munasinghe); Property rights and environmental resources (Hanna,
Folke, Karl-Goran Maler); Designing complexity to govern complexity
(Ostrom); Distributed governance in fisheries (Townsend, Pooley);
Efficiencies of user participation in natural resource management (Hanna);
The management of transboundary resources and property rights systems: the
case of fisheries (Kaitala, Munro); Building equity, stewardship, and
resilience into market-based property rights systems (Young, McCay);
Analysis of Earth summit prescriptions on incorporating traditional
knowledge in natural resource management (Cicin-Sain, Knecht); Mechanisms
that link property rights to ecological systems (Folke, Berkes); Poverty,
population, and the environment (Dasgupta)
Abstract: This book investigates the institutional dimensions of
environmental sustainability. Property rights regimes are particularly
important types of institutions, the knowledge of how they function in
relation to humans and their use of the environment is critical to the
design and implementation of effective environmental protection. The
papers in this book consider the theoretical and conceptual background
related to the design of governance systems for sustainability; the
relationships among equity, stewardship, and environmental resilience; the
use of traditional knowledge in resource management; the mechanisms that
link humans to their environment; and the role played by poverty and
population.
Hanna, Susan and Mohan Munasinghe (eds). Property
rights in a social and ecological context: case studies and design
applications. Washington, D.C.: World Bank, 1995. 206 p.
Contents: An introduction to property rights in a social and ecological context (Hanna, Munasinghe); Design lessons from existing air pollution control systems : the United States (Tietenberg); Distributed governance in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands lobster fishery (Townsend, Pooley); Enforcement of regional environmental regulations - nitrogen fertilizer in Sweden : Appendix 4-A - calculation of abatement and enforcement costs (Gren, Brannlund); Designing incentives to conserve India's biodiversity (Gadgil, Rao); Will new property right regimes in Central and Eastern Europe serve the purposes of nature conservation (Zylicz); Nonsustainable use of renewable resources : mangrove deforestation and mariculture
in Ecuador (Parks, Bonifaz); Learning by fishing : practical science and scientific practice (Palsson); Indigenous knowledge and resource management systems : a Native Canadian case study from James Bay (Berkes); The role of validated local knowledge in the restoration of fisheries property rights : the example of the New Zealand Maori (Ruddle); The role of tenurial shells in ecological sustainability : property rights and natural resource management in Mexico (Alcorn, Toledo); Integrating ecological and socio-economic
feedbacks for sustainable fisheries (Hammer); Parametric management of
fisheries : an ecosystem - social approach (Wilson, Dickie); Environmental
and socioeconomic linkages of deforestation and forest land use change in
the Nepal Himalaya (Pradhan, Parks); Environmental crisis and
unsustainability in Himalayas : lessons from the degradation process
(Jodha)
Abstract: This publication contains a collection of case studies and design applications from around the world that focus on the institutional dimensions of environmental sustainability. The knowledge of how
property rights regimes, as particularly important types of institutions, function in relation to humans and their use of the environment is critical to the design and implementation of effective environmental protection. These studies address questions of the design of governance systems for sustainability; the
relationships among equity, stewardship, and environmental resilience;
the use of traditional knowledge in resource management; the mechanisms
that link humans to their environments; and the role played by poverty and
population.
Hartley, Troy W. "Environmental justice: an environmental
civil rights value acceptable to all world views." Environmental
Ethics 17 (Fall 1995): 277-289. Denton, TX: University of North Texas,
1995.
Abstract: In accordance with environmental injustice, sometimes called
environmental racism, minority communities are disproportionately
subjected to a higher level of environmental risk than other segments of
society. Growing concern over unequal environmental risk and mounting
evidence of both racial and economic injustices have led to a grass-roots
civil rights campaign called the environmental justice movement. The
environmental ethics aspects of environmental injustice challenge narrow
utilitarian views and promote Kantian rights and obligations.
Nevertheless, an environmental justice value exists in all ethical world
views, although it involves a concept of equitable distribution of
environmental protection that has been lacking in environmental ethics
discussion.
Haugh, Alison. "Balancing rights, powers, and privileges: a window on co-management experience in Manitoba." Northern Perspectives 22 (Summer/Fall 1994): 28-32. Ottawa: Canadian Arctic Resources
Committee, 1994. 5 p.
Hawken, Paul. The ecology of commerce: a declaration of
sustainability. New York: HarperCollins, 1993. 250 p.
Contents: A teasing irony; The death of birth; The creation of waste;
Parking lots and potato heads; Pigou's solution; The size thing; Private
lives and corporate rights; The Jesse Helms Citizenship Center; The
opportunity of insignificance; Restoring the guardian; Pink salmon and
green fees; The inestimable gift of a future.
Abstract: Argues that every commercial act in today's industrial society degrades the environment, and what is needed is a business system where the opposite is true, where the everyday acts of work and
production accumulate in a better world as a matter of course. Outlines
a series of economic strategies and innovations.
Hewison, Grant. Reconciling trade and the environment:
issues for New Zealand. Wellington, NZ: Victoria University of
Wellington Institute of Policy Studies, 1995. 78 p.
Contents: (Selected): Realizing New Zealand's "Clean green trade opportunities": Perception of New Zealand in its major markets, The "green" consumer, From image to reality: sustainable agriculture,
sustainable tourism, Does trade benefit or harm the environment: the case of New Zealand agriculture, Environmental impacts of agricultural liberalization; Environmental restrictions on trade: environmental measures that impact on trade: Import bans, Export bans, Eco labeling, Eco packaging, German packaging law, Eco standards, Environmental charges and taxes, Subsidies, Animal welfare, Consumer boycotts; International trade rules governing environmental regulations and standards: plant and animal health,
Technical barriers to trade; Competitiveness; Intellectual property
rights.
Abstract: Reconciliation of trade and environmental policies for New
Zealand is crucial as she is dependent on free international trade and
sustainable environmental management for strong economic growth. Examines
issues affected by the lowering of tariff barriers under the Uruguay Round
Hobley, Mary. Policy, rights and local forest management:
the case of Himachal Pradesh, India. Rural Development Forestry
Network paper 13b. London: Overseas Development Institute, 1992. 32 p. :
map
Hofrichter, Richard (ed). Toxic struggles:
the theory and practice of environmental justice. Gabriola Island,
B.C.: New Society Publishers, 1993. 260 p.
Contents: (Selected); Capitalism and the crisis of environmentalism (Faber, O'Connor); Anatomy of environmental racism (Bullard); Building a new vision: feminist, green socialism (Mellor); Creating a culture of destruction: gender, militarism and the environment (Seager); Feminism and ecology (King); Cultural activism and environmental justice (Hofrichter); Race, gender and the environment: a society
based on conquest cannot be sustained: native peoples and the environmental crisis (LaDuke); Blue collar women and toxic waste protests: process of politicization (Krauss); Building on our past, planning for our future: communities of color and the quest for environmental justice (Miller); Unequal protection: the racial
divide in environmental law (Lavelle, Coyle); Ecofeminism and grassroots environmentalism in the United States (Epstein); Hidden environment: crisis at work: Effects of occupational injury, illness and disease on the health status of Black Americans: a review (Wright, Bullard); Farm workers at risk; Global connection:
exploitation of developing countries: Corporate plundering of Third World resources (Weissman); Trading away the environment: Free Trade agreements and environmental degradation (Ritchie); Economics
and environmental justice: rethinking North South relations (Peng)
Abstract: Discusses how in local communities across the country people of colour, the poor, women, migrant farmworkers and industrial workers are joining forces with civil rights, peace and local community
activists to challenge corporate polluters
Hollister, Benjamin. Shopping for a better world: the quick
and easy guide to all your socially responsible shopping. San
Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1994. 394 p.
Contents: (Selected): Students shopping for a better world; Shopping for: Generous gift giving, Equal opportunity, Right to know, Thriving community, Family benefits, Better workplace, Greener world
(Labeling, New architecture and building supplies, Green construction
materials), Better packaging, Conservation and energy savings. Americans
and food; Americans and clothes; Business of toys; American auto industry;
Appliance industry; Computer industry; Telecommunications industry;
Investments
Abstract: Ratings on over 200 companies with 2000 brand products in 17
industries
Human Rights Watch, Natural Resources Defence Council. Defending
the earth: abuses of human rights and the environment. Washington, DC:
The Council, 106pp.
Abstract: This report focuses on the relationship, often causal, between human rights and environmental abuses. Includes case studies from Brazil, Eritrea, India, Kenya, Malaysia, Mexico, Philippines, The
former Soviet Union & United States.
International Labour Office; ILO. Defending values, promoting change: social justice in a global economy: an ILO agenda: report of the Director-General (Part 1). Geneva: ILO, 1994. 106 p.
Conference: International Labour Conference (81 st. : 1994)
Contents: A changing world; Values and structures of the ILO;
Standards: a broader approach; An organization at the service of its
constituents; The role of the ILO in international policy-making.
Abstract: The author provides an in depth review of the goals and
principles of the International Labour Organization (ILO). International
Labour Organisation; ILO. The rights of migrant workers: a guide to ILO
standards for the use of migrant workers and their organisations. Geneva:
ILO, 1992. 17 p.
International Labour Organisation. International labour
standards for development and social justice. Geneva: ILO, 1990. 48 p.
Kane, Michael J. "Promoting political rights to protect
the environment." Yale Journal of International Law 18, no. 1
(1993):389-411. 1993.
Contents: Introduction; Political rights affecting environmental
protection; Institutions, policies and programs; Conclusion
Abstract: This article describes the relationship between efforts to promote human rights and efforts to protect the environment. Part II illustrates how the exercise of political rights is crucial for
individuals and communities who seek to protect the environment. Part
III describes selected national and international policy initiatives that
have begun or that should begin to link human rights and environmental
concerns.
Khali, Mohamed H., Walter V. Reid, and Calestous Juma. Property rights, biotechnology and genetic resources. African Centre for Technology Studies biopolicy international series no. 7. Nairobi: ACTS Press, African Centre for Technology Studies, , 1992.
58 p.
Contents: Synthesis of papers presented at an expert workshop in
Nairobi, Jun 10-15 1991
Koers, A.W. Rights and obligations of the individual on the
electronic highway: the birth of a charter. Hague, Netherlands:
Rathenau instituut, 1995. 48 p.
Komen, John and Gabrielle Persley. Agricultural
biotechnology in developing countries: a cross-country review. ISNAR
research report no.2. The Hague: International Service for National
Agricultural Research, 1993. 45 p.
Contents: Introduction; A comparison of government programs; Regulatory
issues: biosafety and intellectual property rights; Addressing emerging
constraints; Discussion.
Abstract: Growing numbers of governments in developing countries are investing in infrastructure and human resources to support national biotechnology R&D in both the public and private sectors. This
report provides a comparative description of the different approaches
taken by 10 developing country governments to stimulate biotechnology
research. The experiences discussed include an analysis of the
institutional organization adopted, a description as to how the
governments of these countries manage the regulatory aspects of
biotechnology (biosafety and intellectual property rights), and how they
address issues constraining further development of agricultural
biotechnology.
Korten, David C. When corporations rule the world. West
Hartford, Connecticut: Kumarian Press, 1995. 374 p.
Contents: Cowboys in a spaceship: from hope to crisis; end of the open frontier; the growth illusion; Contest for sovereignty: rise of corporate power in America; assault of the corporate libertarians;
decline of democratic pluralism; illusions of the cloud minders; Corporate colonialism: dreaming of global empires; building elite consensus; buying out democracy; marketing the world; adjusting the poor; guaranteeing corporate rights; A rogue financial system: the money game; predatory finance; corporate cannibalism; managed competition; No place for people: race to the bottom; the end of inefficiency; people with no place; Reclaiming our power: the ecological revolution; good living; an awakened civil society;
agenda for change; Epilogue: a choice for life
Abstract: This publication contends that the convergence of
ideological, political, and technological forces are leading to an
increasing concentration of economic and political power in a handful of
corporations and financial institutions, separating their interests from
the human interest, while the market system considers only its own short
term financial gains. The human and environmental consequences of the
efforts of multi-national corporations to reconstruct values and
institutions everywhere to serve narrow financial ends are discussed. This
includes discussion of reconstruction of world trade bodies and world
trade agreements. The need for sustainable communities, sustainable
livelihoods, and citizen networking are discussed. To ensure human
survival a community-based, life centered alternative is suggested as a
replacement for capitalism and communism. Specific steps are given for
implementing this alternative. Developing political rights, economic
rights, and localizing the global system by limiting the power and freedom
of the large corporations is the alternative presented.
La Botz, Dan. Mask of democracy: labor suppression in
Mexico today. Boston: South End Press, 1992. 223 p.
Lane, Charles and Richard Moorehead. Who should own the
range: new thinking on pastoral resource tenure in dryland Africa.
Pastoral land tenure series no.3. London: International Institute for
Environment and Development, 1994. 34 p.
Contents: Introduction; Indigenous land tenure; Conventional approaches to African pastoral resource tenure; The 'tragedy of the commons' argument; The property rights school; The 'assurance problem'
argument; Theory in practice; Nationalization; Sedentarization, land
use planning and land titling; Privatization; Summary; The implications
for land tenure of the new directions in African range management and
policy; Options for the future; Research; Applied approaches based on
research; Policy formation and adoption; Conclusion.
Abstract: Pastoralists in dryland Africa are often accused of degrading
the resources they use, because they are unable to create and maintain an
effective tenure system for managing their natural resources. New thinking
about range management and tenure theory are challenging this 'old
orthodoxy'. This paper looks at the implications for tenure issues of the
'non-equilibrium' approach to range management in the light of the
'Tragedy of the Commons', 'Property Rights' and ' Assurance Problem'
approaches to resource tenure issues, drawing on case study material from
throughout Africa. The paper argues that pastoralists are well able to
manage their natural resource if they are empowered to do so, and an
essential prerequisite for this is secure access rights to range and
water. The paper describes the threat to herders' livelihoods from the
creeping privatization of key pastoral resources, and concludes with an
agenda for action to support herder's own tenure systems.
Lynch, Timothy. Polluting our principles: environmental
prosecutions and the Bill of Rights. Policy Analysis no. 223 (April
1995). Washington, DC: CATO Institute, 1995.
Abstract: The author argues that many of the US's most basic constitutional principles are being compromised to facilitate environmental investigations and prosecutions. The author urges Congress to
renounce the extraordinary police and prosecutorial powers it has
created during the past 25 years of environmental law enforcement.
Lynge, Finn. Arctic wars: animals rights, endangered peoples. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1992. 118 p.
Notes: Includes bibliography
Makhijani, Arjun. From global capitalism to economic justice: an inquiry into the elimination of systematic poverty, violence and environmental destruction in the world economy. New York: Apex
Press, 1992. 176 p.
Notes: Includes bibliographical references
Contents: (Selected): The war system: Colonial dynamic of capitalism (Third World elites and military power), Monetary imperialism, Dynamic of capitalism within countries, Economic activity of women, Capitalism and democracy, Centralized socialism (Collapse of centralized socialism in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union), Capitalism and socialism: a comparison; Economic justice and a peace system: Some elements of economic democracy (Governments and markets, Restructuring the large corporation, Mobility of capital and of people, National self determination, Private property, Local self reliance); Restructuring the international system (Security of international trade, International monetary system); Restructuring
within countries (Kerala, India, The United States); Money, human needs
and the environment (Monetized and non monetized work, Human needs and the
environment); Economic culture (Restructuring the international monetary
system)
Abstract: Analyzes present-day economic systems, presents a vision of the economic aspect of a system which would engender justice, peace and environmental harmony, and discusses initiatives that people can
take individually and collectively to help move toward that vision.
Martin, Vance G. and Nicholas Tyler (eds.) Arctic wilderness Golden, Colorado: North American Press, 1995. 342 p.
Conference: World Wilderness Congress (5th. : Tromso, Norway)
Contents: The wilderness imperative (Player); Wilderness designation - a global trend (Martin); Unspoiled nature - a prerequisite for civilization (Hareide); Indigenous peoples of the north (Magga); The concept of wilderness among the indigenous peoples of the north (Telekova); Indigenous peoples as managers of wildlife in the north (Pungowiyi); The recognition and exercise of Inuit rights and responsibilities (Kuptana); The indigenous peoples of the Arctic - survival demands (Rasmussen); An Australian aboriginal approach to wilderness (Franks); Involving traditional knowledge and rural people in wilderness conservation (Shuenyane); Wilderness - our lifeline on Earth (Sarathy); The use of wilderness for personal
growth and inspiration (Hendee and Pitstick); The wilderness as a resource for healing (Ramphele); Youth and wilderness (Gamstobakk); Is tourism a threat to polar wilderness? an Antarctic case study (Dingwall); Ecotourism, wildland values and wilderness preservation in the U.S. National Forests (Estill); The value of polar wilderness in a global perspective (Kaltenborn); Fridtjof Nansen and the spirit of northern wilderness (Hestmark); Polar wilderness: what does it contribute and to whom? (Roots); Polar wilderness and
biodiversity (Schei); Wild rivers of the north: a reconnaissance-level
inventory (McCloskey); A comparison of the legal environmental regimes
in the Arctic and Antarctic (Bjorklund); The Arctic and Antarctica: legal
and political perspectives (Ulfstein); Governmental structure of the
Arctic - the rights and duties of the northern peoples (Eriksen); Regional
cooperation in the Arctic as a strategy for marine management (Olsen);
National parks and protected areas in polar regions (Lucas); Arctic
conservation strategies (Wahlstedt); A protected area system for the
Arctic (Prokosch); Finland's wilderness act - a Scandinavian model
(Pietikaninen); Sustainable living in the Arctic (Hickel); Sustainable
management of the Polar regions (Bernsten); Concepts of wilderness and
sustainable use of the Arctic (Muus); Sustainable wilderness in the Arctic
(Miller); An ecosystem approach to fishing and management across the North
Atlantic (Earle); Fisheries management in an overutilized ocean (Tillion);
Developing the natural resources of the Barents Region: opportunities and
dangers (Kalinnikov and Vinogradov); Regional development in the Russian
Far North (Mikhailov); Weighing the needs of the environmental management
and economic development - the challenge for public authorities (Fuhs);
The great Arctic reserve - Taymyr Peninsula (Surlien); The idea of wild
(Rothenberg); International wilderness allocation, management and research
(Hendee and Martin); Arctic wildife and whaling: conflicts in management
(Stirling); Translating wilderness (Witoszek); Strategies for protecting
Arctic Wilderness (Larsen and Miller); The Polar Basin and its Arctic rim:
productivity and global change (Wassmann); Traditional indigenous
knowledge and modern resource management (Stenseth); Resolutions of the
5th World Wilderness Congress.
Abstract: Contributions to the 5th World Wilderness Congress which
focused on "Wild nature and sustainable living in circumpolar regions".
Nijar, G. S., Ling, Chee Yoke. "Intellectual property
rights: the threat to farmers and biodiversity." Third World
Network 39 (1993): 35-40. Briefing papers for CSD. Penang: TWN, 1993.
Abstract: This paper traces the historical route by which Northern countries have step by step imposed intellectual property rights regimes on biological materials and how they are now attempting to make these
uniform and universal. It analyzes the intricacies of the state of play
in two major fora - the Uruguay Round and the Biodiversity Convention -
and shows the implications of patenting life for farmers and biodiversity.
Ontario. Environmental Commissioner of Ontario. Ontario's
Environmental Bill of Rights: statements of environmental values for 14
government ministries. Toronto: Environmental Commissioner of Ontario,
1994. 1 v. in various pagings
Ontario. Office of the Environmental Bill of Rights.
An introduction to the Environmental Bill of Rights. Toronto:
Office of the Environmental Bill of Rights, 1993. 1 v. (loose-leaf)
Contents: Includes Bill 26: an act respecting environmental rights in Ontario; Second draft regulation under the Environmental Bill of Rights : MOEE's classification of instruments; An Introduction to
the Environmental Bill of Rights.
Pietila, Hikka and Jeanne Vickers. Making women matter: the role of the United Nations. (Updated ed.) London: Zed Books, 1994. 198 p.
Notes: Foreword by Gertrude Mongella, Secretary-General of Fourth World
Conference on Women [to be held in] Beijing, 1995
Contents: (Selected): Towards new millennia: forward from Nairobi (NGO Forum, 1985); Development from women's point of view; Forward Looking Strategies for the Advancement of Women [FLS]: equality,
development, peace; United Nations Decade for Women 1976-1985; Importance of other world conferences; Institutional breakthrough in the United Nations system; UN System's concrete commitment to
women; Emerging rights of women (In the United Nations Charter, Commission on the Status of Women, Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women - full text and
discussion); Issues for the nineties: violence against women and the
environment (Women and environment: Agenda 21; General Assembly speaks
out; Promises and doubts: women's future with the United Nations. Annexes:
Selected guidelines and checklists for women in development (INSTRAW); How
to organize a national or local campaign; Relevant international
instruments
Abstract: Comprehensively sets out principles and promises made
regarding the advancement of women and the integration of their interests
into development, while encouraging them to ensure that governments keep
their promises.
Political Ecology Group. Toxic empire: the WMX Corporation, hazardous waste, and global strategies for environmental justice. Political Ecology Group action paper no.2. San Francisco: PEG,
1994. 32 p.
Porter, Gareth. The United States and the Biodiversity
Convention: The Case for Participation. EESI Papers on environment and
development no.1. Washington, DC: Environmental and Energy Study
Institute, 1992. 36 p.
Contents: Includes The Negotiations: Background and Context; The Biotechnology Industry's View; Intellectual Property Rights in the Biodiversity Convention; Other Bush Administration Arguments;
Chronology of Negotiations on a Biological Diversity Convention
Abstract: Argues that the US rejection of the Convention on Biological
Diversity at the Earth Summit was based on a misreading of the GATT text.
Reid, Suzanne. "LEAP: the Legal and Expert Assistance
Program makes environmental justice affordable." Earthkeeper, 4 (2) :
32-33. Guelph: Earthkeeper, 1993.
Renew America. Environmental success index. Washington,
D.C.: Renew America, 1995.
Contents: 1 - Natural Resource Conservation: atmosphere, water,
biodiversity, food and agriculture, public lands and open space
protection, wildlife, oceans and coasts, forests and rangelands; 2 -
Economic progress: renewable energy, growth management and regional
planning, green buildings and green real estate development, hazardous
waste reduction and recycling, pollution prevention, transportation
efficiency, job creation, creating information and communication tools,
energy efficiency, redefining progress and ecological economics, solid
waste reduction and recycling; 3 - Human development : Family planning and
population stabilization, community participation, community education,
improved public health, institutional education, improved role of women
and men, fairness and social justice.
Abstract: This index is a compilation of 1,600 of the most successful environmental programs that can be used as models for other communities to protect, restore and enhance the environment. The environmental programs in the index are divided into 26 categories under three major divisions that contribute to environmental sustainability, natural resource conservation, economic progress, and human development. Within categories programs are grouped according to the type of organization that administers the program:
business, government or nonprofit. Within each division, programs are
sorted alphabetically by state and within each state by city or town.
Rifkin, Jeremy and Carol Grunewald Rifkin. Voting green:
your complete environmental guide to making political choices in the 1990s.
New York: Doubleday, 1992. 390 p.
Contents: (Selected): Green politics (From geopolitics to biosphere
politics, Defending the commons, Greening of science and technology);
Green legislation (Turning arms into a green dividend, Stewarding public
lands, Championing the rights of animals, Genetically engineered nature,
Green platform for 1992); Voting green (Congressional green profile and
report card, and Bush administration "green" report card)
Rural Advancement Foundation International and United Nations Development Programme. Conserving indigenous knowledge: integrating two systems of innovation: an independent study.
New York: UNDP, 1994. 63 p.
Contents: Issues and trends in intellectual property systems; Issues
and trends in biodiversity; Indigenous knowledge of biodiversity;
Alternatives to intellectual property rights.
Abstract: This report attempts to document the socio-economic importance of a dynamic "cooperative innovation system" that continues to work - despite overwhelming pressures to destroy it - and continues to
offer humankind an irreplaceable hope for planetary survival. Indigenous knowledge has gone unnoticed by the institutional innovation system for so long because it is not informal or disorganized, as some say, but cooperative and conducted within the pace of daily living. In particular, indigenous peoples' knowledge
systems operate, often invisibly, within the context of their immediate
agro-ecological environment.
Russow, Joan, Andrea Clark and Kari Jones. International
Women's Committee of the Global Compliance Research Project. Global
Compliance Research Project. 1995. 91 p.
Contents: Background of the project; Involvement of the GCRP in the fourth UN Conference on Women...;Objectives of the GCRP; Participants in the project; Introductory notes...; Systemic constraints and obstacles that must be overcome...; Draft charter of action; Legend for interpreting the charter; Preamble; Definitions; Recognition of urgency of the global situation; Principles of action to address
the urgency; Undertaking to comply with principles; Acknowledging the need for action; Proposed actions to address urgency; Endorsing fundamental rights to safety, security and survival; Enshrining and endorsing fundamental rights and freedoms; Endorsing the rights of the future generations; Respecting basic human rights of women and gender equity; Affirming the rights of indigenous peoples; Affirming the rights of persons with disabilities; Ensuring the prevention of environmental degradation; Committing to
non-transference of harm; Converting to and supporting alternative energy and prevention technology; Commitment to peace by moving away from instruments of war and towards peace with justice; Transferring the military budget to socially equitable and ecologically sound development; Dedication to communication, research and information; Promotion of tolerance, public awareness and understanding of global issues through principle-based education; Establishing advisory bodies drawn from non-vested
interest individuals..
Sachs, Aaron. Eco-justice: linking human rights and the
environment: Worldwatch paper 127. Washington, D.C.: Worldwatch
Institute, 1995. 68 p.
Contents: Introduction: human rights and the environment; What Greenpeace and Amnesty international are learning from each other; Individuals: The traditional human rights focus; Communities: local
people fighting for their environments; Countries: Injustices across
borders; The human rights framework for sustainable development; Toward
environmental justice
Abstract: This book discusses the linkages between environmental degradation and human rights. The experiences of indigenous people form an important part of this discussion. To work toward social justice
and make development environmentally sustainable, the author recommends that the human rights and environmental movements join forces at the regional and international levels, as they already have at the grassroots level. Together the two groups of activists could devise creative, community-based conservation and development schemes. They might also be able to convince policymakers to enshrine in international law each person's right to a healthy and healthful environment. Grassroots campaigners already have shown
that upholding civil liberties - empowering people to mount protests - is crucial to environmental preservation. Protecting the basic rights of the people most vulnerable to environmental injustices, then, may well be the best way to protect the right of future generations to inherit a planet that is still worth
inhabiting.
Saskatchewan. Standing Committee on the Environment. First report of the Standing Committee on the Environment: report on environmental rights and responsibilities. Regina: The Committee , 1993. 44p.
Notes: Includes bibliography
Contents: Introduction; Purpose; Definition of the environment; Rights
of the environment and public trust; Rights of concerned citizens;
Ensuring liability; Civil actions; Reasonable defense; Intervenor funding;
Issues of relief; Role of the minister; Independent environmental
commissioner function.
Abstract: The results of the Committee's five month public hearing and
independent investigation process to analyze the environmental rights and
responsibilities topic and its connection with other Saskatchewan
environmental legislation.
Scarce, Rik. Eco-warriors: understanding the radical
environmental movement. Chicago: Noble Press, 1990. 291 p.
Contents: Pt. 1. Towards an understanding: Gandhi meets the Luddites, Question of compromise, Ecology meets philosophy. Pt. 2. Who would dare?: Greenpeace: bridge to radicalism, Earth first! cracking the
mold, Sea shepherds: bringing justice to the high seas, Animal liberation: from labs to hunt sabs, Radical environmentalism's international face. Pt. 3. Environmental activism in practice: Hanging George Washington's bib, Not just tree huggers anymore, Raid on Reykjavik, Crowd on a crane, On the warpath with Anna, Mel, and Lib, In the wild with "The town crier of the global village". Pt. 4. Inspiration and the future: Stirring the pot: radical environmental literature, music, art and theater, Whither radical
environmentalism?
Seidman, Ann and Frederick Anang. Twenty-first-century
Africa: towards a new vision of self-sustainable development. Trenton,
NJ: Africa World Press, 1992. xi, 330 p.
Contents: (Selected): Towards a new economic strategy for sustainable African development (Structural adjustment programs, Popular participation, Foreign aid, Institutional change and structural transformation,
Debates over resource allocation and Africa's role in the world economy ); African regional cooperation and integration: achievements problems and prospects; Education and development: deconstructing a myth to construct reality (Cachet of capital, Conjunction of research and finance, Fads in education and development, Education and economic productivity, Educational equity, access and education of women); Health of the future (Alternative approaches: Food security, justice and sustainability, Women and structural adjustment, Hazards and people's control of space, Occupational health and workers control, Caring for refugees, Environmental management); Facing Africa's ecological crisis; Gender relations and development: political economy and culture (Gender and households, Gender issues in agriculture,
Gender and technology transfer, Gender and structural adjustment,
Participatory research methodologies)
Abstract: Culmination of the first phase of work of the Task Force on Sustainable Development in Africa, and focuses on seven key areas: economy, legal order, environment, education, health, gender and
regional integration
Sen, Gita, Adrienne Germain and Lincoln C. Chen (eds). Population
policies reconsidered: health, empowerment, and rights. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1994. 280 p.
Contents: Reconsidering population policies: ethics, development, and strategies for change; Population and ethics: expanding the moral space; Setting a new agenda: sexual and reproductive health and rights; Challenges from the Women's Health Movement: women's rights versus population control; Development, population, and the environment: a search for balance; Population, well-being and freedom; Honoring human rights in population policies: from declaration to action; Reproductive and sexual rights: a feminist
perspective; The meaning of women's empowerment: new concepts from action; Women's burdens: easing the structural constraints; Women's status, empowerment, and reproductive outcomes; Gender relations
and household dynamics; Reproductive and sexual health services:
expanding access and enhancing quality; A reproductive health approach to
the objectives and assessment of family planning programs; Reaching young
people: ingredients of effective programs; Fertility control technology: a
women-centered approach to research; Financing reproductive and sexual
health services.
Abstract: This volume brings together a combination of scholars, senior policy-makers and women's health advocates who have experiences in population policy and family planning program implementation. They
explore future directions for population policy centered on health,
women's empowerment, and human rights. The underlying premise is that
public policy should assure the rights and well-being of people already
born and those who will inevitably be born, rather than simply attempt to
limit the ultimate size of the world's population. The contributors
discuss why such a shift in population policies is necessary, and propose
how policies can be transformed to honor human rights, especially women's
rights. The book delineates policy changes needed to ensure that women can
act on their own behalf. It also analyzes the practical aspects of
achieving the proposed reproductive health and rights agenda. The aim is
to contribute to a new consensus on policy directions for the 21st
century.
Shand, Hope. "There is a conflict between intellectual
property rights and the rights of farmers in developing countries."
Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics (1991):132-141.
1991.
Abstract: Attempts by Third World nations to receive compensation for
their biological diversity are being thwarted by corporations seeking to
patent this genetic material. Industrialized nations are vigorously
promoting the global extension and harmonization of intellectual property
laws, with the ultimate goal of exclusive control over biological products
and processes.
Shiva, Vandana. "The effects of WTO on women's rights."
Third World Resurgence no.61/62 (1995):52-55. Penang: TWN, 1995.
Abstract: With the advent of a new regime of globalization as a result of the conclusion of the GATT final agreement and the establishment of the WTO, a new era of gender politics has begun. Gender analysis in
the new era requires a paradigm shift away from the domestic realm to
the global arena.
Society for International Development. People's rights and security: sustainable development strategies for the 21st. (twenty-first) century: conference report. SID, 1994.
Notes: from the 21st. Triennial World Conference
South and Meso American Indian Rights Center. Draft of the Inter-American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Oakland, CA: SAIIC, 1996. 11 p.
Notes: Draft approved by the IACHR at the 1278 session held on
September 18, 1995
Subramanian, Arvind. "The international economics of
intellectual property rights protection: a welfare-theoretic trade policy
analysis." World Development 19 no.8 (1991): 945-956. Oxford:
Pergamon Press, 1991.
Abstract: This paper provides an analytical construct for examining the
trade policy effects of greater intellectual property protection in
technology importing countries. It is shown that two types of conflict are
likely to arise between net technology importers and exporters. The first
relates to the level of protection with importers preferring a low level
and exporters a high one. The second conflict relates to the manner of
protection with importers likely to prefer discriminatory regimes favoring
local R&D creation, whereas exporters would prefer nondiscriminatory
protection in importing countries.
Sugarman, Jim. Field guide to labor rights. Washington,
D.C.: Essential Books, 1993. 57 p.
Contents: (Selected): Multinational corporations and the world labor market; Ten early warning signs of plant closings; Using international agreements to enforce labor rights; How to use GSP provisions to
improve labor conditions; How to use ILO standards; Worker
organizations; Common toxic chemicals used by industry and their effects.
Abstract: Handbook created to help workers and communities around the
world demand equal treatment from the multinational corporations they have
allowed to operate in their own countries.
Swanson, Elizabeth J. and Elaine L. Hughes. The price of
pollution: environmental litigation in Canada. Edmonton: Environmental
Law Centre, 1990. 208 p.
Contents: Civil litigation; General principles; Common law tort
actions; Environmental legislation and civil litigation; Charter of Rights
and Freedoms and environmental litigation; In the public interest:
environmental litigation in the absence of personal gain; Prosecutions;
General principles; Environmental offences; Sentencing in environmental
cases; Reform issues; Environmental reform in the 1990s; Reforming
environmental law and policy: the issues; Reforming environmental law and
policy: conclusions.
Abstract: The authors' intent is to provide an overview of Canadian environmental law and policy which would be useful to anyone with an interest in the area. The book is divided into three parts. The first is about civil litigation; that is, legal action taken to enforce (primarily) private rights. Actions based upon the common law of torts and legislation (including the Charter of Rights) are discussed in this part with an entire chapter devoted to the topic of public interest litigation. Part II concerns prosecutions and
covers many issues ranging from due diligence to sentencing factors.
The final part is intended to identify the cause(s) and nature of current
reform initiatives in environmental law and policy.
Tessitore, John and Susan Woolfson (eds). United Nations Association of the United States of America. A global agenda: issues before the 49th [forty ninth] General Assembly of the United Nations. New York: University Press of America, v ; annual
Notes: Library holds 1994-1995 edition
Contents: (Selected): Making and keeping the peace; Arms control and disarmament; Economics and development; Global resource management (Environment and sustainable development, Food and agriculture, Population, Law of the Sea, ocean affairs and Antarctica); Human rights and social issues (Refugees, Drug abuse, production and trafficking, Status of women); Legal issues (Peace and security,
Space law, International Court of Justice); Finance and administration.
Torres-Rivas, Edelberto and Mirta Gonzalez-Suarez. Obstacles
and hopes: perspectives for democratic development in El Salvador.
Montreal: International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic
Development, 1994. 79 p.
Contents: (Selected): Recent history; Security rights; Participatory
rights; Welfare rights; Non-discrimination rights
Abstract: Analysis of the prospects for democratic development in a
country scarred by a civil war that lasted almost 12 years, with a history
of authoritarian rule, social exclusion and extreme poverty
Treaty and Aboriginal Rights Research Centre of Manitoba. A
debt to be paid: treaty land entitlement in Manitoba. Winnipeg: Treat
and Aboriginal Rights Research Centre of Manitoba , 1994. 32 p.
Abstract: To this day, a number of Manitoba First Nations have not
received the full amount of land which was promised by Treaty. This issue
is referred to as Treaty land entitlement.
United Nations Decade for Women, Manitoba Committee for UN Decade for Women and Canada. Secretary of State. Women and justice/injustice: conference report, 1992 conference... March 20-21, 1992, Winnipeg. Winnipeg: The Committee, 1992.
Notes: "Eight years 'til 2000"
Contents: (Selected): Women in development and the economic status of women North and South (O'Neil); Strategies for change (Rebick); Conflict resolution (Haid); Healing: the Aboriginal women's way to justice;
Violence against women - the greatest injustice; Strategies to the year
2000 (Smith)
United Nations Environment Programme. Industry and Environment Office. Companies' organization and public communication on environmental issues. UNEP/IEO technical report series.
Paris: UNEP, 1991. 129 p.
Contents: (Selected): Factors influencing companies to improve their environmental performance (Legal requirements and increased regulations); Companies' organization to deal with environmental issues; Public communication. Appendices include examples of companies' organizational structures concerning the
environment, their organizational charts, policy statements, and environmental performance reports (e.g.Noranda Minerals, US EPA (Emergency planning and community right-to-know), Responsible care
program of the Chemical Manufacturers Association (CMA)). Appendix 8
has examples of environmental principles and guidelines for industry (ICC
Business Charter for Sustainable Development, CEFIC guidelines for the
communication of environmental information to the public, 1990 CERES guide
to the Valdez Principles). Appendix 9: extracts of staff newsletters.
Appendix 10: extracts of annual reports (Allied Signal, CIBA-GEIGY, Dow,
Noranda)
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The state of
the world's refugees: in search of solutions. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1995. 264 p.
Contents: Introduction; 1 - Changing approaches to the refugee problem; 2 - Protecting human rights; 3 - Keeping the peace; 4 - Promoting development; 5 - Managing migration; Conclusion; Annex 1 - The
problem with refugee statistics; Annex 2 - Statistical tables; Annex 3
- UNHCR in brief.
Abstract: This book discusses the global refugee problem by examining the origins of the current crisis. It provides a comprehensive account of the way in which approaches to the problem of human displacement
have changed since the end of the Cold War. While the right of asylum must be scrupulously maintained, the book argues, grater efforts must also be made to tackle refugee problems at their source, by restoring peace and prosperity to countries where large numbers of people have been forced to abandon their homes. And to achieve this objective, concerted international action will be required to protect human rights, establish effective peacekeeping operations, promote sustainable development and manage migratory
movements. This book also provides a set of statistical tables, graphs
and maps, describing the state of the world's refugees. The report
includes 25 case studies, examining key refugee situations around the
world and showing how new approaches to the problem of human displacement
are being put into practice.
United Nations. Commission on the Status of Women. [Miscellaneous conference materials]. v. in box
Conference: World Conference on Women (4th. : 1995 : Beijing)
Contents: Includes Women's Health and the Fourth World Conference on
Women (Canada. Women's Health Bureau); Intellectual property rights of
indigenous women recognized; First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton remarks for
the ...Conference; Women-food : those that feed the world eat last, and
least (Son); Beijing conference: gender justice and global apartheid
(Shiva); North-South difference in perception on Beijing; Beijing
Declaration of indigenous women (Asia Indigenous Women's Network); After
Beijing, new aid and trade conditionalities? (Khor)
United Nations. Commission on the Status of Women. [Miscellaneous pre-conference materials]. New York: UN, 1994. v. in box notes: Theme: "Action for development, quality and peace". Authors and dates of publication vary.
Conference: World Conference on Women (4th : 1995 : Beijing)
Contents: (Selected): Draft Platform for Action; NGO Forum on Women '95 bulletins; Wealth of nations, poverty of women (ECE regional preparatory meeting, Vienna October 1994); WIDE perspective paper
for the World Summit on Social Development and the fourth World
Conference on Women; The long road to Beijing : a brief history of U.N.
initiatives leading to the Fourth World Conference on Women (Allen and
others); Regional platform for action : women in a changing world - call
for action from an ECE perspective (Economic Commission for Europe);
Adoption of the report : Vienna NGO Forum 94 Call to Action; onward to
Beijing : for equality, development peace (newsletter of the Canadian
Beijing Facilitating Committee); Canada's national report to the United
Nations for the...conference; ngo news: without waiting for Beijing; U.S.
delegates; Statement of the South Asian Women's caucus; Agenda for equal
partnership (Bangladesh); Your rights in Beijing; Focus on 4WCW; Women's
linkage caucus; 180 days/180 ways: women's action campaign; Take the
brackets off women's lives; IWTC global net: new and developments about
the fourth world conference on women; NGO forum on women Beijing '95
information packet; '95 preview: shaping the agenda for the 4FCW; Policy
recommendations from the Women and Sustainable Development: Canadian
Perspectives Conference.
United Nations. Committee on the Status of Women. [Miscellaneous conference materials]. New York: UN, 1995. v. in box
Conference: World Conference on Women (4th : 1995 : Beijing)
Contents: (selected): A pledge to gender justice; A women's creed; South Asian Women's declaration for equal political power; Women taking hold of information technologies; NGO Beijing declaration; Final
countdown to Beijing; Women, health and the environment: action for cancer prevention campaign; Sustainable futures: women in science and energy; Women and the environment: towards sustainable
societies; Bottlenecks of development in Africa; UN Fourth World
Conference on Women press kit
United Nations. [Miscellaneous conference and post-conference materials] New York: UN, 1994. v. in box
Conference: International Conference on Population and Development
(1994 : Cairo)
Contents: Includes ICPD materials: Government of Canada statement by Sergio Marchi; kit of Canadian materials including CIDA documents. Key note address to the International Conference....(Gro Harlem
Brundtland); Programme of action of the ICPD (unedited). Report of the International Conference on Population and Development (United Nations). World Programme of Action : a new paradigm for
population policy (Sen). Women, politics, and global management: the Cairo Conference (Chen, Fitzgerald, Bates). IN/Fire ethics: newsletter of the International Network of Feminists Interested in
Reproductive Health [special issue on ICPD]. Consumption: the other side of population for development (Ramphal); National perspectives on population and development : synthesis of 168 national reports prepared for the ....(United Nations Population Fund); Summary of the programme of action of the International Conference....(United Nations); V.1. Population and development: programme of action adopted at the International Conference...(United Nations Department for Economic and Social
Information Policy Analysis); ICPD news (UNFPA Task Force on ICPD Implementation; Report of the Round Table on Women's Perspectives on Family Planning, Reproductive Health and Reproductive Rights.
New perspectives on population: lessons from Cairo (Ashford); Wedline :
Environmental Liason Centre International special newsletter on Women,
Environment and Sustainable Development for the Fourth World Conference on
Women : issue no. 3/4; Women watching ICPD : one year after Cairo....
(Sadasivam)
Wallace, Aubrey. Green means: living gently on the planet. K Q E D Books, 1994. 251 p.
Notes: Includes bibliography
Contents: Green cowboy: Jack Turnell manages his ranch the green way; The buffalo return: Fred DuBray brings back the buffalo and tribal tradition; Crimes against nature: Ken Goddard brings high-tech
investigation to wildlife crimes; Reef relief: DeeVon Quirolo works to preserve living coral reefs; Colored cotton: Sally Fox raises organic cotton in natural colors; Sewage sanctuary: Bob Gearheart runs a state-of-the-art green sewage plant; Shamans & scientists: Lisa Conte helps preserve the rainforest by developing new drugs; Habitat forming: Steve Packard restores a forgotten ecosystem in Illinois; Guru of the old growth: Jerry Franklin works to both preserve and harvest timber; Seeds of life: Catherine Sneed creates
an organic garden for prison inmates; The population connection: Nancy
Wallace lobbies Congress on population issues; Prairie prophet: Wes
Jackson works to invent the ultimate sustainable agriculture; Barnyard
biodiversity: Don Bixby preserves disappearing breeds of farm animals; The
recyclers of Cairo: Laila Kamel recycles rags in Cairo and offers new hope
to girls; Solar ovens: Dan Kammen introduces appropriate energy technology
in Kenya; Organic milk: The Straus family preserves their farm by becoming
an organic dairy; Tackling Texas toxics: Susana Almanza fights
toxic waste and environmental racism; Salmon habitat: Billy Frank
uses Indian fishing rights to save the salmon; Always cry wolf: Renee
Askins works to reintroduce the wolf to Yellowstone; Save the tigers:
Ullas Karanth studies tigers to save them; Green means and environmental
education (Pendergraft) Green Means programs
Abstract: Based on the popular PBS television spots, the book presents
20 success stories of local environmental activists: what they did, how
they did it, and why it worked.
Wijk, Jeroen van, Joel I. Cohen and John Komen. "Intellectual
property rights for agricultural biotechnology: options and implications
for developing countries." ISNAR research report no.3. The
Hague: International Service for National Agricultural Research, 1993. 38
p.
Contents: Introduction; Intellectual property protection of biotechnology; The global technology system and IPR protection; Developing country responses, assessing complexities; Towards an international
agreement on the legal protection of biotechnological innovations; Developing country responses, assessing the