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Economics ForeverPublication DateMarch 15, 2000
SummaryFrom the brief... "Natural disasters are increasing: the floods in Venezuela and Mozambique and the cyclone in Orissa, India, are just a few recent examples. Many of these disasters may well have been intensified by human activities such as deforestation and by global warming. At the same time, the protest demonstrations at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) meeting in Seattle in December 1999 highlighted worldwide concern that economic growth based on free trade is having negative impacts on society and the environment, especially in poorer countries."
These very different events show how urgently people around the world are trying to address questions that have been asked since the 1960s: is economic growth destroying the planet? And if so, what must be done to change our destructive course? How can we slow down the rate at which we exploit the earth, while still providing a decent standard of living for all the world's present and future people? The questions are still hotly disputed, but the relatively new discipline of 'green' economics is seeking to find some answers."... If you would like a printed copy, contact Mark Covey markc@panoslondon.org.uk the cost is £5.00 each (including postage). PublisherContactKitty Warnock
Panos London
9 White Lion Street
London
N1 9PD
United Kingdom (UK)
Tel: 44 20 7278 1111
Fax: 44 20 7278 0345
Placed on the Communication Initiative site September 21 2003 Last Updated June 29 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
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