Title: Introduction to Science Policy HPSC 1004
1Introduction to Science PolicyHPSC 1004
- Environmental Movements and Science Policy
- Tom Roberts
- PhD Researcher
- Department of Geography
- t.roberts_at_ucl.ac.uk
2Defining Environmental Movements
- Consist of a wide range of phenomenon so
therefore difficult to define. - As a result have often been overlooked in the
literature despite their significant political
impact. - Roots 1999 provides a broad definition
- broad networks of people and organisations
engaged in collective action in the pursuit of
environmental benefit. - Environmental movements are understood to be very
diverse and complex, their organisational forms
ranging from the highly organised and formally
institutionalised to the radically informal the
spatial scope of their concerns ranging from
single issues to full global concerns.
3Early Environmentalism
- During the 19th Century we see the emergence of
the first environmental movements - 1860 (UK) Royal Society for the Protection of
Birds (RSPB) formed - 1864 (US) Creation of the first National Park
(Yosemite)
4Early Environmentalism
- But by the late 19th and early 20th century the
UK was experiencing many of the urban
environmental problems associated with rapid
industrial growth.
5The Beginning of the Modern Environmental Movement
- As man proceeds towards his announced goal of
the conquest of nature, he has written a
depressing record of destruction, directed not
only against the earth he inhabits but against
life that shares it with him. The question is
whether any civilization can wage such
relentless war on life without destroying itself,
and without the right to be called civilized. - (Carson, R 1962)
6Changing Perspectives on the EnvironmentFirst
Wave Environmentalism 1968-1976
- Spaceship Earth (Buckminster Fuller, 1963)
- Emphasises concern over limited resources
available to humanity and the unequal way in
which they are being consumed and shared among
the existing population. - Gaia Hypothesis (James Lovelock, 1972)
- The theory that the earth is in itself a
self-regulating living system or organism which
he named Gaia after a Greek Godess.
7World Earth Day 22nd April 1970
- Before I flew I was already aware of how small
and vulnerable our planet is but only when I saw
it from space, in all its ineffable beauty and
fragility, did I realize that human kind's most
urgent task is to cherish and preserve it for
future generations. - Sigmund Jähn, Astronaut, German Democratic
Republic
8Club of Rome (1972) Limits to Growth
(1)If the present growth trends in world
population, industrialization, pollution, food
production, and resource depletion continue
unchanged, the limits to growth on this planet
will be reached sometime within the next one
hundred years. The most probable result will be a
rather sudden and uncontrollable decline in both
population and industrial capacity. (Meadows et
al. 1972, Limits to Growth London Earth Island).
9 Club of Rome (1972) Limits to Growth
(2) It is possible to alter these growth trends
and to establish a condition of ecological and
economic stability that is sustainable far into
the future. The state of global equilibrium could
be designed so that the basic material needs of
each person on earth are satisfied and each
person has an equal opportunity to realize his
individual human potential. (Meadows et al.
1972, Limits to Growth London Earth Island).
10The Doomsday Decade1970-1980
11Global Environmental Organisations
- The late 1960s and early 1970s also saw the birth
of a number of environmental organisations which
would have a massive impact on policy over the
coming decades. - The most prominent of which was Greenpeace which
was formed by a group of anti-Vietnam campaigners
to campaign against the USs testing of nuclear
bombs.
12Growth of Environmental Organisations
13International Conferences and Treaties
- Biosphere conference in Paris 1968
- UN conference on the Human Environment Stockholm
1972 - In the forty years between 1930 and 1970, 48
international environmental conventions or
treaties were signed - In the years from 1971-1980 47 were agreed to.
141980s - The New Right and Environmental Ignorance
- Activities during the 1970s had succeeded in
raising awareness and a number of laws and
treaties had been passed. - However, in 1980 a report, The Globe 2000, was
presented to Jimmy Carter which suggested that
the world was still in terminal decline. - This was shelved by Ronald Regan who embarked on
a decade of growth and destruction at a time when
restraint was desperately needed.
151980s- Institutionalisation of the Environmental
Movement and the Birth of Radical
Environmentalism
- Despite the anti-environment rhetoric of the
Regan and Thatcher Governments the membership of
environmental movements continued to grow. - As they became more established grass roots
activists became increasingly alienated, as one
American activist commented - The older national environmental organisations
in their Washington offices have taken the soft
political road of negotiation, compromising with
the corporations on the amount of pollution that
is acceptable. The people living in the polluted
communities have taken the hard political road of
confrontation, demanding not that the dumping of
hazardous waste be slowed down but that it is
stopped.
161992 UN Conference on Environment and Development
in Rio
- 1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development
in Rio (Earth Summit) which recognised of the
need for a globally co-ordinated approach to
environmental problems. - Emergence of several interdisciplinary,
international, scientific research programmes to
study global environmental change including the
International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme, the
World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) the
International Human Dimensions Programme on
Global Environmental Change (IHDP looks at land
use, urban environments etc) and DIVERSITAS
(biodiversity).
17The role of Popular TV
181990s Environmental Consciousness and Ethical
Consumption
19Anti-globalisation
20Kyoto Protocol
- The Kyoto Protocol, which was agreed upon on
December 11, 1997, at a meeting of the UNFCCC in
Kyoto, Japan, was created as an effort to force
action on the international community
21Climate change