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International Environmental Problems and Policy

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International Environmental Problems and Policy Office hours PROFESSOR ZOLT N GROSSMAN 258 Phillips Hall 10:00-10:50 am MWF 836-4471 E-mail: grossmzc_at_uwec.edu Web ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: International Environmental Problems and Policy


1
International EnvironmentalProblems and
Policy
2
Office hours
  • PROFESSOR ZOLTÁN GROSSMAN
  • 258 Phillips Hall
  • 1000-1050 am MWF
  • 836-4471
  • E-mail grossmzc_at_uwec.edu
  • Web www.uwec.edu/grossmzc

3
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4
Regions of the World Village
  • 333 East Asians
  • 274 South Asians
  • 132 Africans
  • 120 Europeans
  • 86 Latin Americans
  • 50 North Americans
  • 5 from Oceania

5
Where we live
  • 452 in town
  • 548 in country

6
Ages
  • 310 children
  • 70 elderly
  • 610 between

7
Demographics
  • 22 children born
  • 9 people die
  • One-third of deaths are children under 5.
  • Numbers of elderly increasing rapidly.

8
Human Population at 6 billion
  • Food shortages/famines
  • Water quality
  • Fossil fuel burning
  • Air and water pollution
  • Landscape destruction
  • Loss of biodiversity

9
Languages
  • 500 speak one of six languages
  • Chinese
  • English
  • Hindi
  • Spanish
  • Russian
  • Arabic
  • 500 speak one of 6,000 languages

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11
Household income
  • Average annual income 4,890
  • 600 poor
  • 300 marginal
  • 100 well-off

12
Ownership/consumption
  • 200 richest villagers own and consume 80 of
    goods
  • Other villagers own and consume remaining 20

13
Affluent lifestyles
14
Material World A Global Family Portrait
Iceland
Guatemala
Japan
15
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16
Land use
  • Average of 6 acres for each person
  • 700 acres cropland
  • 1400 acres pasture
  • 1900 acres woodland
  • 2000 acres desert, other noneconomic land

17
Land ownership
  • The richest 270 people control
  • 40 of the cropland
  • 72 of the foodgrain
  • but feeds 27 of the people
  • 83 of the fertilizer

18
United States Population
  • 45 people live in U.S.
  • 955 live elsewhere

19
United States Consumption
  • Oil 26
  • Aluminum 24
  • Copper 20
  • Nickel 19
  • Steel 13

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21
United States Share of World Pollution
  • Toxic wastes 50
  • Nitrogen oxides 26
  • Carbon dioxide 26
  • Sulfur oxides 25
  • Chloroflurocarbons 22

22
Rich/poor divisions
  • Wealthy countries tend to be located in the
    Northern Hemisphere.
  • About 1/5 of world population live in countries
    with per capita income gt 25,000.00 (U.S.).
  • Poor people exist here as well.
  • Gap between rich and poor continues to increase.
  • Wealthiest 200 people in the world have combined
    wealth of 1 trillion - more than total wealth of
    poorest half (3 billion) of the worlds
    population.

23
Environmental challenges
  • Wealthy countries exploit natural resources
  • in poor countries (often through
    corporations).
  • Elites in poor countries often cooperate with
  • wealthy countries and interests.
  • Poor exploit natural resources, because
    socio-economic conditions (dictated by rich
    countries and domestic elites) create a struggle
    for survival.
  • Poor in wealthy countries also face economic
    blackmail.
  • .

24
Philadelphia Infant Mortality
  • Red area high than
  • at least 28 Third
  • World countries,
  • including
  • Jamaica
  • Cuba
  • Costa Rica
  • Malaysia
  • Panama
  • Sri Lanka
  • South Korea
  • Taiwan
  • Uruguay
  • Argentina
  • Chile

25
Adult Literacy
  • 310 adults can read and write
  • 310 adults cannot read or write
  • Girls half as likely as boys to attend school

26
Access to TV
  • 10 without access
  • 90 with access

27
Access to fresh water
  • 30 of rural residents without access
  • 7 of urban residents without access

28
Women and girls
  • Two-thirds of manual labor
  • One-tenth of wages
  • One-hundredth of property
  • Make up 70 of the poor.

29
Life expectancy
  • Not age lived to,
  • but affected by infant mortality rates.
  • Richest familes
  • women 80, men 78
  • Poorest families
  • 48 for both

30
North/South Divisions
  • Poor countries tend to be located in Southern
    Hemisphere.
  • World Bank estimates more than 1.3 billion people
    (1/5 world population) live in acute poverty of lt
    1 (U.S.) per day.
  • 70 women and children
  • Self-Sustaining
  • Daily survival necessitates over-harvesting
    resources thus degrading chances of long-term
    sustainability.

31
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32
Former world divisions
  • First World - Industrialized, market-oriented
    democracies of Western Europe, North America.
  • Second World - Centrally-planned socialist
    countries such as former USSR.
  • Third World - Ex-colonial nations such as
  • India, Malaysia, Iran, etc.
  • Fourth World - Poorest nations (and indigenous
    communities within wealthy nations).

33
Current world system
  • Core - Industrialized, market-oriented
    democracies of Western Europe, North America,
  • East Asia, Australia.
  • Periphery - Poor, ex-colonial nations such as
  • Kenya, Bolivia, Pakistan, etc.
  • Semi-periphery - Partially industrialized
  • ex-colonial nations (South Africa, Brazil,
  • Mexico, South Korea, etc.)

34
Indigenous peoples
  • Indigenous (Native) people are often least
    powerful, most neglected people in the world.
  • At least half the worlds 6,000 distinct
    languages are dying.
  • Indigenous homelands may harbor vast percentage
    of worlds biodiversity.
  • Recognizing Native land rights and political
    rights may often be a solid ecological safeguard.
  • Who is Indigenous?

35
Human Development Index
  • United Nations releases Human Development Index
    (HDI). Based on social factors - ranges from
    0-1.0.
  • In 2000 Canada had highest with 0.96 and Sierra
    Leone had lowest with 0.19.
  • Aggregate numbers hide many important
  • inequity issues
  • Gender
  • Race

36
Sustainable Development
  • Meeting the needs of the present without
    compromising the ability of future generations to
    meet their own needs.
  • Benefits must be available to all humans, not
    just sub-set of privileged group.
  • Economists continual growth for people
  • Ecologists non-renewable resources, limited
    waste capacity

37
Signs of hope
  • Progress had been made on many fronts.
  • Population has stabilized in many industrialized
    countries population growth slowing in others.
  • Incidence of life-threatening diseases has been
    reduced in some countries.
  • Average life expectance nearly doubled.

38
World Summit onSustainable Development
  • Johannesburg, South Africa, Aug.-Sept. 2002
  • Ten years after 1992 Earth Summit in
  • Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Rio 10).
  • International grassroots NGOs
  • used as opportunity for networking.

39
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40
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41
WSSD websites
  • Earth Summit 2002
  • www.earthsummit2002.org
  • UN site
  • www.johannesburgsummit.org
  • Linkages
  • www.iisd.ca/wssd/portal.html
  • Radio Earth Summit
  • http//www.radioearthsummit.org/
  • Girona Declaration
  • http//www.xs4all.nl/ceo/un/gironadecl.html
  • Global Indaba
  • www.globalindaba.org.za
  • Independent Media Center
  • http//southafrica.indymedia.org/

42
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