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The Environmentalists Dilemma: Dollars and Sand Dollars

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Title: The Environmentalists Dilemma: Dollars and Sand Dollars


1
The Environmentalists Dilemma Dollars and Sand
Dollars
  • Bryan G. Norton

2
Norton begins by asking
  • Must environmental conscience always give way to
    economic arguments? (494).

3
The Problem
  • If one wants the child to put the starfish back
    but there is no right to life how can one justify
    this request? If sand dollars are just resources
    then there is nothing wrong with taking the
    resources.

4
  • Does one have to choose either economic
    aggregation (its O.K. to take up to the
    sustainable yield of the population if one can
    make money) or resort to moralistic language
    where sand dollars are more than just resources
    and all have to be put back.

5
Why its a Problem
  • The aggregationist position may be too weak and
    the moralist position too strong.
  • This might be considered the environmentalists
    dilemma, its a dilemma in values or between
    world-views.

6
  • It affects how we talk about policies and
    occasionally effects the policies we create. The
    idea is that there is more than utilitarian
    argument that is relevant but utilitarian
    arguments are relevant too.

7
Two Crises
  • We fact two crises an internal and an external
    one. Against outsiders we have to argue for new
    reforms in the face of economic efficiency.
  •  

8
  • Internally we must deal with a variety of
    competing worldviews as There has emerged within
    the movement no single, coherent consensus
    regarding positive values, no widely shared
    vision of a future and better world in which
    human populations live in harmony with the
    natural world they inhabit. (496).

9
Communication
  • These are problems for justifying, explaining and
    discussing values. If we have to chose either
    economics or preservationist approaches we may
    not be able to communicate.

10
Historical Divisions
  • Historically there has been a division between
    conservationists sustainability or wise use and
    preservationists let it be approaches.

11
Conservation vs. Preservation
  • Conservationism was initiated in Gifford
    Pinchots world view as first official forester
    of the U.S. he wanted good resource management
    and today conservationist try to get economists
    to look at the results over a longer time frame.
    John Muir was the first preservationist and the
    first president of the Sierra Club he rejected
    monotheism and took a very pantheistic
    world-view.

12
Problems with Each Position
  • There are problems with both of these world-views
    if carried too far.

13
Preservationism
  • Preservationism or moralism might end up being
    totally excluded for the market place and
    environmental impacts totally ignored (since they
    cannot be calculated in dollars).

14
Conservationism
  • Conservationists may be completely drowned out in
    the melee of special interest groups, they may be
    unable to get government resources for what they
    can only claim is one amongst many social
    problems.

15
How this Debate has been Manifest
  • The debate has surfaced in biocentrism/anthropocen
    trism debates, those environmentalist who like
    current socio-political system, and may be best
    captured by the division between
    environmentalists who see themselves as deep and
    those who dont (they are called shallow).

16
A Solution?
  • But focusing on these options as mutually
    exclusive horns of a dilemma has just led to
    distrust between different groups and discomfort
    as people either opt for a single horn or waver
    between both.
  •  

17
  • Rather, one should focus on what environmentalist
    have in common. What environmentalists share is
    not a world-view but policy goals, objectives not
    values.

18
How it Works
  • Norton thinks we ought not focus on categorizing
    or defending world views in opposition to each
    other, instead we should look for common ground.
    This isnt to deny that There has emerged within
    the movement no shared, positive understanding of
    the human relationship to the natural world
    (498).

19
Paradise and a Parking Lot
  • Differences in value may lead to shifting
    coalitions regarding objectives (500). 

20
Pluralism and Political Correctness
  • Freedom to appeal to different values may
    ultimately provide the greatest strength of the
    movement, allowing environmentalists to appeal to
    the broadest spectrum of American voters. (500).

21
  • Preservationism and conservationism may each
    provide useful perspectives.

22
Pluralist Perspective
  • There may not be a correct value system here,
    rather we may need a pluralist integration of
    different value systems.
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