Changing public attitudes to long-term issues

Featured in

  • Published 20070504
  • ISBN: 9780733318603
  • Extent: 284 pp
  • Paperback (234 x 153mm)

IF INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY is to survive, the next century will have to be a time of transformation, not just in technological capacity but also in our approach to the natural world and to each other. The second report in the Global Environmental Outlook series from the United Nations Environment Program says: “The present approach is not sustainable. Doing nothing is no longer an option.”

A sustainable society would not be eroding its resource base, causing serious environmental damage or producing unacceptable social problems. But we are dissipating resources that future generations will need, damaging environmental systems and reducing social stability by widening the gap between rich and poor.

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Share article

More from author

A long half-­life

EssayON MY DESK there sits a well-­thumbed copy of the 1976 Fox Report, the first report of the Ranger Uranium Environmental Inquiry. I grew up...

More from this edition

The echo-chamber

DebateJØRN LOMBORG FLEW to Australia to provide "balance". In October 2003, just as the Kyoto debate was cranking up in Australian Parliament, and just...

Return to the river

MemoirI STEERED THE raft with my paddle buried deeply by the stern and we sped down the final drop of Newland's Cascades on the...

How green is my valley?

MemoirEverybody talks about the weatherbut nobody does anything about it.– Mark TwainTALK OF A hotter, wetter climate is all the go, but I beg...

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.