Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 368
Trim: 7¼ x 10¼
978-0-7425-1522-2 • Hardback • April 2002 • $187.00 • (£144.00)
Ben A. Minteer is assistant professor of environmental studies at Bucknell. Bob Pepperman Taylor is associate professor of political science at the University of Vermont.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Introduction
Part 3 Democracy and Environmental Values
Chapter 4 Democracy and Environmentalism: Foundations and Justifications in Environmental Policy
Chapter 5 Deweyan Democracy and Environmental Ethics
Chapter 6 Environmental Pragmatism, Ecocentrism, and Deliberative Democracy
Chapter 7 The Legitimacy Crisis in Environmental Ethics and Politics
Chapter 8 Science, Value, and Ethics: A Hierarchical Theory
Part 9 Environmentalism and Democratic Citizenship
Chapter 10 Opinionated Natures: Toward a Green Public Culture
Chapter 11 Vulnerability and Virtue: Democracy, Dependency, and Ecological Stewardship
Chapter 12 Restoring Ecological Citizenship
Chapter 13 Aldo Leopold's Civic Education
Part 14 Environmentalism and the Boundaries of Democratic Discourse
Chapter 15 Justice, Democracy, and Global Warming
Chapter 16 Environmentalism, Democracy, and the Cultural Politics of Nature in Monte Verde, Costa Rica
Chapter 17 Environmental Rights as Democratic Rights
Chapter 18 Deliberative Democracy and Environmental Policy
Part 19 Democracy and Environmental Movements
Chapter 20 Cycles of Closure in Environmental Politics and Policy
Chapter 21 The People, Politics, and the Planet: Who Knows, Protects, and Serves Nature Best?
Chapter 22 Linking Movements and Constructing a New Vision: Environmental Justice and Community Food Security
Chapter 23 Civic Environmentalism
This collection will become the definitive text to consult to understand the interplay of democratic norms and environmental values. In this benchmark study, the leading philosophers in the field integrate past research and lay out the intellectual agenda for the future.
— Mark Sagoff, Institute of Philosophy and Public Policy, University of Maryland
It is a testament to the innovation shown by the contributors that this volume exhibits such a high degree of originality. The book successfully traverses environmental ethics, democratic theory and environmental movements. It is a valuable contribution to an important area of green political theory.
— Political Studies Review
There is no more necessary debate within environmental studies than that defining the 'proper' role for responsive democratic politics in making collective choices regarding nature. Should anticipatory institutions, within a republic, regulate humanity's use of the environment on the basis of prior principle, or should collective choices only be made when communities perceive the need for them and give their active consent? This important book sets out the moral, political, and social parameters of this debate in stark relief and challenges the reader to consider all its ramifications.
— John Martin Gillroy, director of the Environmental Studies Program, Bucknell University