Red Sky At Morning

James Gustave Speth authored the book Red Sky at Morning: America and the Crisis of the Global Environment, which Yale University Press published in 2004. A central premise of the book is that environmentalism, so far, has been unsuccessful in protecting the natural environment on Earth. Deprecating the past efficacy of the Natural Resources Defense Council, the White House Council on Environmental Quality, and the United Nations Development Programme — as well as the actions of the current Bush administration — Speth writes (as cited in the TIME article listed in the "References" section): "The climate convention is not protecting climate, the biodiversity convention is not protecting biodiversity, and the desertification convention is not preventing desertification." Potential for effective environmentalism, he says (as cited in the TIME article) now rests upon actions analogous to "jazz": volunteerism and improvisation. He also notes, "Since the Montreal Protocol, United States has not accorded global-scale environmental challenges the priority needed." (p.116)

References

* "Storm Warnings Ahead: In Red Sky at Morning, the ultimate insider offers a devastating critique of global environmental efforts", an article on page 79 of the 5 April 2004 issue of TIME

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
conciliarism
teresa gambaro
keith giffen
schoolcraft river
1943 in aviation
miss
society for philosophical inquiry
ibm 1800
1941 in aviation
48 hours
cascade lakes
1944 in aviation
joanna gash
cartesian dualism
1934 in aviation
ideomotor effect
music of the gambia
hellcat v medium fighter
aesop rock
power girl
1939 in aviation
1972 in india
jennie george
tint control
letterer
a show of hands
northrop yb 35
petro georgiou
akahata
77 sunset strip
northrop yb 49
cornflower
rochester americans
steve gibbons
career and technical student organization
bachelor's bump
gotthard gnther
sharon grierson
kanzi
presto (album)
frederic hsieh
future business leaders of america
tom clarke
the yellow clearance black box blues