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Managing Human- Environment Interactions Chapter 1
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Chapter 1. Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Managing Human-Environment Interactions

Chapter 1

Page 2: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Management Controlling and guiding interactions

• Prevention• Conservation• Preservation

Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare• Humans• Environment (why is this missing from the

text?)

Page 3: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Catalysts for Management Environment presents a risk to

humans• Natural Hazards

Society presents a risk to humans• Environment as vector• Pollution

Page 4: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Catalysts for Management Society exploits the environment

• Unsustainable consumption

Pollution and consumption undermines productivity of natural systems• A matter of values• Or… how do we place “value” on certain

systems?

Page 5: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Participants The Market

The State

Civil Society

Page 6: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Participants The Market

• Landowners• RE Professionals• Developers• Financial Institutions

Their Motives• Internal• Short and Long Term (unenlightened or

not?)

Page 7: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Participants The State

• Federal / State / Local• Regional

Their Motives• Multiple Use / Stakeholders

("the art of producing from the forest whatever it can yield for the service of man.“ – Pinchot)

• Short and Long Term• Regulation and Incentive

Page 8: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Participants Civil Society

• Citizens• Non-Profits / NGOs• Property Owners• “The Community”

Their Motives• Internal or External• Short and Long Term

Page 9: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.
Page 10: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Valuing the Environment Instrumental Value

• “Exploitation”• Economic valuation• Environment as an input• Tangible value to your well-being

Page 11: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Valuing the Environment Intrinsic Value

• Aesthetics• Intangible value to your well-being

Inherent Worth• The value of the environment in-and-of

itself• Consideration of the environment on an

equal level with everything else.

Page 12: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Human Perspectives on EM Optimists

Concerned Optimists

Hopeful Pessimists

Pessimists

The Self-Absorbed

Page 13: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

More Perspectives Frontier Economics

Environmental Protection

Resource Management

Eco-Development

Deep Ecology

Page 14: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

The Dimension of Perspectives

Dominant Imperative Human/Nature Relationship Dominant Threats Main Themes View on Property Rights Who Pays (for EM) Responsibility for Development and

Management

Page 15: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

The Dimension of Perspectives

Environmental Management Technology and Strategies

Analytic Modeling and Planning Technologies

Fundamental Flaws (of perspective)

Page 16: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.
Page 17: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.
Page 18: Chapter 1.  Controlling and guiding interactions Prevention Conservation Preservation  Protecting and Enhancing Health and Welfare Humans Environment.

Sustainable Development Bruntland Commission (1989)

• “…paths of economic, social, environmental, and political progress that aim to meet the needs of today without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs.”

The Three (or five) “E”s• Economy, Environment, Equity

(Engagement, Eternity)