Environment and Development: Views from the East & the WestAmitava Mukherjee, V. K. Agnihotri Concept Publishing Company, 1993 - 587 pagini Contributed articles. |
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Pagina 43
... approach in which ecologi- cal integrity is the governing factor and the permissible level of economic activity is the dependent variable ( Rees , 1988 ) . Intervention must adhere to this natural principle of spatially differentiated ...
... approach in which ecologi- cal integrity is the governing factor and the permissible level of economic activity is the dependent variable ( Rees , 1988 ) . Intervention must adhere to this natural principle of spatially differentiated ...
Pagina 226
... approach knowledge derived from experiment can be replicated . It is thus essentially an a historical approach to knowing , since laws are held to be universal in time and space . It is also an approach which tends to trivialise the ...
... approach knowledge derived from experiment can be replicated . It is thus essentially an a historical approach to knowing , since laws are held to be universal in time and space . It is also an approach which tends to trivialise the ...
Pagina 569
... approach is the moralist one . All human beings are morally accountable for the impact their actions , direct or indirect , have on non - human elements of the environment . While the human rights approach , would not censure man for ...
... approach is the moralist one . All human beings are morally accountable for the impact their actions , direct or indirect , have on non - human elements of the environment . While the human rights approach , would not censure man for ...
Cuprins
List of Tables | 14 |
Acknowledgements | 20 |
Concept and Application | 39 |
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Environment and Development: Views from the East & the West Amitava Mukherjee,V. K. Agnihotri Previzualizare limitată - 1993 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
action activities agricultural animal approach Bangladesh Bank become blocks canal cause cent changes concern cover crops cultivation culture degradation Delhi developing countries ecological economic effects energy environment environmental erosion fields floods flow forest future Geographical global growth hectares households housing human impact important improve increased India industrial International irrigation issues kilometres land landuse leading less limited living located London major materials means ment nature North Paddy pattern planning political pollution poor population possible present problems production programmes region relation Report responsibility result rice rise river road rural scale Science Settlement slopes social society soil sources South Sugarcane sustainable development TABLE tion tropical units University urban values village waste West