PS 3480, Environmental Politics, December 3, 2012
The Problem of Biodiversity
1. Facts and Uncertainty
Species extinction:
The Case of the Dodo
2. Values and Disagreement
Arguments for Species Protection:
3. The Policy Response
a.
CITES,
1973
b. The U.S.
Endangered
Species Act, 1973
4. The Politics of Implementation
The Northern Spotted Owl
Habitat Protection
5. The Problem of Biodiversity in the Twenty-First Century
The Problem of Population
1. The Situation
2. So What? Who Cares about population?
a. Carrying Capacity (Garrett Hardin, “Tragedy of the Commons”)
b. Economic Capacity
c. Political Capacity
3. Alternative Perspectives and Values
a. “We’re all gonna die!” - Population is a Crisis
Thomas Malthus
Paul Ehrlich: “The Population Bomb”
Zero Population Growth /
Negative Population Growth
b. “Don’t worry, be happy” - Population is an opportunity
Julian Simon
c. “It’s technology, stupid” - Population problems can be
fixed
Barry Commoner
4. What can reduce high birthrates in a developing country?
a. An assured food supply
b. reduced infant mortality rates
c. literacy
d. rudimentary health services
e. social insurance
f. industrialization and urbanization
g. rising economic expectations
h. women’s rights, work outside the home