Can sustainable economic development be achieved without strong
environmental protections? Bringing together theoretical issues in
development economics and a wide range of empirical evidence, this
book examines this question and explores ways that environmental
sustainability has been--and might be--incorporated into existing
theories of economic development. Protection of the environment is
an essential part of development, and the best chance for achieving
long-term sustainable development is to systematically incorporate
environmental issues into key aspects of economic development
paradigms. To show this, Desta makes use of theoretical approaches,
draws policy implications, and illustrates each point with in-depth
case studies from developing countries.
Although economists have attempted to discern the factors that
contribute to sustainable economic growth since the 18th-century,
development economics did not emerge as a legitimate discipline
until after World War II. By the 1980s, the view that environmental
concerns pose economic constraints had given way to the belief that
environmental and development issues are interwoven. This book
integrates existing economic development theories and environmental
issues in a comprehensive, user-friendly way. It pulls together and
makes understandable a wide range of current thinking and
historical development, concluding each chapter with a case study
that shows the workings of these ideas in practice.
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