During the summer of 1992, the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro was hailed as a
watershed moment in the ecology movement. Over 100 nations signed a
new international treaty intended to conserve biological diversity.
Yet, every day, species--many not even discovered--are driven into
extinction and the ecological crisis continues to be a pressing
global problem.
Stressing the need to build bridges between the scientific
community and international policymakers, Timothy Swanson here
develops a new theory of the interplay between human society and
the biological world. Biodiversity regulation, he argues, must
focus specifically on the regulation of the global economic forces
driving species into extinction. As the global development process
becomes increasingly sophisticated, the spectre of a homogenized
biosphere looms large.
Yet, while biological diversity is responsible for a host of
global benefits, it confers few tangible gains onto individual
nations that offset the financial advantages of exploiting these
same natural resources. The same economic rationale that drives
farmers to grow coca leafs instead of grain compels countries to
exploit natural resources, rather than conserve them. In order to
stave off the decline of biological diversity, Swanson proposes the
creation of specific policies that will internalize the benefits of
biodiversity on a national level.
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