

In this article, Mercè Agüera-Cabo presents the case of grassroots organizations in North Catalonia in the context of gender, values, and power in local environmental conflicts.
John M. Francis discusses nature conservation and the precautionary principle.
In this paper, Birgitte Nerlich and Nick Wright analyze the interaction between policy and ritual during the foot and mouth crisis in the UK.
In his essay, Robert L. Chapman analyzes the role of environmental restoration.
This issue aims to continue the discussion of how the continental tradition might advance or transform environmental thinking by considering different philosophers’ works.
This article is building the theory for the scientific field of industrial ecology.
This paper discusses the impacts of different formal and informal institutions upon the Regional Forest Programme of Southwest Finland (1997–2001).
This analysis raises questions about the extent to which ecological economics has been able to influence real-world decisions and policy.
This article argues that the State-Primacy Theory provides a plausible explanation for the nature of that mechanism, and concludes that the most common strategies offered as a response to our environmental impact are most likely to be insufficiently radical to meet our seeming obligations effectively.
This appraisal of Carol A. Kates’ “Reproductive Liberty and Overpopulation” challenges her call for world-wide population control measures—using compulsory methods if necessary—to save the world’s environment.