Environmental theory subsumes a wide range of theoretical work spanning the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities of relevance to environmental issues. Bibliographic resources on environmental theory are many; examples include “Nature-Society Theory” (Loftus and Royle 2017), “Environmental Determinism” (Brooke 2016), “Limits to Growth” (Farley 2009), “Tragedy of the Commons” (Schmittz and Willott 2009), “Deep Ecology” (Keller 2009), “Environmental Pluralism” (Hull 2009), “Essentialism” (Gelman and Mannheim 2008), “Utilitarianism” (Gunn 2009), “Anarchism” (Dolgert 2008), “Incrementalism” (Lowery 2008), “Neoliberalism” (von Schnitzer 2008), “Social Constructionism” (Chu 2008), “Structuralism” (Barnard 2008), “Utopianism” (Bartowski 2008), and “Footprints” (Galli 2015).
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Categories: 6-Perspectives