• Skip to content

Introduction to Environmental Studies Spring 2017

Site for ENVS 160 student posts

Main navigation

  • Team Assignment Posts
    • 1-Climate
    • 2-Materials
      • Situating Minerals Mashup Map
    • 3-Thought
      • Isms Glossary
  • Individual Posts
    • Post 1 (Due Apr 05)
    • Post 2 (Due Apr 10)
    • Post 3 (Due Apr 17)
    • Post 4 (Due Apr 24)
    • Roadmap (Due Apr 24)
    • Posts by Author
  • ENVS 160 Moodle Page

Limits to Growth

March 11, 2017 7:35 pm by James Proctor — last modified March 17, 2017 11:35 am

« Back to Glossary Index

Classic environmental theory stressing fixed carrying capacity of Earth and recommending degrowth. Opposite of intensification, ecomodernism, and other contemporary theories.

Related Articles:
  • Through the Lens of a Political Ecologist
  • Ecomodernism: A Realistic Solution?
  • That Intense Feeling: Intensification
  • How We Arrived in the Modern World: An Exploration of Modernism
  • Why Science Won't Save Us
Limits to Growth (Wikipedia)
The Limits to Growth
Cover first edition Limits to growth.jpg
The Limits to Growth first edition cover.
Author Donella H. Meadows
Dennis L. Meadows
Jørgen Randers
William W. Behrens III
Language English
Published 1972 Universe Books
Pages 205
ISBN 0-87663-165-0
OCLC 307838
Followed by The First Global Revolution
digital: Digitized 1972 edition
Logo of the Club of Rome.

The Limits to Growth is a 1972 book about the computer simulation of exponential economic and population growth with finite resource supplies. Funded by the Volkswagen Foundation and commissioned by the Club of Rome, it was first presented at the St. Gallen Symposium. Its authors were Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jørgen Randers, and William W. Behrens III. The book used the World3 model to simulate the consequence of interactions between the Earth's and human systems.

The original version presented a model based on five variables: world population, industrialisation, pollution, food production and resources depletion. These variables are considered to grow exponentially, while the ability of technology to increase resources availability is only linear. The authors intended to explore the possibility of a sustainable feedback pattern that would be achieved by altering growth trends among the five variables under three scenarios. They noted that their projections for the values of the variables in each scenario were predictions "only in the most limited sense of the word," and were only indications of the system's behavioral tendencies. Two of the scenarios saw "overshoot and collapse" of the global system by the mid to latter part of the 21st century, while a third scenario resulted in a "stabilized world."

The book continues to generate fervent debate and has been the subject of several subsequent publications. The most recent updated version was published on June 1, 2004 by Chelsea Green Publishing Company and Earthscan under the name Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update. Donella H. Meadows, Jørgen Randers, and Dennis Meadows have updated and expanded the original version.

« Back to Glossary Index

Digital Scholarship Multisite © 2018 · Lewis & Clark College · Log in