in understanding poverty

An eminent economist and social thinker explains his views on why traditional environmental and resource economics has not met the needs of the developing world. The gaps between haves and have-nots are so great, says Partha Dasgupta, that many premises of our analyses are mistaken or irrelevant in other international contexts. Thus, 'the environmental economics to be found in the literature in the North cannot much resonate in the South.' This breach helps explain the exclusion of environmental concerns from economic modeling in poor nations, causing problematic gaps in development economics, in understanding poverty, and in understanding what is, for some populations, a deepening economic and environmental peril. The author establishes important connections between poverty, high fertility, and malnourishment -- and environmental damage and civic disconnection. For example, communal ownership of resurces is common in poor rural areas. Democratic decisionmaking and self-determination could result in more careful use of resources, yet democracy is too rarely found in these areas. Also, high birthrates., resulting from several cultural and economic factors, lock communities in the grip of poverty and resource degradation. In assessing the interrelationships of these factors, Dasgupta makes a thoughtful contribution to development economics, environmental/resource economics, and our sociopolitical understanding of poverty.
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Presenting his views on why traditional environmental and resource economics has not met the needs of the developing world, the author establishes important connections between poverty, high fertility, and malnourishment - and environmental damage and civic disconnection. For example, communal ownership of resurces is common in poor rural areas.
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Introduction Paul R. Portney The Environment in Environmental and Development Economics Orthodox Dichotomies and Their Limitations Communal Rights and the Local Commons Institutional Failure as a Cause of Environmental Degradation Fertility Behavior and the Structure of Households Population, Poverty, and the Local Environment Some Tentative Conclusions
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Product details

ISBN
9780915707911
Published
1998-02-05
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Inc; Resources for the Future Press (RFF Press)
Weight
454 gr
Height
228 mm
Width
153 mm
Age
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Biographical note

Partha Dasgupta is the Frank Ramsey Professor of Economics at the University of Cambridge as well as a University Fellow at Resources for the Future. He is the author of An Inquiry into Well-Being and Destitution.