Addressing the Crisis in Employment and Consumer Demand: Reconciliation with Financial and Environmental Sustainability

For a long time, the earlier sustainability literature focused almost exclusively on environmental sustainability, which included resource exhaustion, toxic pollution, ecosystem destruction, and global climate disruption. The sources of environmental problems were acknowledged to stem from industria...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ashford, Nicholas A. (Contributor), Hall, Ralph P. (Author), Ashford, Robert (Author)
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. School of Engineering (Contributor)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EBR Media, 2014-02-19T20:10:09Z.
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Online Access:Get fulltext
Description
Summary:For a long time, the earlier sustainability literature focused almost exclusively on environmental sustainability, which included resource exhaustion, toxic pollution, ecosystem destruction, and global climate disruption. The sources of environmental problems were acknowledged to stem from industrialization and the ever-increasing consumption of materials and energy. Some attention surfaced on environmental justice, reflecting the disparate effects of environmental deterioration on poor people and poor nations. Recently, concerns with environmental sustainability have become dominated by global climate change, almost to the exclusion of other environmental concerns.