transaction
Home Log In Register About TA Contact Us FAQ
Search:  
Google contents of this site:
Google full text of our books:
 
Sign Up

Web Specials

Advances in Criminological Theory
African Civilizations
African-American Studies
American Academy of Arts and Sciences
American Presidents
American Studies
Asian Studies
Classics in Anthropology
Classics in Communication and Mass Culture
Clinical and Social Psychology
Communication and Social Order
Comparative Policy Evaluation
Comparative Politics
Comparative Urban and Community Research
Contemporary Austrian Studies
The Covenant Tradition in Politics
Current Topics in Management
Energy and Environmental Policy
Evolutionary Foundations of Human Behavior
Festschriften
Genocide: A Critical Bibliographer Review
Higher Education
History of Higher Education
History of Ideas
Humor Studies
Independent Studies in Political Economy
Information and Behavior
International Organizations
International Social Security
Judaica and Hebraica
Latin American Political Yearbook
Law and Society
Library of Conservative Thought
Library of Liberal Thought
The Life Course and Aging
Media Studies
Memory and Narrative
Modern Applications of Social Work
The National Interest
National Political Science Review
New Lines in Criminology
New Studies in Social Policy
Peace and Policy
Philanthropy and Society
Policy Studies Review Annual
Political and Legal Anthropology
Praxiology
Psychiatry and Social Psychology
RAND Studies
Religion and Public Life
Rutgers University Studies in Classical Humanities
Schnitzer Studies in Israeli Society
Science and Technology Studies
Science, Ideology, and Value
Sexuality and Culture
Social and Ethical Thought
Social Institutions and Social Change
Social Philosophy and Policy Center Occasional Papers
Social Policy and Social Theory Series
Social Problems and Social Issues
Social Science Classics
Sociological Imagination and Structural Change
Sociology and Economics
Studies in Austrian and Central European History
Studies in Ethnicity
Studies in Migration and Minorities
Studies in Social Philosophy and Policy
Traffic Safety
U.S.-Third World Policy Perspectives
World Bank Series on Evaluation and Development
eBooks
Catalogues
Aldine Transaction
Distributed Publishers
Express Book Freight
The Horowitz Foundation
Evolutionary Perspectives on Environmental Problems
 Evolutionary Perspectives on Environmental Problems
 Iver Mysterud, Editor
 Dustin Penn, Editor

List price: $29.95

Add to Cart
 Bookmark and Share
 ISBN: 978-0-202-30755-8
 Pages: 364
 Publication Date: 2006
 Binding: Paper




Description

Reviews

Other information

The twenty-first century presents an increasing number of environmental problems, including toxic pollution, global warming, destruction of tropical forests, extinction of biological diversity, and depletion of natural resources. These environmental problems are generally due to human behavior, namely over-consumption of resources and overpopulation. Designing effective policies to address these problems requires a deep understanding of human behavior as well as ecology. This in turn requires considerations of human nature, and the evolutionary “design” of the human mind.

Evolutionary research on human behavior has profound implications for the environmental sciences. The aim of this collection is to bring together a variety of chapters that show how and why. Part 1, “Human Nature and Resource Conservation,” addresses environmental problems from different evolutionary perspectives. Part 2, “The Ecological Noble Savage Hypothesis,” examines the notion that our environmental problems are due to Western culture, and that our ancestors and people in indigenous societies lived in harmony with nature until the corrupting influences of Western culture. Part 3, “The Tragedy of the Commons,” explores the conservation of common-pool or open-access natural resources, such as fisheries, forests, grazing lands, freshwater, and clean air. Part 4, “The Evolution of Discounting and Conspicuous Consumption,” looks at the problem of explaining why people are so ecologically short-sighted and why people in developed countries consume so many resources. Part 5, “Overpopulation and Fertility Declines,” addresses the evolution of human reproductive decisions. Part 6, “Biophilia,” aims to explain why people cherish nature as well as destroy it.

The goal of this volume is to introduce environmental thinkers to evolutionary perspectives on human behavior, and the new interdisciplinary sciences of evolutionary psychology and behavioral ecology. This reader aims to help bridge the artificial division between the biological and social sciences, and provide a synthesis between evolutionary sciences of human behavior and environmental sciences.

Dustin J. Penn is director, Konrad Lorenz Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna. Iver Mysterud is biologist and researcher at the Department of Biology, University of Oslo, Norway.

Related Topics:   AldineTransaction