Write a summary after reading the pdf then a 2.5 page double space report - Writing
RequirementsWrite a summary for each reading. A summary highlights (emphasizes) the main points of a text.Structure your summary as follows:Name the author (or authors) and title of the text.Identify 2-3 of the major points or ideas of the reading. Be concise. Accurately represent the author’s writings. Use direct quotations from the text.Conclusion: What findings (evidence, conclusions) does the author give?Example of opening sentence:In “__________” (title of article) by __________ (author’s first and last name), the author documents…• Don’t copy sentences verbatim from the text. Summarize the reading in your own words.• Use present tense, for example:The article documents, describes, examines, etc.The author observes, writes, concludes by saying, etc.• Type the following at the top left or right corner of the front-page:Your first & last nameEnvironmental Problems & SolutionsWinter 2020Reading title & author(s)Getting startedGrab the reader’s attention by:Citing an interesting fact or statistic from the reading.Opening with a quote from the reading.Posing a question your summary will answer.Using examples from the reading.Word length• 2.5 pages typed.• 12-sized font (any style).• Double-spaced.• Print single-sided.
eileen_crist_welcoming_limitations..pdf
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t:::
7 lie tJiiti’et,sit’
--
ot Chicago
EI LEEN CR
ci? Ot
Press
Chicaço and London
Tovvard an Ecological Cn’tl,zat,on
Abundant Earth
.
-
185
human potential:
an aura of regression and constriction of
often charged
are
calls to end humanity’s expansionism
ning humanity “to
with harboring the motive of retur
rhetorical deceits
the caves.” Human supremacy anti its
ot humanity, and
must be unmasked for a good portion
re continued cx pan
for many in leadership positions, beto
way train that is
runa
a
is:
it
what
siomsm can be seen for
.
privileges condones
guished and Utie special 1)Iafletary
woridview iznbues
this
n,
toke
expansionism. By the same
enterprise wit)]
an
hum
any proposal for contracting the
the wide
trophically dimin
Given that human eXpansionisni is catas
expansionism not
ishing Earth’s biologicat wealth, why is
abo)lishing? Why
e
aton
let
ng,
on the table for questioni
an population,
hum
ing
are the trends of more—a grow
s, ad in Iraomie
econ
burgeoning global trade, expanding
rtiheit,”
“sma
or
structural sprawl—to be accommodated
edges?
the
nd
arou
and their adverse effects just managed
y, or
emac
an supr
I have argued that the woridview ot hum
ans are ttistiti
ly shared l)ehef system that huni
many mote scientists and policy
If foresight intelligence became established,
the demographic contributions to
planners (and society) might understand
tion growth as a “given” and consider
the predicament, stop tteating popula
of humanely ending growth well
the nutritional, health and social benefits
. This would be a monumental
decline
slow
a
below nine billion and starting
growth. Monumental, but
tion
popula
of
tum
task, considering the momen
be generated globally to give full
not impossible if the political will could
, and provide all sexually ac
tights, education and opportunities to women
eption. PAUL AND ANNE EHRLIcH
tive human beings with modern contrac
Welcoming Limitations
EIGHT
186
base and
into a human-user resource
transmogrifying the living Earth
danger.
placing all complex life in mortal
e an
the trends of more and embrac
ge
To become willing to challen
will
e
becom
life on Earth, we must also
other possibility of human
our
te
extrica
and environmental arena) to
ing (in the broader culture
read
widesp
knots discussed earlier: the
reasoning from the discursive
the notion
causing the ecological crisis;
belief that “human nature” is
fabricated idea;
a passé and/or culturally
that wilderness (free nature) is
ionism with
that conflates ongoing expans
and the circulating ideology
new imagi
A
.
people
for more and more
increasing degrees of freedom
We need
e.
becom
we are and who we can
nation is needed about who
es
produc
that
gy of Earth as a planet
also to recall the original ontolo
bio
,
beings
ms, populations of living
stupendous abundance of life-for
of conscious
ena, and diverse forms
logical processes, living phenom
, and
experience of well-being, beauty
ness, all scaling up to a shared
transcendence.
the
reversing, not accommodating,
Halting expansionism entails
population,
stabilize and reduce the global
trends of more: working to
trade,
global
over
regional economies
prioritizing robust local and
undo
and
g
limitin
and substantially
downsizing the global economy,
these
ructure. The vision inspiring
infrast
ing the sprawl of industrial
rem
which
should not be the sea within
proposals is that humanity
:
around
way
are as islands, but the other
nant patches of wild nature
es
societi
human
vast terrain within which
wild nature can become the
nce.
nature’s abunda
are nestled in reciprocity with
challenging to
ical civilization will be
ecolog
an
The pathway toward
down human
scaling
to envision. It entails
forge, but it is not difficult
ive presence
excess
time pulling back our
ity’s impact while at the same
calls for
down
the natural world. Scaling
from, and interference with,
along
s,
consumption, which require
drastically reducing excessive
de
tion,
popula
res, lowering the global
with other actions and measu
ng
lesseni
relocalizing economies, and
industrializing food production,
re
of restoring,
the life-affirming project
global trade. Pulling back is
ocean, so as to
and
land
large expanses of
connecting, and rewilding
and renew its
with its millions of life-forms
share the planet generously
and pulling
down
all earthlings. Scaling
life-nourishing vibrancy for
ical civili
ecolog
strategies for creating an
back comprise the conjoined
explored
is
ies
Earth. Pursuing these strateg
zation within a biodiverse
that follows.
in this chapter and the one
CHAPTER EIGHT
167
onic way of life:
Mass consumption is humanity’s present-day hegem
and appear
slated,
are
life
of
way
people or nations not part of this
a point
fine
too
put
to
Not
fold.
mostly willing, to be brought into its
living
of
ts
amoun
vast
ing
on it, mass consumption involves devour
Mass
waste.
of
ts
amoun
and nonhiving matter while spewing out vast
ex
in
als
materi
consumption includes the societal use of energy and
and
ture
ial agricul
traction and production processes, such as industr
g; the societal
acturin
manuf
and
,
mining
y,
forestr
fishing, industrial
as electrification,
use of energy and materials for public works such
development; and
construction, transportation, and infrastructure
icks and clothing
chopst
from
dities
people’s consumption of commo
of foods and bev
ption
consum
to electronics and cars, as well as the
assumes the au
it
e
becaus
life,
erages. Mass consumption is a way of
materials and
raw
of
ts
thority and prerogative to source colossal amoun
er they
wherev
from
manufactured goods (for societies or individuals)
can be sourced and by any means necessary.
as globally
This way of life proliferates never-ending services (such
h which mass
burgeoning fast-food outlets and big-box stores) throug
nation of
combi
The
fied.
magni
and
ed
consumption can be perform
class
middle
global
rising
the
with
d
growing numbers of people, couple
is
ption
consum
mass
that
participating in the global economy, means
im
severe
p,
lockste
In
not growing in linear fashion but accelerating.1
hstanding some effi
pact on the biosphere is also accelerating, notwit
systems (such as
ciency gains in production, transportation, and other
ncy gains tend
savings in material throughput and energy use). Efficie
and growing size
to be overwhelmed by increased use of commodities
Such gains can thus
of commodities (like bigger cars and refrigerators).2
foot, while leav
one
with
brake
the
be compared to stepping softly on
ator.
acceler
ing the other slamming down on the
of global
Reducing the huge demands and resulting waste output
and
actions
of
array
mass consumption will require stepping up an
and
gains
ncy
policies already pursued to one degree or another: efficie
fossil fuels to a
conservation in energy consumption; shifting from
and other renew
new energy system utilizing distributed solar, wind,
ing recycling in
ables; phasing out extractive industries while advanc
transform
waste;
ating
elimin
le,
possib
dustries; reducing and, where
economy;
dle)
-to-cra
(cradle
r
circula
a
ing a throwaway economy to
ture,
agricul
ial
industr
to
those
as
abolishing destructive subsidies such
Facing Mass Consumption
WELCOMING LIMITATIONS
768
governmental policies.
approach to lower
Along with these approaches, the indispensable
and gradually reducing
ing consumption on all fronts is stabilizing
Martha Campbell writes,
the global population. As population expert
do and everything we
“population is the multiplier of everything we
Patrick Curry, “has the pe
consume.”3 “Overpopulation,” states author
numbers, the most natu
of
force
culiarly vicious result that simply by
and the continu
survival
to
ral human activities relating most directly
procreation,
food,
growing
ation of the species—finding fuel, shelter,
threats
direct
pathological;
excretion and so on—themselves become
to personal survival and to that of the species.”4
toward its substan
Stabilizing the human population and embarking
richness of the biosphere,
tial reduction are necessary for preserving the
gains in consumption reduc
for at least three reasons. First, whatever
operations, demate
recycling
tion are achieved by efficiency measures,
or energy con
activities),
rialization (i.e., less throughput in production
changes)
behavioral
via
or
servation (in vehicles, construction design,
(for ex
numbers.
human
tend to be undermined by sheer growth in
2050
in
meat
less
percent
ample, if the average American consumes 20
con
meat
total American
than at the turn of the twenty-first century,
because
in 2050 simply
sumption will stilt be five million tons greater
to counteract over
policies
and
actions
of population growth.5) Diverse
since the global
pursued,
be
to
consumption should of course continue
positive effects
the
Yet
them.
situation would be all the worse without
population
the
once
palpable
of the above listed measures will become
diminished.
and then
factor underlying consumption is stabilized
globe, both in the devel
the
across
people
of
numbers
Second, huge
the natural world with their
oping and developed world, overwhelm
density and rapid popula
demands. In poor nations, high population
wetland destruction, often for
tion growth drive forest, grassland, and
for large-scale, exportstibsistence food production and increasingly
and Erica Chambers
McKee
Jeffrey
oriented agriculture. As researchers
cause of biodiver
primary
a
is
have found, “human population density
use, and is thus
land
agricultural
sity losses, in a large part mediated by
to Earth’s
threats
future
reduce
a key factor that must be addressed to
biodiversity.”6
and drastically shrink
industrial fishing, and the fossil-fuel industry;
ecologically destructive foods,
ing the production and consumption of
Work in all these areas is
especially animal products (including fish).
it can be sped up via
way,
under
important, and while some is already
initiatives, and
business
grassroots campaigns, institutional reforms,
CHAPTER EIGHT
189
on Earth.’1
In brief, the second reason that numbers of people in developing
and developed nations need to be reduced is that they collude, in dif
ferent as well as interacting ways, to diminish biodiversity and fttel the
extinction crisis: the poor via high densities and rapidly growing num
bers in the vicinity of wild places and consumers by the energy, food,
mineral, and other demands at home and abroad of their ranks swell
ing into billions.
The third reason that a far lower global population is called for is
connected (as earlier argued) with the imperative to move in the direc
tion of abolishing industrial food production. The organic, local, fair,
Examples of destructive impact due to high density and rapid
growth in the developing world include Haiti, Ethiopia, Niger, Ghana,
Madagascar, Pakistan, and the Philippines—all nations that have de
stroyed vast portions of their forests in recent times. For instance, even
until the middle of the twentieth century, Pakistan was more than
30 percent forested, but its forests have dwindled to 4 percent of its
territory in our time.7 (Pakistan has about two hundred million in
habitants, and, despite a looming water crisis, is projected to grow to
395 million by 2050.8) On a similar note, the profiles of rapidly grow
ing African nations, as summarized in the open-access World Fact
Book, reveal a near identical litany of environmental disasters, most
especially in countries with soaring fertility rates: deforestation, de
sertification (from overgrazing), poaching, soil erosion, and pollution.
Pressures of high population density on biodiversity are not foreign to
the developed world, as the eastern coastline of the United States and
the state of Florida, among other places around the world, attest.9
Meanwhile, hundreds of millions of consumers in the developed
(and increasingly urban developing) world also destroy (and have de
stroyed) much of the biodiversity of their land and sea territories. Add
ing insult to injury, they have the power to sponsor more destruction
remotely. For example, deforestation of Brazil’s Amazonia, Indonesian
forests, and the Congo basin is beholden to pressures from rich nations,
via a global trade regime that those nations have favored and estab
I ished. Economic factors associated with mass-consumption markets
in countries with which developing nations do business (such as the
United States, China, Japan, and European countries) drive habitat de
struction and species extinctions.’0 Importantly, the developed world is
also historically most responsible for greenhouse gas pollution, thereby
instigating a climate-change episode that if allowed to continue un
abated has the potential to bring about a holocaust for all complex life
WELCOMING LIMITATIONS
190
significant strides toward revamp
and slow food movement has made
dly, as well as animal, farmer, and
ing the food system to be Earth frien
high-quality nurturing diet that
community friendly, and to offer a
and not just the privilege of the
should become universally available
nic food production could be
wealthy. The question of whether orga
ing population has often been
scaled up to feed the present and com
offer an interesting agronomi
posed in recent years.’2 While it may
anity inhabiting a biodiverse
cat inquiry, from the perspective of hum
pertinent question is: What must
planet it is the wrong question. The
for all people to be well fed on or
the global population size be in order
and regionally grown food, while
ganic, diversified, and mostly locally
space to be freed and rewilded?
also allowing terrestrial and marine
tures with organic production sys
Simply replacing industrial monocul
and healthier options, would not
tems, while promoting less polluting
r cultivation.
enable the reduction of land-use unde
goal of gradually lowering the
the
uing
purs
The solution lies in
be sustained by an agro-ecological
global population to a level that can
huge demands on land and seas.
food system that would also not place
on human carrying capacity away
This calls for shifting perspectives
maximum number of people the
from the standard definition of the
shelter, toward formulating a
planet can adequately feed, clothe, and
people that an ecologically sound
robust touchstone: the number of
ltaneously allowing for the flour
food system can support while simu
inant food system—founded on in
ishing of wild nature. Since the dom
ture production, primarily designed
dustrial animal and crop monocul
it
t catastrophic force on the planet,
to serve global markets—is the mos
m.
requires revamping the food syste
follows that addressing life’s crisis
has implications for global pop
Revamping the food system, in turn,
growing numbers are beholden
ulation size. Humanity’s current and
estimated that roughly 40 percent
to industrial food production. It is
ined without synthetic fertilizers;
of our population could not be susta
y
have nearly doubled human carr
otherwise put, synthetic fertilizers
per
700
, fertilizer use increased
ing capacity.’3 Between 1961 and 2000
n people and growing primarily
billio
7.5
cent.’4 The global population is
e this possible. Industrial food pro
because industrial food has mad
underwritten exponential growth,
duction on land and seas has thus
, all at once, than would otherwise
enabling more people to be alive
be possible.
organic, diversified, and locally
Moving toward a food model that is
synthetic fertilizers and chemicals,
and regionally oriented, using no
CHAPTER EIGHT
j
191
people and freedom for all earthlings.
This argument collides head-on with the specter haunting the pop
ulation question: for many, even mention of the word “overpopula
tion” is taken to imply blaming the global South (where population
growth is largely occurring) for the world’s ecological woes. Indeed, the
population issue has been so bogged down by political controversy, ac
rimonious debates, and knee-jerk attributions of the shady motive of
“population control” that it has become, as Julia Whitty puts it, “the
last taboo.” We can move beyond the historical baggage and mistrust
goal as I argue below.
The argument in a nutshell is this: If we choose to change how
we eat—so that food production ceases impoverishing the biosphere,
while displacing, killing, and mistreating myriad beings—then we
must lower our population. The proposal that the human population
should not exceed the support capacity of an organic agriculture was
also made by ecological economist Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen. To my
knowledge, he did not develop this proposal into a full-blown argu
ment, but in 1975 he wrote: “Mankind should gradually lower its popu
lation to a level that could be adequately fed only by organic agricul
ture. Naturally, the nations now experiencing a very high demographic
growth will have to strive hard for the most rapid possible results in
that direction.”5 The rationale underlying this proposal encapsulates
an ecological bottom line for the population question, because the cre
ation of a food system in friendship with the natural world sets rela
tively robust parameters for population size. Honoring such limits to
population size is not a constriction of human possibility and freedom,
but a necessary dimension for achieving a higher quality of life for all
among other changes, means that human numbers must be gradually
lowered to at least half present levels. Considerations of land and sea
protection push the number even lower than half its current size, for
in order to restore a life-thriving planet large areas of habitat must be
returned to wild beings and ecologies. In addition to the mandates of
an organic polycultural food model and large-scale protection and res
toration of wild nature, it is also imperative that people inhabit places
nearby where food can grow for both food security and ecological rea
sons. All considerations in hand, a global population closer to two bil
lion people is an initial ecologically sound and rational goal, enabling
the conservation of a biodiverse planet, a connected global civilization,
a high-quality and equitable standard of living for all people, and the
co-flourishing of humanity and the living world. It is also a feasible
WELCOMING LIMITATIONS
192
ndary
ving beyond the prevailing qua
The first reframing involves mo
popula
sumption or an unsustainable
of whether it is excessive con
ercon
“ov
that
zing
gni
impact, and reco
tion that underlies humanity’s
the
ile
Wh
es.
iabl
var
on” are not distinct
sumption” and “overpopulati
ce,
uen
affl
,
ion
ulat
act as a factor of pop
celebrated IPAT formula—of imp
ing
idat
eluc
for
ful analytic shorthand
and technology—has been use
aged
ical damage, it has also encour
log
the big factors underlying eco
lev
n
ptio
luence” (i.e., high consum
relegating “population” and “aff
renatu
n of
silos. from this balkanizatio
els) into separate explanatory
th
Nor
move to regard the global
impacting variables, it was an easy
the
and
a “consumption problem”
(the developed world) as having
blem.”
pro
n
atio
pul
“po
a
d) as having
global South (the developing worl
some extent remains, a truism.
This assessment became, and to
, there
ed and inaccurate. for starters
The truism, however, is muddl
amely,
—n
one
but
nature’s destruction
are not two big factors driving
as a
h
bot
uses the world excessively
overconsulnption. Humanity
sink
a
as
living and inorganic world and
source of materials from the
con
s,
gase
ogen, herbicides, greenhouse
for wastes, such as garbage, nitr
natural
the
that
h
fort
so
and
, sewage,
fined livestock manure, plastics
of impinge
nsumption refers to a scale
world cannot absorb. Overco
g it exces
usin
by
,
ably
ere, often irrepar
ment that damages the biosph
variable
ked
rloo
ove
enormous yet oddly
sively as source and sink. An
popu
en
Wh
ple.
pt ...
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The ability to view ourselves from an unbiased perspective allows us to critically assess our personal strengths and weaknesses. This is an important step in the process of finding the right resources for our personal learning style. Ego and pride can be
· By Day 1 of this week
While you must form your answers to the questions below from our assigned reading material
CliftonLarsonAllen LLP (2013)
5 The family dynamic is awkward at first since the most outgoing and straight forward person in the family in Linda
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The most important benefit of my statistical analysis would be the accuracy with which I interpret the data. The greatest obstacle
From a similar but larger point of view
4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open
When seeking to identify a patient’s health condition
After viewing the you tube videos on prayer
Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
Data collection
Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an
I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option. I would want to find out what she is afraid of. I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych
Identify the type of research used in a chosen study
Compose a 1
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effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte
I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources
Be 4 pages in length
soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test
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One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research
Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti
3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family
A Health in All Policies approach
Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum
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Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change
Read Reflections on Cultural Humility
Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing
Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section
Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident