Abstract

Any attempt to ensure a sensible response to adverse environmental impacts, or to redirect human behavior along less environmentally deleterious channels, must necessarily clear a formidable array of obstacles. These range from (1) the physical (e.g., road systems and the layouts of towns and cities) through (2) the institutional (e.g., the economic system and the system of social stratification), (3) the ideational (e.g., people's assumptions and priorities about what is acceptable or unacceptable, good or bad, desirable or undesirable), and (4) the demographic to (5) reinforcing experience. Each is in one way or another conducive to the continuation of resource-intensive practices. Yet, countervailing forces do exist, if not to a degree that justifies much optimism, at least to one that justifies cautious hope. These relate to (1) the turnover of both physical stocks and human generations, (2) possibilities that exist for informing people and changing their values, and (3) certain possibilities that the political structure affords for controlling or preventing various types of resource-intensive activity.

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