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Dealing with Dumb and Dumber: The Continuing Mission of Citizen Environmentalism
Zygmunt J.B. Plater Boston College - Law School Journal of Environmental Law & Litigation, Vol. 20, pp. 9-47, 2005 Boston College Law School Research Paper No. 96 Abstract: Surveying the history of citizen environmentalism in the context of environmental law and politics over the past fifty years, this essay hypothesizes five different categories of corporate, governmental, political, and individual actions that deserve to be called "dumb," and the societal lessons that have been or could be learned from each. If there is truth to the wistful aphorism that "we learn from our mistakes," then our society is in position to learn a great deal about our world and how it works, which perhaps provides some ground for hope for the years to come. Environmentalism embodies fundamentally rational and realistic principles of analyzing scientific fact, human needs and behavior, values and risks, and issues of policy and governance - so therefore, as in the past, against protracted retrogressive opposition, citizen environmentalism will undoubtedly continue to play an indispensable societal role.
Keywords: citizen environmentalism, environmental law, environmental policy Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: May 26, 2006 ; Last revised: June 02, 2006Suggested CitationContact Information
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