Concerned scientists recently signed a World Scientists Warning to Humanity that advocates policies necessary to change a collision course with the natural world that human activities are engendering. The document calls for an end to population growth and poverty and it predicts conflicts over increasingly scarce resources. A second environmental science is needed that focuses on human-environment interactions by analyzing: 1) forces behind those human activities that are major contributors to environmental degradation 2) how environmental degradation affects human well-being and 3) the most effective interventions for changing environmentally destructive activities. The US releases almost 30 times as much carbon dioxide per capita as India; 1 years natural population increase in the US (1.3 million) adds about twice as much carbon dioxide to the atmosphere as 1 years natural increase in India (18 million). Basic as well as applied research is proceeding on human-environment interaction with significant progress made in understanding how people perceive environmental risks; how we manage common-property resources such as fisheries grasslands and the atmosphere; what brought about anthropogenic environmental changes in the past; public concern about the environment; and the economic forces affecting natural resource availability. The scientific study of human-environmental interactions can advance human knowledge correct misconceptions and inform vital policy decisions. The National Research Councils recommendations for global change research are appropriate for other areas of human-environmental science. Such a program could attack the intertwined problems of training careers institution and community building and the development of a basic human-environmental science and could induce universities to become actively involved.
[1]
P. Stern.
What psychology knows about energy conservation.
,
1992
.
[2]
M. Cropper,et al.
Environmental Economics: A Survey
,
1992
.
[3]
P. Ehrlich,et al.
Human population and the global environment.
,
1974,
American scientist.
[4]
E. Aronson,et al.
The Effectiveness of Incentives for Residential Energy Conservation
,
1986
.
[5]
R. Bilsborrow.
Population pressures and agricultural development in developing countries: A conceptual framework and recent evidence
,
1987
.
[6]
Don A. Dillman,et al.
Lifestyle and home energy conservation in the United States: the poor accept lifestyle cutbacks while the wealthy invest in conservation
,
1983
.
[7]
P. Ehrlich,et al.
IMPACT OF POPULATION GROWTH
,
1971,
Science.
[8]
N. Keyfitz.
Population and development within the ecosphere: one view of the literature.
,
1991,
Population index.
[9]
A. Coale,et al.
Man and his environment.
,
1970,
Science.