Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Career
  • Sports
  • Climate
  • Science
    • Tech
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
Categories
  • Breaking News (4,907)
  • Business (309)
  • Career (4,157)
  • Climate (210)
  • Culture (4,124)
  • Education (4,341)
  • Finance (190)
  • Health (850)
  • Lifestyle (4,019)
  • Science (4,028)
  • Sports (302)
  • Tech (170)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Hand Picked

Trump releases video of US destroying drug sub carrying fentanyl in Caribbean

October 18, 2025

4-Hers find working with horses builds leadership | News, Sports, Jobs

October 18, 2025

Nikon’s Small World contest highlights microscopic beauty of weevils, butterfly eggs and more

October 18, 2025

Washington County Career Center FFA elects officers | News, Sports, Jobs

October 18, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
onlyfacts24
  • Breaking News

    Trump releases video of US destroying drug sub carrying fentanyl in Caribbean

    October 18, 2025

    Israel, Hamas exchange remains of the deceased under new ceasefire | Gaza

    October 18, 2025

    Invesco looks at income portfolio strategies

    October 18, 2025

    Sara Haines says ‘The View’ wants to have people with ‘different views’ at table

    October 18, 2025

    Dozens injured, heavy security in Kenya as Odinga mourned before burial | News

    October 18, 2025
  • Business

    Business Engagement | IUCN

    October 14, 2025

    10 ways artificial intelligence is transforming operations management | IBM

    October 11, 2025

    The View Didn’t Talk About Jimmy Kimmel’s Suspension Over Charlie Kirk

    October 10, 2025

    40+ Chatbot Statistics (2025)

    October 9, 2025

    Things You Should Never Talk About at Work, From Etiquette Experts

    October 8, 2025
  • Career

    Washington County Career Center FFA elects officers | News, Sports, Jobs

    October 18, 2025

    UNM professor receives DOE Early Career Research Award

    October 18, 2025

    CBS NewsNew documentary "Mr. Scorsese" offers a rare look at the legendary director's life and careerFilmmaker Rebecca Miller joins "CBS Mornings Plus" to discuss her five-part documentary "Mr. Scorsese," which features rare archival footage….14 hours ago

    October 18, 2025

    A new experience creating career pathways

    October 18, 2025

    Drone careers spotlighted at Stony Brook open house

    October 18, 2025
  • Sports

    Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Association | Supreme Court Ruling Explained, Sports Betting, Legal Case Summary, Outcome, & Impact

    October 17, 2025

    Franco Mastantuono, the Hot Topic Among Real Madrid Supporters

    October 17, 2025

    Thunder’s Nikola Topic out at least 4-6 weeks following testicular procedure

    October 17, 2025

    List of athletes with the most Olympic medals | Names, Gold, Silver, Bronze, Sports, & Facts

    October 17, 2025

    Thunder’s Nikola Topic: Debuts in Salt Lake City

    October 15, 2025
  • Climate

    PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

    October 17, 2025

    World Bank Group and the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution Process

    October 14, 2025

    GEI Target Rules 2025 and Carbon Market

    October 10, 2025

    Sustainability remains hot topic in corporate America — Harvard Gazette

    October 9, 2025

    Care of environment topic of youth meeting with Bishop Hicks – Chicagoland

    October 7, 2025
  • Science
    1. Tech
    2. View All

    AI safety topic of Oct. 28 Tech Council luncheon in Madison » Urban Milwaukee

    October 16, 2025

    Meta updates chatbot rules to avoid inappropriate topics with teen users

    October 13, 2025

    Energy Innovation – Topics – IEA

    October 7, 2025

    Samsung | History, Consumer Products, Leadership, & Facts

    October 7, 2025

    Nikon’s Small World contest highlights microscopic beauty of weevils, butterfly eggs and more

    October 18, 2025

    Japanese astronaut snaps stunning aurora photo from orbit | On the International Space Station Oct. 13 – 17, 2025

    October 18, 2025

    Ancient lead exposure may have helped humans evolve over Neanderthals, study finds

    October 18, 2025

    How to watch the Orionid meteor shower, debris of Halley’s comet

    October 18, 2025
  • Culture

    How a ‘revolutionary’ CCTV film captures a shocking US killing

    October 18, 2025

    BBC Gaza documentary a ‘serious’ breach of rules, Ofcom says

    October 18, 2025

    Why I celebrate Diwali – Washington Square News

    October 18, 2025

    MoPOP, now 25, continues to adapt to pop culture’s ever-shifting landscape | Entertainment

    October 18, 2025

    ‘Pop Culture Jeopardy!’ moves to Netflix for season 2 and more – KORN News Radio

    October 18, 2025
  • Health

    Mental health & finance topic for women @Bromley conference

    October 17, 2025

    Mental health & finance topic for women @Bromley conference

    October 17, 2025

    Mental health & finance topic for women @Bromley conference

    October 16, 2025

    Mental health & finance topic for women @Bromley conference

    October 16, 2025

    Health Emergencies Overview

    October 13, 2025
  • Lifestyle
Contact
onlyfacts24
Home»Climate»Environmentalism | Ideology, History, & Types
Climate

Environmentalism | Ideology, History, & Types

May 11, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Crowd earth day washington dc capitol.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

environmentalism, political and ethical movement that seeks to improve and protect the quality of the natural environment through changes to environmentally harmful human activities; through the adoption of forms of political, economic, and social organization that are thought to be necessary for, or at least conducive to, the benign treatment of the environment by humans; and through a reassessment of humanity’s relationship with nature. In various ways, environmentalism claims that living things other than humans, and the natural environment as a whole, are deserving of consideration in reasoning about the morality of political, economic, and social policies.

For additional discussion of ethical issues related to the natural environment, see environmental ethics. For discussion of environmental statutes and regulations, including international conventions, see environmental law.

Intellectual underpinnings

Environmental thought and the various branches of the environmental movement are often classified into two intellectual camps: those that are considered anthropocentric, or “human-centred,” in orientation and those considered biocentric, or “life-centred.” This division has been described in other terminology as “shallow” ecology versus “deep” ecology and as “technocentrism” versus “ecocentrism.” Anthropocentric approaches focus mainly on the negative effects that environmental degradation has on human beings and their interests, including their interests in health, recreation, and quality of life. It is often characterized by a mechanistic approach to nonhuman nature in which individual creatures and species have only an instrumental value for humans. The defining feature of anthropocentrism is that it considers the moral obligations humans have to the environment to derive from obligations that humans have to each other—and, less crucially, to future generations of humans—rather than from any obligation to other living things or to the environment as a whole. Human obligations to the environment are thus indirect.

Why these rivers have the same legal rights as peopleIn 2017, India’s Ganges River and its main tributary, the Yamuna River, were granted human rights.

See all videos for this article

Critics of anthropocentrism have charged that it amounts to a form of human “chauvinism.” They argue that anthropocentric approaches presuppose the historically Western view of nature as merely a resource to be managed or exploited for human purposes—a view that they claim is responsible for centuries of environmental destruction. In contrast to anthropocentrism, biocentrism claims that nature has an intrinsic moral worth that does not depend on its usefulness to human beings, and it is this intrinsic worth that gives rise directly to obligations to the environment. Humans are therefore morally bound to protect the environment, as well as individual creatures and species, for their own sake. In this sense, biocentrics view human beings and other elements of the natural environment, both living and often nonliving, as members of a single moral and ecological community.

By the 1960s and ’70s, as scientific knowledge of the causes and consequences of environmental degradation was becoming more extensive and sophisticated, there was increasing concern among some scientists, intellectuals, and activists about Earth’s ability to absorb the detritus of human economic activity and, indeed, to sustain human life. This concern contributed to the growth of grassroots environmental activism in a number of countries, the establishment of new environmental nongovernmental organizations, and the formation of environmental (“green”) political parties in a number of Western democracies. As political leaders gradually came to appreciate the seriousness of environmental problems, governments entered into negotiations in the early 1970s that led to the adoption of a growing number of international environmental agreements.

The division between anthropocentric and biocentric approaches played a central role in the development of environmental thought in the late 20th century. Whereas some earlier schools, such as apocalyptic (survivalist) environmentalism and emancipatory environmentalism—as well as its offshoot, human-welfare ecology—were animated primarily by a concern for human well-being, later movements, including social ecology, deep ecology, the animal-rights and animal-liberation movements, and ecofeminism, were centrally concerned with the moral worth of nonhuman nature.

Anthropocentric schools of thought

Apocalyptic environmentalism

The vision of the environmental movement of the 1960s and early ’70s was generally pessimistic, reflecting a pervasive sense of “civilization malaise” and a conviction that Earth’s long-term prospects were bleak. Works such as Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (1962), Garrett Hardin’s “The Tragedy of the Commons” (1968), Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb (1968), Donella H. Meadows’ The Limits to Growth (1972), and Edward Goldsmith’s Blueprint for Survival (1972) suggested that the planetary ecosystem was reaching the limits of what it could sustain. This so-called apocalyptic, or survivalist, literature encouraged reluctant calls from some environmentalists for increasing the powers of centralized governments over human activities deemed environmentally harmful, a viewpoint expressed most vividly in Robert Heilbroner’s An Inquiry into the Human Prospect (1974), which argued that human survival ultimately required the sacrifice of human freedom. Counterarguments, such as those presented in Julian Simon and Herman Kahn’s The Resourceful Earth (1984), emphasized humanity’s ability to find or to invent substitutes for resources that were scarce and in danger of being exhausted.

Emancipatory environmentalism

Beginning in the 1970s, many environmentalists attempted to develop strategies for limiting environmental degradation through recycling, the use of alternative energy technologies, the decentralization and democratization of economic and social planning, and, for some, a reorganization of major industrial sectors, including the agriculture and energy industries. In contrast to apocalyptic environmentalism, so-called “emancipatory” environmentalism took a more positive and practical approach, one aspect of which was the effort to promote an ecological consciousness and an ethic of “stewardship” of the environment. One form of emancipatory environmentalism, human-welfare ecology—which aims to enhance human life by creating a safe and clean environment—was part of a broader concern with distributive justice and reflected the tendency, later characterized as “postmaterialist,” of citizens in advanced industrial societies to place more importance on “quality-of-life” issues than on traditional economic concerns.

Emancipatory environmentalism also was distinguished for some of its advocates by an emphasis on developing small-scale systems of economic production that would be more closely integrated with the natural processes of surrounding ecosystems. This more environmentally holistic approach to economic planning was promoted in work by the American ecologist Barry Commoner and by the German economist Ernst Friedrich Schumacher. In contrast to earlier thinkers who had downplayed the interconnectedness of natural systems, Commoner and Schumacher emphasized productive processes that worked with nature, not against it, encouraged the use of organic and renewable resources rather than synthetic products (e.g., plastics and chemical fertilizers), and advocated renewable and small-scale energy resources (e.g., wind and solar power) and government policies that supported effective public transportation and energy efficiency.

The emancipatory approach was evoked through the 1990s in the popular slogan, “Think globally, act locally.” Its small-scale, decentralized planning and production has been criticized, however, as unrealistic in highly urbanized and industrialized societies. (See also urban planning; economic planning.)

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

October 17, 2025

World Bank Group and the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution Process

October 14, 2025

GEI Target Rules 2025 and Carbon Market

October 10, 2025

Sustainability remains hot topic in corporate America — Harvard Gazette

October 9, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

Trump releases video of US destroying drug sub carrying fentanyl in Caribbean

October 18, 2025

4-Hers find working with horses builds leadership | News, Sports, Jobs

October 18, 2025

Nikon’s Small World contest highlights microscopic beauty of weevils, butterfly eggs and more

October 18, 2025

Washington County Career Center FFA elects officers | News, Sports, Jobs

October 18, 2025
News
  • Breaking News (4,907)
  • Business (309)
  • Career (4,157)
  • Climate (210)
  • Culture (4,124)
  • Education (4,341)
  • Finance (190)
  • Health (850)
  • Lifestyle (4,019)
  • Science (4,028)
  • Sports (302)
  • Tech (170)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from onlyfacts24.

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from ONlyfacts24.

News
  • Breaking News (4,907)
  • Business (309)
  • Career (4,157)
  • Climate (210)
  • Culture (4,124)
  • Education (4,341)
  • Finance (190)
  • Health (850)
  • Lifestyle (4,019)
  • Science (4,028)
  • Sports (302)
  • Tech (170)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Facebook Instagram TikTok
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
© 2025 Designed by onlyfacts24

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.