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Monthly Archives: April 2008

Economic growth and the environment

By Grossman and Krueger.
In this paper, Grossman and Krueger trace out the environmental Kuznets curves for pollutants in cities. They study atmospheric and water pollutants. In general, they find that there is a Kuznets relationship, with pollution peaking around the GDP of Mexico or Malaysia.
There conclusions are in line with Arrow et al; Grossman and [...]

Resilience and Stability of Ecological Systems

This paper, by C.S. Holling, is a primer on ecology. In it, Holling distinguishes between resilience and stability. Stability is the tendency of a population to remain constant in time, even when faced with disruptions. If, say, we pluck out 500 of the 1000 fruitflies in a jar, they will be quickly replaced, reaching the [...]

Economic growth, carrying capacity, and the environment

By Arrow, Bolin, Costanza, Dasgupta et al.
Everybody hopes that growth and environmental quality follow a Kuznets curve: that as our economy grows, we can afford to buy more environmental quality.
This paper, the second most important paper according to Costanza’s list, is pessimistic that environmental quality and economic growth have this relationship.
The authors sensibly divide environmental [...]

The value of the world’s ecosystem services

This paper was by Costanza et al. It is the most cited paper in EE.
In The value of the world’s ecosystem services and natural capital, Costanza et al try to place a monetary value on the services of the natural systems of the environment. Marshes, for instance, protect cities from hurricanes. Coral reefs provide habitat [...]

Ecological economics papers

One of the difficulties of getting a multi-disciplinary degree is that one never feels certain that one has mastered the disciplines in question
I have an MA in environmental studies. I focussed on ecological economics. I feel I know it quite well, but it is quite hard for me to tell for certain whether I know [...]

The usefulness of higher education

This morning, Andy Barrie interviewed a philosophy professor. The good doctor was at pains to prove that philosophy is good for many very practical things. He trotted out the same old horse: philosophy teaches critical thinking, and critical thinking is always in demand. Computer skills come and go, but the ability to think–that’s timeless.
To be [...]

Professors on the CBC

This morning, Andy Barrie interviewed two professors on the usefulness of a university education. He made mention of a college education at least twice: once in the beginning, and once at the end. Neither person he spoke to, however, was a college teacher. One was a philosophy professor, defending philosophy as practical (it’s not); one [...]

My courses

I use the internet a lot in the courses I teach. You can peer through the warbly wired glass into my classrooms if you’d like:

Economics
Green economics
Political economy
Philosophy
Business writing
Research and writing
College writing

Why Dawkins is wrong

I’ve been reading Richard Dawkins’ book “The God Delusion”. There is much to dislike about the book. Among the many reasons I dislike the book is Dawkins’ egotistical certainty. It’s off-putting.
The first, and easiest refutation of Dawkins is this, I believe: Dawkins spends the great bulk of his book refuting religion in general, and Christianity [...]