EXCESSIVE INDIVIDUALISM TODAY THREATENS LIBERTY TOMORROW - SUSTAINABLE USE OF THE PLANET

Authors
Citation
J. Cairns, EXCESSIVE INDIVIDUALISM TODAY THREATENS LIBERTY TOMORROW - SUSTAINABLE USE OF THE PLANET, Population and environment, 19(5), 1998, pp. 397-409
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Demografy,"Environmental Studies
Journal title
ISSN journal
01990039
Volume
19
Issue
5
Year of publication
1998
Pages
397 - 409
Database
ISI
SICI code
0199-0039(1998)19:5<397:EITTLT>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
In no period of human history has the exercise of perceived individual rights been so extreme, especially in developed countries such as the United States. These perceived rights might have been tolerable in a frontier society (although it is questionable whether the exercise of perceived individual rights to overhunt was tolerated) with vast per c apita resources and space, but not on a planet where resources are bei ng fully (or over) utilized, billions are malnourished, and the range from the poorest to the most affluent in material and energy terms is the greatest in human history. Sustainable use of the planet requires some curtailment of individual rights as they are now perceived, not o nly for the well-being of future generations but for more equitability and fairness at present. In short, sustainability requires a new etho s (a set of guiding beliefs) substantively different from the current practices: (1) an intergenerational equity and fairness in the use of the planet's ecological life support system, (2) an intolerance of the possible high risk associated with human practices that may result fr om seriously altering the ecological life support system when the cons equences of doing so are highly uncertain, and (3) a compassion and es teem for other species and other humans who are now living or yet to l ive-this should result from tempering often aggressive insistence on i ndividual rights.