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Michael Redclift [7]Michael R. Redclift [1]
  1.  41
    Sustainable Development: Needs, Values, Rights.Michael Redclift - 1993 - Environmental Values 2 (1):3-20.
    'Sustainable development ' is analysed as a product of the Modernist tradition, in which social criticism and understanding are legitimized against a background of evolutionary theory, scientific specialization, and rapid economic growth. Within this tradition, sustainable development emphasizes the need to live within ecological limits, but allows the retention of an essentially optimistic idea of progress. However, the inherent contradictions in the concept of sustainable development may lead to rejection of the Modernist view in favour of a new vision of (...)
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  2. From Peasant to Proletarian: Capitalist Development and Agrarian Transitions.David Goodman & Michael Redclift - 1983 - Science and Society 47 (4):487-490.
     
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  3. Environment and Development in Latin America: The Politics of Sustainability.David Goodman & Michael Redclift - 1992 - Environmental Values 1 (4):367-370.
     
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  4.  17
    Environmental Security and the Recombinant Human: Sustainability in the Twenty-first Century.Michael Redclift - 2001 - Environmental Values 10 (3):289-299.
    Examining the concepts of ‘security’ and ‘sustainability’, as they are employed in contemporary environmental discourses, the paper argues that, although the importance of the environment has been increasingly acknowledged since the 1970s, there has been a failure to incorporate other discourses surrounding ‘nature’. The implications of the ‘new genetics’, prompted by research into recombinant DNA, suggest that future approaches to sustainability need to be more cognisant of changes in ‘our’ nature, as well as those of ‘external’ nature, the environment. This (...)
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  5.  21
    From a ‘Sociology of Nature’ to Environmental Sociology: Beyond Social Construction.Graham Woodgate & Michael Redclift - 1998 - Environmental Values 7 (1):3-24.
    This paper aims to provide some theoretical starting points for constructing a social science approach to environmental issues which goes beyond narrower forms of constructivism without dismissing the importance of interpretative sociology. An ecological understanding of society is compared with the notion of structuration and integrated into the concept of coevolution in order to shed light on the dynamic nature of socioenvironmental relations and move beyond the constructivist/realist dualism.
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