Shoveling Fuel for a Runaway Train: Errant Economists, Shameful Spenders,
and a Plan to Stop Them All is now coming out in paperback, so Im
sending off one last round of announcements (though I reserve the right
to have a memory relapse if necessary). Im tired of acting like a
salesman. Its
for an academic (Phase 1) and social (Phase 2)
steady state revolution!
Brian Czech
www.steadystate.org
On Wed, 9 Oct 2002 08:31:19 +0100 Mark Jones
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Brian M Czech wrote:
Just out of curiosity, why is there so little discussion of the
ecological economics movement
Just out of curiosity, why is there so little discussion of the
ecological economics movement on this list? My memory isnt the
greatest, but I dont recall ever hearing any mention of Herman Daly,
Robert Costanza, Richard Norgaard, the International Society for
Ecological Economics, the journal
Dear Pen-l,
I really respect you folks for your knowledge of economics and corporate
operations. Do any of you have an example of (or know of a website that
includes or quotes) a typical corporate charter? Im especially
looking for charter language, explicit or implicit, to the effect of
The University of California Press will be sending 30 complimentary exam
copies of the new paperback edition of Shoveling Fuel for a Runaway Train
to professors or teaching assistants who are teaching appropriate
courses, contingent upon my providing the Press with the names and
addresses of the
I don't think I was resubscribed to Enviroethics (or pen-l) when I posted
my review of Lomborg's Julian Simon regurgitation to the TWS and ECOLOG
listservers. As published in Conservation Biology a few months ago
(under the title Julian Simon Redux):
Lomborg, B. (2001) The Skeptical