Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T04:19:57.065Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The World's Conservation Strategy*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Lee M. Talbot
Affiliation:
Director-General of I.U.C.N., 1196 Gland, Switzerland; Senior Scientific Adviser on Conservation and Natural Resources, International Council of Scientific Unions.

Extract

Rational use and conservation of living resources must be the active concern of all of us, rich and poor alike, if the world is to continue to develop in any reasonable degree of harmony with Nature. Accordingly it is necessary to recognize that industrial—and even some degree of demographic—development is not necessarily incompatible with environmental protection, and indeed that, in the world to come, conservation and development will have to be widely interlinked.

Cognizant of this and of the fundamental need to protect and perpetuate living, renewable resources in the face of ever-mounting and demanding human populations, and stressing the imperative of preserving a holistic approach to these problems of Man's and Nature's ‘only one Earth’, IUCN, with the support of UNEP and WWF, and the endorsement of some other bodies, launched, early in 1980, after several laborious redraftings, a ‘World Conservation Strategy’, in the manner described in the last part of this paper. It sets a policy for all to follow, taking mankind well away from the merely reactionist basis of conservation.

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1980

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Allen, Robert (1980). How to Save the World: Strategy for World Conservation. Kogan Page, London, UK: 150 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Anon. (1978). Furry funnels: Are Polar Bears really white? Time, 4 12.Google Scholar
Carter, Jimmy (Dir.) (1980). Global 2000 Report, Council on Environmental Quality and U.S. Department of State, Washington DC: [not available for checking].Google ScholarPubMed
Farnsworth, Norman R. & Morris, Ralph W., (1976). Higher plants: The sleeping giant of drug development. American Journal of Pharmacy, 146, pp. 4652.Google Scholar
Independent Commission on International Development Issues (1980). North-South: A Programme for Survival. Pan Books, London & Sydney: 304 pp.Google Scholar
Marsh, George Perkins (1864). Man and Nature, or Physical Geography as Modified by Human Action. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, NY: [not available for checking].CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sagan, C., Toon, O. B., & Pollack, J. B. (1979). Anthropogenic albedo changes and the Earth's climate. Science, 206 (4425), pp. 1363–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Storrs, Eleanore E. (1971). The Nine-banded Armadillo: A model for leprosy and other biomedical research. International Journal of Leprosy, 39, pp. 703–14.Google Scholar
Talbot, Lee M. (1957). The lions of Gir; Wildlife management problems of Asia. Trans. North American Wildlife Conf., 22, pp. 570–9.Google Scholar
Talbot, Lee M. (1960). A Look at Threatened Species; Conservation in the Middle East and Southern Asia. Fauna Preservation Society, London, UK: 137 pp.Google Scholar
Talbot, Lee M. (1964). Wilderness overseas. Pp. 7580 in Wildlands in our Civilization. Sierra Club, San Francisco, California: 175 pp.Google Scholar
Talbot, Lee M. (1972). Grasslands of the world. Pp. 142–7 in 1972 Britannica Yearbook of Science and the Future. Encyclopaedia Biitannica, Chicago, Illinois: 448 pp.Google Scholar
Talbot, Lee M., Talbot, Martha H., & Lamprey, H. F. (1961). An Introduction to the Landscape iGovernment Printer, Nairobi, Kenya: 38 pp.Google Scholar
Thomas, William L. Jr (Ed.) (1956). Man's Role in Changing the Face of the Earth. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois: 1193 pp.Google Scholar
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) (1977). The Fourth World Food Survey. FAO, Rome, Italy: [not available for checking].Google Scholar
United Nations Industrial Development Organization [cited as UNIDO] (1978). Report of the Technical Consultation on Production of Drugs from Medicinal Plants in Developing Countries. Lucknow, India, 13–20 March. ID/222 (ID/WG.271/6), UNIDO, Vienna, Austria: [not available for checking].Google Scholar
World Bank (1979). World Development Report, 1979. The World Bank, Washington, DC: [not available for checking].Google Scholar
World Bank (1980). World Development Report, 1980. The World Bank, Washington, DC: viii + 166 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
World Conservation Strategy (1980). World Conservation Strategy: Living Resource Conservation for Sustainable Development. IUCN/WWF, 1196 Gland, Switzerland, and UNEP, Nairobi, Kenya: special pack of brochures, etc., totalling 50 printed pages.Google Scholar