At the dawn of the Anthropocene, continued economic growth carries the risk of irreversibly damaging the global carrying capacity. Using data from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species (2016), I present estimates of the expected extinction rates during the coming century for 557 regions. I illustrate that these rates exceed the planetary boundary formulated by Rockström et al. (2009) virtually everywhere and increase with population density and GDP per capita. Likewise, the percentage of threatened species increases with anthropogenic pressure. I find no evidence in support of an Environmental Kuznets Curve. By doing so, this paper contributes to an ongoing debate on the relevance of absolute ...
Stabilizing human population size and reducing human-caused impacts on the environment are keys to c...
We live amid a global wave of anthropogenically driven biodiversity loss: species and population ext...
An article published in the journal Nature in January 2004-in which an international team of biologi...
There is growing evidence to suggest that there is an increase in species extinction occurring globa...
This paper investigates the relationship between economic growth, biodiversity loss and efforts to c...
Policy on population and environment in the United States and abroad has been vacillating, unsure of...
Several environmental problems linked to extinction (resource mining, biodiversity depletion, and ov...
This work examines the impact that economic growth can have on biodiversity and on the ecological dy...
[eng] The unlimited economic growth that fuels capitalism's metabolism has profoundly transformed a ...
We live amid a global wave of anthropogenically driven biodiversity loss: species and population ext...
Environmental degradation is one tradeoff of a continually growing world. This paper investigates th...
The negative effects of globalization upon the natural environment have come to the forefront of nat...
Throughout history there has often been a blatant separation between environmental preservation and ...
The economic process transforms raw materials and energy into economic products and waste. On a fini...
This paper investigates how optimal economic growth can affect the natural evolution of the ecologic...
Stabilizing human population size and reducing human-caused impacts on the environment are keys to c...
We live amid a global wave of anthropogenically driven biodiversity loss: species and population ext...
An article published in the journal Nature in January 2004-in which an international team of biologi...
There is growing evidence to suggest that there is an increase in species extinction occurring globa...
This paper investigates the relationship between economic growth, biodiversity loss and efforts to c...
Policy on population and environment in the United States and abroad has been vacillating, unsure of...
Several environmental problems linked to extinction (resource mining, biodiversity depletion, and ov...
This work examines the impact that economic growth can have on biodiversity and on the ecological dy...
[eng] The unlimited economic growth that fuels capitalism's metabolism has profoundly transformed a ...
We live amid a global wave of anthropogenically driven biodiversity loss: species and population ext...
Environmental degradation is one tradeoff of a continually growing world. This paper investigates th...
The negative effects of globalization upon the natural environment have come to the forefront of nat...
Throughout history there has often been a blatant separation between environmental preservation and ...
The economic process transforms raw materials and energy into economic products and waste. On a fini...
This paper investigates how optimal economic growth can affect the natural evolution of the ecologic...
Stabilizing human population size and reducing human-caused impacts on the environment are keys to c...
We live amid a global wave of anthropogenically driven biodiversity loss: species and population ext...
An article published in the journal Nature in January 2004-in which an international team of biologi...