Created by Izzy Noone
almost 7 years ago
|
||
Question | Answer |
Conservationism | A movement that aims at conserving the environment. |
An instrumentalist view | A view which sees resources as being there to be used. |
Shallow ecology | Another term for Conservationism |
Deep ecology | Sees all species as having intrinsic value. |
The Gaia hypothesis | The notion that the Earth itself can be understood as a massive biological organism which acts intelligently to preserve life. |
James Lovelock (1919- ) | Creator of the Gaia hypothesis |
Aldo Leopold (1887-1948) | Mainly famous for A Sand County Almanac (1949) which advocates a ‘land ethic’, or a responsible relationship between people and the land they inhabit |
Arne Næss (1912-2009) | Norwegian Professor of Philosophy and environmentalist who claimed that Conservation is a superficial approach to environmental problems. |
‘Ecosophy’ | Næss’s view that all living things – not just animals, but plants and bacteria too – have rights. |
St Augustine (354- 430 CE) | Held that animals are not rational, and since rational beings should rule irrational beings, humans should rule animals. |
St Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274 | Held a similar position: animals exist to serve humans, because God created the universe as a hierarchy: Himself at the top and humans well above animals. |
Andrew Linzey | Says humans should treat all animals in relation to their intrinsic God-given worth. |
Stewardship | The Christian belief that we should look after the planet on God’s behalf because He commissioned us to do so. |
Milton Friedman (1912-2006) | Wrote the 1970 essay, The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase its Profits: |
Communism | A movement that believes only the abolition of capitalism/ business will solve the problems of humanity. |
Stakeholders | People whose interests the business directly affects. |
Shareholders/ stockholders | People who hold shares or stocks, certificates entitling them to part ownership of the business. |
The Advertising Standards Authority | A regulatory body that applies the rules businesses must observe in the UK in advertising (although it doesn’t write them). |
Positive Discrimination/ affirmative action | Discrimination in favour of a person, usually justified as countering the effects of a history of discrimination against the group to which he/ she belongs. |
A whistleblower | Someone who informs on his own company for dishonest or illegal practices |
‘Gagging order’ | A contractual agreement whereby an employee is retired with a large sum of money in return for an agreement to remain silent about shady dealings. |
Kyoto Conference on Climate Change in 1998 | A global conference in Japan that aimed to reduce the world’s greenhouse emissions. |
Globalisation | The process whereby the world’s economies have become ever more integrated, with trade barriers coming down to facilitate the movement of goods, services and labour between countries with increasing ease. |
Naomi Klein’s "The Shock Doctrine 2007" | A book that purported to show how Western businesses have taken advantage of developing world crises to ‘open up’ markets and transfer wealth to the already wealthy. |
Paul Krugman (1953-) | A Nobel Prize winning economist who admits that globalisation can look like a bad thing, but thinks its opponents often make things worse. |
The Ferengi | A fictional race of business people (in Star Trek: The Next Generation), driven by a biological desire for financial profit. |
Want to create your own Flashcards for free with GoConqr? Learn more.