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Ideologues for a
Ecosustainable World
Temporary translation
It seems only right to give
all those who are collaborating on the creation of a new world fair
contribution and recognition. Here are the main authors of that
change that we are all working together.
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Robert Costanza
- (Pittsburgh, September 14, 1950) - It is an American
economist. In 1982 he was selected in the Kellogg National
Fellow, where he explores and distinguishes itself in the
field of environmental conservation. In 1998 Kenneth
Boulding Memorial Award receives for outstanding
contributions to the emerging green economy. He was director
of the Institute for Ecological Economics at the University
of Maryland and a professor in the Center for Environmental
Science and professor and director of the Institute of
Ecological Economics at the University of Vermont. It is
co-founder and former president of the International Society
for Ecological Economics (ISEE) and is president of the
International Society for Ecosystem Health, member of
various scientific committees. |
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Ivan Illich
- (Vienna, 4 September 1926 - Bremen, 2 December 2002) - He
was a writer, historian, educator and philosopher Austria.
He served as assistant parish in New York. In 1956, he was
appointed vice-rector of the Catholic University of Puerto
Rico, and in 1961 he founded the Centro Intercultural de
Documentación (CIDOC) in Cuernavaca, Mexico, a research
center which carried out courses for missionaries in North
America. In 1977 he taught at the Faculty of Sociology,
University of Trento, where he gave lectures and organized
seminars soon became a reference for the student movement.
He was appointed a Visiting Professor of Philosophy,
Science, Technology and Society at Penn State, and also
taught at the University of Bremen. |
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Serge Latouche
- (Vannes, January 12, 1940) - is a French philosopher and
economist. It is one of the leaders of La Revue du Mauss,
president of "The ligne d'horizon", is Professor Emeritus of
Economics at the University of Paris XI and the Institut
d'Etudes du devoloppement économique et social (IEDES) of
Paris. It is among the best-known opponents of
Westernization of the planet and a supporter of the decline
of localism and friendly. Referring to the thought of Karl
Polanyi, he aims to propose the concept of the economy in
his work as an activity designed to provide the material
means to satisfy the needs of people. Criticizes the notion
of development and the notions of rationality and economic
efficiency. |
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Jeremy Rifkin
- (Denver, January 26, 1945). He graduated in economics from
the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
(Pennsylvania) and International Affairs at the Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. Activist of
the U.S. peace movement in the sixties and seventies,
including support for the adoption of government policies
"responsible." He founded, in 1969, the Citizens Commission
for the purpose of making known the war crimes committed by
the Americans during the Vietnam War. He is the founder and
president of the Foundation on Economic Trends (FOET) and
president of the Greenhouse Crisis Foundation. |
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Gilbert Rist
()- Is professor emeritus at the
Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
in Geneva. He first taught at the University of Tunis,
became the Director of the Europe-Third World Centre in
Geneva and, later on, Senior Researcher on a United Nations
University Project. Afterwards he joined the Graduate
Institute of Development Studies where he taught
intercultural relations and social anthropology. His main
interest is in an anthropological approach of our
contemporary society. He is the author of The History of
Development. |
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Hermann Scheer
- (Wehrheim, April 29, 1944 - Berlin,
14 October 2010) was a German politician, former member of
the Bundestag in the ranks of the SPD, chairman of Eurostar
and the World Council for Renewable Energy. Scheer saw in
renewable energy with short supply chains and distribution
on the territory of the only alternative to lengthy, complex
and polluting production lines and supply of fossil fuels.
He received the 1999 Right Livelihood Award for "his
tireless work in promoting solar energy in the world." He
disappeared in 2010 at the age of 66 years because of a
heart attack. |
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Vandana Shiva
- (Dehra Dunh, November 5, 1952). Is an Indian activist
and environmentalist. In 1993 he received the Right
Livelihood Award. In 1978 he graduated in physics at the
University of Western Ontario, Canada, with a doctoral
thesis on "hidden variables and locality in quantum theory."
In 1982 he founded the Research Foundation for Science,
Technology and Natural Resource Policy, a research institute
which she directed. It has fought to change paradigms and
practices in agriculture and food, was also in charge of
intellectual property rights, biodiversity, biotechnology,
bioethics, genetic engineering and altro.Nel 1993 he
received the Right Livelihood Award. |
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Ernst Friedrich
"Fritz" Schumacher - (16 August 1911 – 4
September 1977) Was an internationally influential economic
thinker, statistician and economist in Britain, serving as
Chief Economic Advisor to the UK National Coal Board for two
decades. His ideas became popularized in much of the
English-speaking world during the 1970s. He is best known
for his critique of Western economies and his proposals for
human-scale, decentralized and appropriate technologies.
According to The Times Literary Supplement, his 1973 book
Small Is Beautiful. Schumacher's basic development theories
have been summed up in the catch-phrases Intermediate Size
and Intermediate Technology. Together with long-time friends
and associates like Professor Mansur Hoda, Schumacher
founded the Intermediate Technology Development Group (now
Practical Action) in 1966. |
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Sachs
Wolfgang-
(München, November 25, 1946) - Is a German scientist and author of books including:
environment and social justice. The limits of globalization.
It was also the editor of the dictionary development. He
argues that there are three ways to achieve sustainable
development, three perspectives that are related to the
security crisis: the prospect for the home, the prospect of
an astronaut and the endogenous perspective. He currently
works and teaches at the Wuppertal Institute in Germany. It
is located at the head of a cross-project called
"globalization''sustainability''and" the Wuppertal
Institute. In 2007 he participated in the Stock Exchange of
Visions project. |
It contains a brief biography of the authors mentioned above, they
are only part of the vast world of alternative proposals for a
future system. This page will be continually updated. If someone
thinks to suggest that authors can write to be entered here:
gubissa@tin.it
Guido Bissanti
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