Environment
Content
CWPE investigates the reasons why a variety of environmental problems are defined or presented as population problems. It rejects the notion that population size and growth are primarily responsible for environmental degradation. This notion is created and spread by an alliance between the mainstream media, environmental organizations, and population control advocates, especially in the United States. In many countries even where population growth rates have fallen, environmental conditions continue to decline. The industrialized countries, which have the lowest population growth, are in fact the major consumers of the world's resources.
Environmental degradation derives from complex and interrelated causes:
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One of CWPE's first actions was to develop a statement on global environmental degradation, calling for an approach, which does not single out population size and growth as its primary cause. The Call for a New Approach was presented at the UN Summit on Environment and Development (Rio de Janeiro, 1992), the UN Conference on Human Rights (Vienna, 1993), the 7th International Women and Health Meeting (Kampala,1993), the International Women's Health Conference for Cairo (Rio de Janeiro, 1994), and the International Conference on Population and Development (Cairo, 1994). Signed by over 300 groups from many countries, the Call for a New Approach is also available in French and Spanish. Request these by writing us at info@cwpe.org.
Women, Population & the Environment : Call For A New Approach
Environmentalism & Population Control
Environmental degradation derives from complex and interrelated causes:
- Economic systems, with a drive for short-term and short-sighted gains and profits, exploit and misuse nature and people.
- War-making and arms production destroy the natural environment, perpetuate the militarization of culture, hardening gender differences, and divert resources from human needs.
- Disproportionate consumption patterns of the affluent the world over wreak havoc on the environment. Currently, the industrialized nations, with 22 percent of the world's population, consume 70 percent of the world's resources. Within the United States, deepening economic inequalities mean that the poor are consuming less, and the rich more.
- Agribusiness, timber, mining, and energy corporations displace small farmers and indigenous peoples, often with encouragement and assistance from international financial institutions, and the complicity of national governments.
- Migration from rural areas combined with inadequate planning and resource allocation in towns and cities result in rapid urbanization and intensify conditions of poverty.
- New technologies often exploit rather than restore natural resources.
Quick Links:
- CWPE Analysis of the Environment
- Call for A New Approach
- Environmentalism & Population Control
- Greening of Hate
- Neo-Malthusianism: A Narrow Theory Exceeds Its Carrying Capacity, by Henri Acselrad
- Feminism, Environmental Justice, Toxic Dumps and Pesticides, by Jill Gay
- Managerial Environmentalism, Population Control and the New National Insecurity: Towards a Feminist Critique, by Ynestra King
- The Limitations of 'Carrying Capacity' Part I, by Ben Wisner
- The Limitations of 'Carrying Capacity' Part II, by Ben Wisner
- Prospects for a Contemporary Peace Movement: An Ecofeminist Perspective, by Ynestra King
- Security, Livelihood and the Politics of Space in Brazil, by Fatima Vianna Mello
- Rethinking the Environment : Women and Pollution, by Joni Seager
- Wisconsin Grassroots Alliance Close to Victory, by Debi McNutt
One of CWPE's first actions was to develop a statement on global environmental degradation, calling for an approach, which does not single out population size and growth as its primary cause. The Call for a New Approach was presented at the UN Summit on Environment and Development (Rio de Janeiro, 1992), the UN Conference on Human Rights (Vienna, 1993), the 7th International Women and Health Meeting (Kampala,1993), the International Women's Health Conference for Cairo (Rio de Janeiro, 1994), and the International Conference on Population and Development (Cairo, 1994). Signed by over 300 groups from many countries, the Call for a New Approach is also available in French and Spanish. Request these by writing us at info@cwpe.org.
Women, Population & the Environment : Call For A New Approach
Environmentalism & Population Control
- Environmentalism and Population Control (background information), by Rajani Bhatia and Tom Reisz
- An Open Letter to Oppose the Formation of a National Optimum Population Commission
- To Vanquish the Hydra, by Betsy Hartmann
- Dangerous Intersections, by Betsy Hartmann
- Population, Environment, and Security: A New Trinity, by Betsy Hartmann
- A Defeat for the Greening of Hate, by China Brotsky
- Blunting the Wedge : Fighting the Politics of Division in the Sierra Club, by Brad Erickson and China Brotsky
- Documenting Racism in the 'Green' Campaign Against Immigration, by the Political Ecology Group (PEG)
- Keep a Watchful Eye Out for Anti-Immigration Activities
- Keep a Watchful Eye Out for Anti-Immigration Activities : Controversy Continues in the Sierra Club
- Political Ecology Group's Immigration and Environment Campaign Position Statement
- Report on the Immigration and Environment National Strategy Meeting, U.SA. March 16-17, 1996
- Keep a Watchful Eye Out for Anti-Immigration Activities : Controversy Continues in the Sierra Club
- What's in a Word? : Sierra Club Moves Right and Away from Democracy, by Betsy Hartmann

