The Environmental Debate, Third Edition

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314 The Environmental Debate



  1. After more than $100 million had been spent and the project was in its final stages, the Supreme
    Court ruled that the dam could not be completed because the operation of the dam would destroy
    the only known habitat of the snail darter. See Tennessee Valley Authority v. Hill, in United States
    Reports, 1978,Vol. 437 (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1980), pp. 153-213.

  2. John H. Cushman, Jr., with Evelyn Nieves, “In Colorado Resort Fires, Culprits Defy Easy Labels,”
    New York Times, October 24, 1998, p. A11.

  3. Daniel P. Beard, “Dams Aren’t Forever,” New York Times, October 6, 1997, p. A19.


Part VII



  1. Quoted in Bill Hosakawa, “It Takes a Lot of Energy to Keep Up with Interior’s Jim Watt,” Denver
    Post, March 1, 1981, quoted in Lou Cannon, Reagan (New York: Putnam’s 1982), p. 359.

  2. Gary Lucier, Susan Pollack, and Agnes Perez, “Import Penetration in the U.S. Fruit and Vegeta-
    ble Industry,” Vegetables and Specialties, VGS-273 (Washington, D.C.: Economic Research Service/
    USDA, November 1997), p. 16.

  3. Mark Holt and Carl E. Behrens, “Nuclear Energy in the United States,” Congressional Research
    Service, updated July 23, 2003, http://www.policyalmanac.org/environment/archive/nuclear_energy.

  4. See Jane Lubchenko,”Entering the Century of the Environment: A New Social Contract for Sci-
    ence,” Science 279 (January 23, 1998): 493.

  5. Mark Sagoff, “Do We Consume Too Much?,” Atlantic Monthly, June 1977, p. 16.

  6. World Commission on Environment and Development, Our Common Future (New York: Oxford
    University Press, 1987); and Agenda 21 Earth Summit: The United Nations Programme of Action
    from Rio (New York: United Nations, 1992).

  7. Arne Naess, “The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology Movements,” in George Sessions,
    ed., Deep Ecology for the Twenty-first Century: Readings in the Philosophy of the New Environ-
    mentalism (Boston: Shambala, 1995), p. 151.

  8. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Report summarizing work done on the Kissimmee River, June 2010.

  9. Edward O. Wilson, “Integrated Science and the Coming Century of the Environment,” Science 279
    (March 27, 1996): 2049.

  10. Moustafa Tolba, “The Ozone Agreement—and Beyond,” Environmental Conservation 14, no. 4
    (1967): 287-90, quoted in Robert F. Fleagle, Global Environmental Change: Interactions of Science,
    Policy and Politics in the United States (Westport, CT: Praeger, 1994), p. 185.

  11. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Report on Black and Minority Health (Washing-
    ton, D.C.: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1985), named for Health and Human
    Services secretary Margaret Heckler.

  12. By 2005 nearly all of the approximately one thousand commercially produced EV-1’s had been
    taken back from the people who had leased them, and had been crushed and shredded. A few
    survive in museums but have no ability to move. See the DVD Who Killed the Electric Car (Sony
    Pictures Classic Release, Electric Entertainment, 2006), written and directed by Chris Paine, and
    produced by Jessie Dexter.

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