Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Overspending Ecological Resources and Its Consequences. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page report discusses the fact that
the overspending of ecological resources is having far-reaching economic, ecological and social consequences. Such "overspending" is discussed in terms of agriculture, water use, and air pollution and how all of those areas are related to larger ecological concerns. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWospend.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Working conservationists have come to understand that environmental management means working with the environment, not controlling it, not maintaining it but envisioning it as an equal partner in its own
survival. As Jensen (1995) points out that it is essential that human beings make the choice to remove themselves from the cultures pervasive destructiveness and discover whether or not
it is possible to live another way. He explains that it is time for human beings to change their long-ingrained attitudes and: ". . . separate ourselves
from our collective consciousness of the past arrogance of domination and subjugation that appears to be as natural, as instinctive as the expansion of bacteria on a Petri dish.
Given that humans have been and continue to cause the greatest mass extinction of species in the history of the planet, can there be hope?" (p. 3). Understanding What
Is Happening Whether the issue is the protection of the rainforests of the planet, air pollution, endangered species, recycling, or clean water, all environmental scientists, educators, and policy-makers
agree that the key to public understanding is public education. Without a thorough understanding of the problems facing the planet in terms of its fragile environment, humanity is on
a collision course with disaster. It is not enough to warn people, impose economic sanctions, establish stringent regulations. People must understand the basic premises of why they should
recycle, how they can reduce air pollution, what they can do to lessen their own individual impact on the earth. It is, as with most aspects of human endeavor and
interaction, that understanding serves as the bridge to meaning and meaningful action. All over the globe, developing countries have been and continue to
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