Religious Environmentalism

What it is, Where it’s Heading and Why We Should be Going in the Same Direction

Authors

  • Roger S. Gottlieb

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.v1i1.81

Keywords:

religion, nature, culture

Abstract

My topic is the important and unprecedented phenomenon of religious environmentalism. In its most compressed form my message is simple: religious environmentalism is good for environmentalism, good for religion, and good for the earth community. I will also hazard a few thoughts on the role scholars can play in this movement.

References

Bartholomew, Ecumenical Patriarch 2004 ‘Address of His Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew at the Environmental Symposium, Santa Barbara, CA, November 8, 1997’, in Gottlieb (ed.) 2004: 227-31.

Berry, T. 1988 Dream of the Earth (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books).

Bond, George D. 2004 Buddhism at Work: Community Development, Social Empowerment, and the Sarvodaya Movement (Bloomfield, CT: Kumarian Press).

Bonner, Raymond 1993 At the Hand of Man: Peril and Hope for Africa’s Wildlife (New York: Knopf).

Catholic Bishops of the Philippines 1996 ‘What is Happening to our Beautiful Land?’, http://www.aenet.org/haribon/bishops.htm.

Environmental Working Group 2005 ‘Body Burden—The Pollution in Newborns’, 14 July, http://www.ewg.org/reports/bodyburden2/execsumm.php.

Fox, M. 2004 ‘How the Environment Can Assist Us to Deconstruct and Reconstruct Theology and Religion’ (Friends of Creation Spirituality website). http://www.matthewfox.org/sys-tmpl/htmlpage5/.

Gottlieb, R.S. 2002 Joining Hands: Politics and Religion Together for Social Change (Cambridge, MA: Westview Press).

A Greener Faith: Religious Environmentalism and our Planet’s Future (New York: Oxford University Press).

Gottlieb, R.S. (ed.) 2004 This Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature, Environment (New York: Routledge, 2nd edn).

The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Ecology (New York: Oxford University Press).

Gottlieb, Robert 1993 Forcing the Spring (Washington, DC: Island Press).

John, Dewitt 1994 Civic Environmentalism: Alternatives to Regulation in States and Communities (Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Press).

McKibben, B. 2001 ‘Where Do We Go From Here?’, Daedelus (Fall). See also: http://www.amacad.org/publications/fall2001/mckibben.aspx (accessed 10 September 2006).

Nash, J.A. 1991 Loving Nature: Ecological Integrity and Christian Responsibility (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press).

Palmer, Martin 2003 New Approaches to Religions and the Environment (Washington, DC: The World Bank).

Rothman, Franklin, and Pamela Oliver 2002 ‘From Local to Global: the Anti-Dam Movement in Southern Brazil, 1979–1992’, in Jackie Smith and Hank Johnston (eds.), Globalization and Resistance: Transnational Dimensions of Social Movements (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002): 119-23.

Shutkin, William A. 2000 The Land that Could Be: Environmentalism and Democracy in the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000).

Published

2007-04-20

How to Cite

Gottlieb, R. S. (2007). Religious Environmentalism: What it is, Where it’s Heading and Why We Should be Going in the Same Direction. Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, 1(1), 81-91. https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.v1i1.81

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