Hazel Henderson and Elisabet Sahtouris - Citizen Participation.
Abstract/Description
In the final segment of a three part series, Sahtouris and Henderson conclude their discussion arguing for economic policy with an eye toward protecting the environment. The pair stress citizen responsibility for protecting the environment, and focus on democracy in our society. They continue to speak about the world as a living system and how we need to be shifting towards prevention and organic methods in order to live in harmony with nature.
Date Issued
1992
Identifier
HazelHendersonElisabetSahtouris3
Format
Video file
Title
Hazel Henderson and Elisabet Sahtouris - The Sustainable Future.
Abstract/Description
In the second of a three-part series, Hazel Henderson and Elisabet Sahtouris continue their discussion on sustaining our environment and focus on how the 1990's is a critical time period for coming to terms with the planet and redefining what we mean by progress. Henderson continues her thesis suggesting citizens should create and conduct economic policy with an eye toward protecting the environment. She and Sahtouris place particular emphasis on regulations for developed vs developing countries.
Date Issued
1992
Identifier
HazelHendersonElisabetSahtouris2
Format
Video file
Title
Hazel Henderson and Elisabet Sahtouris - Futurism.
Abstract/Description
In the first of this three-part series, Carol Spalding Miner interviews two Futurists who agree that the world can be seen as a living system rather than a mechanical system. Although these futurists have different focuses - Elisabet Sahtourist is a biologist and Hazel Henderson is a green economist - they share similar viewpoints on the environment and how important it is for us to protect it. Sahtouris discusses her book Gaia: The Human Journey from Chaos to Cosmos and its framing of the universe as natural rather than mechanical. Henderson argues that economics should be taught with this natural framing.