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The Barriers present in more developed countries and less developed countries slowing the implementation of substainability
doi: 10.34917/1472091
In 1996 the natural resource base of the world is being depleted at a rate far below the sustainable level. This is very evident in less developed countries (IDC), where raw limited natural resources are being poorly utilized and/or exported to more developed countries (MDC). The More Developed Countries such as the United States, Japan, and Germany use a high amount of natural resources and energy to maintain their material Standard Of Living (SOL), and this is at rates above what their own country can sustain with its own natural resources within its own borders. Both MDC's and LDC's are contributing to the decline of the earth's natural resources, the over-burdening the natural waste assimilation cycle, and the destruction of natural habitats. It is the MDC that hold global power in the form of technology, military might, and financial power, and they have the ability to be the forerunner in creating and implementing policies that would move themselves and the world toward a sustainable society worldwide. There are barriers that exist today in both MDC and LDC that prevent us from moving to a more sustainable society. In this paper I hope to identify these barriers preventing sustainable development in MDC's and LDC's, and propose possible solutions to those barriers.
- University of Nevada, Las Vegas United States
- University of Nevada, Las Vegas United States
Cost and standard of living, Natural Resources Management and Policy, Natural resources management, 333, Developing countries, Sustainability, Sustainable development, Developed countries, Natural Resource Economics, Growth and Development, Environmental Sciences
Cost and standard of living, Natural Resources Management and Policy, Natural resources management, 333, Developing countries, Sustainability, Sustainable development, Developed countries, Natural Resource Economics, Growth and Development, Environmental Sciences
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