Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Double_diversion> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 75 of
75
with 100 triples per page.
- Double_diversion abstract "The double diversion is two-part theory about environmental harm that was developed by William Freudenburg and colleagues beginning in the 1990s, and focusing on "disproportionality" and "distraction." The concept of disproportionality involves the observation that, rather than being a reflection of overall levels of economic activity, the majority of environmental destruction is actually due to a relatively small number of economic actors, which enjoy privileged access to natural resources, “diverting” those resources for the private benefit of the few. Freudenburg's original work on this concept was carried out in conjunction with his colleague from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Peter Nowak. The reference to the "double" diversion reflects the argument that this first diversion is made possible in large part by the second—the diversion of attention, or distraction, often ironically relying on the widespread but empirically inaccurate belief that environmental harm is economically beneficial to the population as a whole.".
- Double_diversion wikiPageExternalLink 1445.
- Double_diversion wikiPageID "25303707".
- Double_diversion wikiPageLength "13707".
- Double_diversion wikiPageOutDegree "41".
- Double_diversion wikiPageRevisionID "683840667".
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink A._Kurniawan.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink A._Schmidt-Ott.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Agricultural_subsidy.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Agriculture.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Arable_land.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Barry_Commoner.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Beaton_(scientist).
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Bishop_&_Stedman.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Capitalism.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Carrying_capacity.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Environmental_science.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Cattle.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Cow.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Crop_subsidies.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Economic_activity.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Economic_growth.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Economics.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_Science_&_Technology.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_Science_and_Technology.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_degradation.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_destruction.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_protection.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Fertilizer.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Garret_Hardin.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Gini_coefficient.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Herder.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink I_=_PAT.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Industry.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink John_Holdren.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Kolmogorov–Smirnov_test.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Lisa_Berry.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Natural_resource.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Paul_R._Ehrlich.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Nowak.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Phosphorus.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Piotr_Nowak.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Pollution.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Rationality.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Rural_Sociological_Society.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Science_(journal).
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Social_Forces.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Society_and_Natural_Resources.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink The_Tragedy_of_the_Commons.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Tragedy_of_the_commons.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink William_Freudenburg.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink William_R._Catton,_Jr..
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLink Wisconsin.
- Double_diversion wikiPageWikiLinkText "double diversion".
- Double_diversion hasPhotoCollection Double_diversion.
- Double_diversion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Double_diversion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Double_diversion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Harvp.
- Double_diversion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Double_diversion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Double_diversion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Double_diversion subject Category:Environmental_science.
- Double_diversion hypernym Theory.
- Double_diversion type Article.
- Double_diversion type Book.
- Double_diversion type Article.
- Double_diversion type Science.
- Double_diversion type Study.
- Double_diversion comment "The double diversion is two-part theory about environmental harm that was developed by William Freudenburg and colleagues beginning in the 1990s, and focusing on "disproportionality" and "distraction." The concept of disproportionality involves the observation that, rather than being a reflection of overall levels of economic activity, the majority of environmental destruction is actually due to a relatively small number of economic actors, which enjoy privileged access to natural resources, “diverting” those resources for the private benefit of the few. ".
- Double_diversion label "Double diversion".
- Double_diversion sameAs m.09gm1p_.
- Double_diversion sameAs Q5300019.
- Double_diversion sameAs Q5300019.
- Double_diversion wasDerivedFrom Double_diversion?oldid=683840667.
- Double_diversion isPrimaryTopicOf Double_diversion.