The aim of this monograph
This combination of theoretical, topical and geographical focus integrates
the social and natural science approaches to problems of ecology in development
in South-west Asia. Permits coherent treatment, in an argument of reasonable
length, of (1) some of the major areas of accumulation of ecological knowledge
and insight in relation to development, (2) the changes of emphasis in
ecological interests among planners, (3) the development and integration of
theory (especially the efforts to straddle the boundaries of sociological and
ecological understanding), (4) the changing perceptions of man's relation to
nature, and (5) the underlying moral problems of management and welfare. The
changes of orientation in each of these arenas over the last decade are treated
below not simply as another stage of progress to confirm our faith in the
perfectibility of man, but as a function of a larger historical process of
increasing awareness and communication, the beginnings of which would have to be
sought at least as far back as the Industrial
Revolution.