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Global Greens: Inside the International Environmental Establishment - Sustainable Living Products for Eco-Conscious Consumers | Perfect for Home, Office & Green Lifestyle
Global Greens: Inside the International Environmental Establishment - Sustainable Living Products for Eco-Conscious Consumers | Perfect for Home, Office & Green Lifestyle
Global Greens: Inside the International Environmental Establishment - Sustainable Living Products for Eco-Conscious Consumers | Perfect for Home, Office & Green Lifestyle

Global Greens: Inside the International Environmental Establishment - Sustainable Living Products for Eco-Conscious Consumers | Perfect for Home, Office & Green Lifestyle

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Description

Published in 1998, Global Greens narrates the story of international environmental groups in world affairs. It examines how nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) work with the United Nations and other international organizations to promote environmentalist policies and treaties. To understand many of the current foreign policy controversies it is increasingly important to know how international environmental groups are involved.Global Greens describes in detail NGO activity at some of the most significant UN environmental conferences through the end of the 20th century, including the global warming conference in Kyoto, Japan. Most of the story is serious, but some of it amuses. Inside the Kyoto conference hall, four men disguised as world leaders play soccer with a large inflatable balloon of the planet, activists blanketed the building with propaganda leaflets, and a group of grim-faced individuals stand solemnly around three ice carvings of penguins begging the little creatures to forgive mankind for permitting the global warming that causes them to melt.As recent news developments have confirmed, environmental groups have been accomplishing–and continue to accomplish–their objectives gradually and under a cloak of secrecy. Few Americans know that nonprofit organizations, staffed by professionals, primarily Americans, and financed by a mix of private and public funds, exercise real power in the conduct of diplomacy and the creation of international policy. A global environmental movement is using international agencies to undermine national self-government, economic freedom, and personal liberty.  Global Greens exposes the behind-the-scenes efforts of this well-funded and ideologically driven force.

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In 1990, Capital Research Center published one of the first analyses of the environmental movement's political agenda and funding sources -- "Protecting the Evnironment: Old Rhetoric, New Imperatives," by Jo Kwong Echard. The Center has, since 1984, specialized in such research. Its periodic "Studies in Organizational Trends" are valuable resources.Now Capital builds on this exemplary foundation with the release of James M. Sheehan's "Global Greens: Inside the International Environmental Establishment." Sheehan -- who directs international policy at Competitive Enterprise Institute -- gathers uder one roof, so to speak, pertinent facts about the political and monetary relationship between the UN and international environmental groups. His documentation is so devastating that even black helicopter critics will be forced to achknowledge the threat to American sovereignty is real."Global Greens" begins with an analysis of how environmental groups have transformed into unelected, UN-accredited "representatives of the public" -- non-governmental organizations (NGOs). These self-appointed, quasi-governmental groups participate at every level of treaty and international law negotiations. The list of issues that fall under their purview is extensive -- global warming, international trade, fishing, biotechnology, population control, food security, forestry, and the world bank. Environmental NGOs have tied these issues together under the sustainable development aegis -- the old socialist imperative of controlled economic development and wealth redistribution repackaged in new, post cold war rhetoric. "Global Greens" documents the events that have propelled this agenda forward.Sheehan insists that, "if the battle over environment is the equivalent of yesterday's Cold War, then environmental pressure groups...must support and promote the actions international agencies take to intervene in markets and regulate private decision-making around the world." The only way this agenda can succeed, however, is with American tax dollars. According to Sheehan, green organizations "need increased appropriations for agencies like the World Bank, the Global Environmental Facility, and the U.S. Agency for International Development. Most of all, they need to strengthen the United Nations system on whose behalf they...urge Congress to make full payment of back 'dues.'" In short, "Global Greens have put their faith in the 'process.' They have achieved success even when their ideas have been discredited. What's needed now," Sheehan concludes, "is the vigilance to detect their maneuverings and the skill to overcome them."This strategy requires a well-informed public and legislature. "Global Greens" -- a scant 200 pages -- is the perfect resource to put in the hands of anyone who needs to get "up to speed" on the issue -- especially newly elected local, state and federal officials.

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