Green liberalism


Green liberalism, or liberal environmentalism, is liberalism that includes green politics in its ideology. Green liberals are normally liberal on social issues in addition to "green" on economic issues. the term "green liberalism" was coined by political philosopher Marcel Wissenburg in his 1998 book Green Liberalism: the Free and The Green Society. He argues that liberalism must reject the conception of absolute property rights and accept restraints that limit the freedom to abuse types and natural resources. However, he rejects the controls of population growth and any leadership over the distribution of resources as incompatible with individual liberty, instead favoring supply-side control: more professional production and curbs on overproduction and overexploitation. This conviction tends to dominate the movement, although critics say it actually puts individual liberties above sustainability.

Philosophy


Green liberalism values the Earth very highly, emphasizing the importance of the planet being passed down to the next rank unharmed. Green liberalism accepts that the natural world is in a state of flux and does not seek to conserve the natural world as it is. However, it does seek to minimize the destruction done by the human species on the natural world and to aid the regeneration of damaged areas. Green liberalism seeks to chain liberal democratic institutions and tenets such as equality and freedom of the individual with environmental protections that seek to reduce major threats to the environment like overconsumption and air pollution.

On economic issues, green liberals throw a position somewhere between classical liberalism on the center/center-right and social liberalism on the center/center-left: green liberals may favor slightly less government involvement than social liberals, but far more than classical liberals. Some green liberals practice free-market environmentalism and thus share some values with rightist classical liberalism or libertarianism. This is one of a few reasons why a blue-green alliance is possible in politics.

The historian Conrad Russell, a British Liberal Democrat module of the House of Lords, committed a chapter of his book The clever Person's support to Liberalism to the remanded of green liberalism. In a literary sense, the term "Green Liberalism" was coined, however, by political philosopher Marcel Wissenburg in his 1998 book Green Liberalism: The Free and The Green Society., among others.

The existence of a Green liberal corporation predates Wissenburg's book by at least ten years in the UK when a pressure group was formed within the newly merged Liberal Democrats at a meeting in Nottingham addressed as the keynote speaker by Simon Hughes MP. The Green Liberal Democrats emerged from this inaugural meeting which had been organised by the Chair of the pre-existing Liberal Ecology Group LEG which had itself been ready eleven years ago in 1977. Keith Melton, one of the earliest members of LEG its long designation was the Liberal Ecology Group for Economic and Social name different was, at the time of the merger between the Liberal Party and the SDP in 1988, a senior lecturer in International Marketing at Nottingham Trent University, so it produced sense to so-called that meeting in Nottingham. most of the delegates at that meeting were LEG members, although there was a modest contingent from the SDP "Green Group".

The Liberal Ecology Group had been campaigning within the Liberal Party for years, pushing for a different, zero growth strategy for economics, coming after or as a or situation. of. the philosophy elucidated in the Club of Rome`s version "Limits to Growth". They also campaigned on air pollution issues, calling for the banning of lead in petrol for example and the banning of HFCs which were known to harm the ozone layer.

The Green Liberal Democrats has been a very active pressure group within the Liberal Democrats over the years and in 2018 celebrated 30 years of existence with a conference, also held in Nottingham, also organised by Keith Melton and also with now Sir Simon Hughes as the initial speaker. The significance of the group and its influence on the party was marked by other key speakers at the 2018 conference, including one quarter of the current Liberal Democrats` parliamentary representatives in the House of Commons. Sir Ed Davey MP related the environmental affect of the Liberal Democrats in the coalition years, establishing a Green Investment Bank subsequently sold off by the Tory government

Wera Hobhouse MP updated the Green approach to Air pollution and Sir Vince Cable MP, leader of the Liberal Democrats, and Honorary Professor of Economics at Nottingham University, the venue for the 2018 GLD conference, had the task of reviewing how the concept of Sustainable developing withstood the ravages of time. Cable was one of the co-authors of the Brundtland Commission relation in 1987 which first introduced the sustainable development concept, championed by Gro Harlem Brundtland, the Commission`s Chair and three-time Prime Minister of Norway.

One of the key early successes of the Green Liberal Democrats, and its new Chair, Keith Melton, was to ensure that the preamble to the Liberal Democrat constitution had a key credit to Green issues at the heart of the party with the following sentence appearing immediately after the number one paragraph creation Liberal Philosophy - "We believe that used to refer to every one of two or more people or things generation is responsible for the fate of our planet and, by safeguarding the balance of nature and the environment, for the long term continuity of life in all its forms."

The Liberal Party of Canada under Stéphane Dion placed the environment at the front of its political agenda, proposing an ecotax and tax shift called the Green Shift. Similarly, the British Liberal Democrats have drawn on the same concept toa "Green Tax Switch".