Affiliations: Department of Urban and Environmental Science, Peking
University, Beijing 100871, China. E-mail: rdawson@colorado.net;
rwdawson@sina.com
Note: [] Corresponding author
Abstract: The lessons of history indicate that mismanagement of natural
resources and the environment often leads to potentially adverse consequences.
The increasing interest in economic development, particularly in the developing
countries of the world coupled with increasing population pressures and the
globalization of economic activity is placing noticeable stresses on the
ultimate sustainability of both human and environmental systems. Sustainable
development is not a new concept. It has been an area of concern for different
elements of society for some time. Yet efforts to understand the implications
of sustainable development have not, until recently, been formalized. We have
focused singularly on economic development and environmental quality as if they
were mutually exclusive. This paper focuses on the concept of concurrency as
both a conceptual framework and practicable method of understanding and
implementing the ecology and economy of sustainability.