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Bryan G. Norton

Bryan G. Norton is a Professor of Philosophy at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He writes on inter-generational equity, sustainability theory, bio-diversity policy and on valuation methods. His specialty is the integration of spatio-temporal scaling considerations into sustainability criteria.

Recent research includes work on inter-generational impacts of policy choices (sponsored by US EPA), on endangered species policy, on sustainability theory, and on cultural aspects of environmental protection (sponsored by the Army Environmental Policy Institute). He has also done research on the socio-economic impacts of global climate change for the United States Forest Service Global Change Program, and several projects on bio-diversity policy sponsored by the National Science Foundation.

Dr. Norton is author of Linguistic Frameworks and Ontology (Mouton Publishers, 1977); Why Preserve Natural Variety? (Princeton University Press, 1987); Toward Unity Among Environmentalists (Oxford University Press, 1991). He is editor of The Preservation of Species (Princeton University Press) and co-editor of Ecosystem Health: New Goals for Environmental Management (Island Press, 1992); Ethics on the Ark (Smithsonian Press 1995) and Searching for Sustainability: Interdisciplinary Essays in the Philosophy of Conservation Biology (Cambridge University Press, 2002). He is a member of the editorial boards of Environmental Ethics, Environmental Values, Ethics and the Environment, Ecosystem Health, and a former section editor for Conservation Biology.

Dr. Norton has served on numerous panels, including the Ecosystem Valuation Forum (US EPA), and The Risk Assessment Forum (US EPA), for whom he co-authored the scientific background papers for the first-ever protocols for Ecological Risk Assessment. He has recently completed a term as a charter member of the Environmental Economics Advisory Committee of the EPA Science Advisory Board.

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