Paul Harrison (pantheist)

Paul Harrison is an environmental writer, author of several books and reports on environment and development, and the founder and president of the World Pantheist Movement.

For most of his life, Harrison has been a journalist and writer on the environment and Third-World development. His best known books are Inside the Third World (1979) (on world poverty) and The Third Revolution (1993) (sub-titled 'Population, environment and a sustainable world'). He also wrote The Greening of Africa (1987) about sustainable development for Africa, and Inside the Inner City (1983) about inner city poverty in East London. His book on pantheism, Elements of Pantheism, was published by Element Books in 1999.

Harrison has worked for six UN agencies and travelled to many Third-World countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. In 1988 he received a UN Environment Programme (UNEP) Global 500 Roll of Honour award for his writings on environment.[1] He edited the United Nations Population Fund "State of World Population," (1990 and 1992) and was editor-in-chief for the Independent Commission on Population and Quality of Life report "Caring for the Future." He has edited several flagship reports for the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. He was the lead author of the American Association for the Advancement of Science "Atlas of Population and Environment."[2] From 2005 to 2008 he edited the United Nations Environment Programme Yearbook (formerly Geo Yearbook).[3]

Harrison was born in Oldham, Lancashire, England, and has master's degrees in European languages and literature (Jesus College, Cambridge) and political sociology (London School of Economics), and a PhD from Cambridge in Earth Sciences and Geography.

In July 1996 he posted the first page of what became the scientific pantheism site, and in 1997 he started the mailing list that grew into the World Pantheist Movement.

References

  1. "Adult Award Winner in 1988 - Paul Harrison". Archived from the original on 2011-06-22. Retrieved 2010-02-18.
  2. "AAAS atlas of population and environment". UNESCO Digital Library.
  3. "UNEP Year Book: an overview of our changing environment 2008". Wedocs.unep.org. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
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