THE STOCKHOLM CONFERENCE 



Aaronson, Terri. "UN Environment Agency Sent to Kenya." IVew Scientist, 

 Jan. 11, 1973:72-75. 



"The United Nations decision to site its Environmental Secretariat in 

 Nairobi represents a victory for the Third World view that malnutrition, 

 poverty, disease have a higher priority than pollution. But the new U.N. 

 agency starts life with severe problems." 

 Dosa, Marta L. "A View of the International Environmental Information Prob- 

 lem." Special Libraries, v. 64, Oct. 1973: 457-463. 



"Report on the United Nations Environment Programme Governing 

 Council and on the World Assembly of Non-Government Organizations 

 Concerned with the Global Environment, June 5-26, 1973." 

 Engfeldt, Lars-Goran. "The United Nations and the Humjjn Environment — 

 Some Experiences. "International Organization, v. 27, summer 1973: 393-412. 

 "... a non-technical summary of some experiences from the five years 

 which have passed since the Swedish government took its initiative to place 

 the problems of human environment on the agenda of the United Nations 

 for the first time." 

 Environmental Studies Board. Committee for International Environmental Pro- 

 grams. Institutional Arrangements Jar International Environmental Cooperatio7i; 

 a Report to the Department of State. Washington, National Academy of Sciences, 

 1972. 74 p. 



In a report prepared for the U.N. Conference on the Human Environment, 

 recommends that the U.S. participate in international environmental pro- 

 grams and support new institutions and adapt old ones to better serve this 

 end. 

 Gardner, R. N. "Role of the U.N. in Environmental Problems." International 



Organization, v. 26, Spring 1972: 238-254. 

 Joyner, Christopher C. and Nancy D. Joyner. "Global Eco-management and In- 

 ternational Organizations: the Stockholm Conference and Problems of Co- 

 operation." Natural Resources Journal, v. 14, Oct. 1974: 533-555. 



". . . tobriefly analyze the nature of the environmental crisis, to evaluate 



international machinery presently available for implementing restorative 



action, and to point out conflicting world priorities that are hindering genuine 



international environmental cooperation." 



Langway, Lynn and Jerry Edgerton. "The U.S. at Stockholm." Nation, v. 15, 



July 10, 1972: 7-11. 



Argues that the State Dept. dominated the U.S. delegation at the U.N. 

 Conference on the Human Environment to the extent that the environment 

 often came out second-best to U.S. foreign policj^ objectives. 

 McLin, Jon. "Stockholm: the Politics of 'Only One Earth.'" [Hanover, N.H.] 

 American Universities Field Staff [1972] 12 p. (American Universities Field 

 Staff. Fieldstaff reports, West Europe series, v. 7, no. 4 [Europe]) 

 Summarizes the U.N. Conference on the Human Environment. 

 Schacter, O. et al. "Post-Stockholm: Influencing National Environmental Law 

 and Practice Through International Law and Policy." American Journal 

 of International Law. Proceedings, v. 66, Sept. 1972: 1-14. 

 Tinker, Jon. "World Environment: What's Happening at UNEP?" New Scientist, 

 v. 66, June 12, 1975: 600-613. 



Discusses the structure, function, and operation of UNEP, the United 

 Nations Environment Programme. 

 Members of Congress for Peace Through Law. World Environment and Inter- 

 national Cooperation Committee. "What's Happened Since Stockholm? 

 International Environmental Action Since the 1972 Stockholm Conference 

 on the Human Environment." In Extension of remarks of Don Fraser. Con- 

 gressional Record [daily ed.j v. 120, Dec. 20, 1974: H12741-H12746. 

 Reviews the activities of the U.N. Environment Program. 



^e>* 



(1992) 



