American
European
Author
Accredited/Activist
Bonus
100

An American economist whose curve is used to explain the relationship between environmental degradation and the per capita income of countries.

Simon Kuznets

100

A British economist whose theorem describes the conditions where an optimal decision can be made between multiple parties towards resolving disputes, though the theorem is used mainly to explain why inefficiencies exist.

Ronald H. Coase

100

Anthropologist and author of Natural Symbols (1970) which defined the cultural theory of risk based upon relationships illustrated through modeling the societal structure.

Mary Douglas

100

Credited with coining the term “political ecology” in the 1935 article “Nature Rambling: We Fight for Grass.”

Frank Throne

100

Authored the short essay “The Shallow and the Deep, Long-range Ecology Movement: A Summary” (1973) where the term Deep Ecology was coined.

Arne Næss

200

The first head of the U.S. Forest Service and is credited with forerunning the conservationist approach regarding human-environment relations.

Gifford Pinchot

200

A French mathematician who was famous for his triangle which patterns many numerical sequences in an aesthetic way.

Blaise Pascal

200

Author of Animal Liberation (1975) which started the movement of the same name where the application of the utilitarian idea of aiming for “the greatest good” or ethical behavior was principally applied to other animals.

Peter Singer

200

Credited with developing the three fundamental assumptions of practicing political economy.

Sinéad Bailey /Raymond Bryant

200

Coauthor of Deep Ecology: Living as if Nature Mattered (1985) which brought the deep ecology movement to the United States.

George Sessions/Bill Deval

300

Was a professor at University of Wisconsin, authored A Sand County Almanac (1949), and is considered the founding father of wildlife ecology.

Aldo Leopold

300

A German priest and professor who is credited in a large part for starting the Protestant Reformation, which in the western world’s culture opened the door for freedom of conscience.

Martin Luther

300

Author of Never Cry Wolf (1963), which contributed to the change in perception of wolves from villains to heroes by sharing the scientific findings of wolves’ ecological contribution and role in an accessible manner for general audiences.

Farley Mowat

300

Credited with reviving the term “political ecology” and setting off the scholarly movement of the same name with the article “Ownership and Political Ecology (1972).

Eric Wolf

300

Cornucopian and business professor that took a famous wager in 1980 and won.

Julian Simon

400

Free Space

Free Space

400

An English economist whose famous theory lies in the concern that the rate of population increase would outpace the rate of the resources increase, eventually leading to a point of crisis where there were too many people for the number of resources available.

Thomas Malthus

400

Author of Silent Spring (1962) which advocated the end of the widespread use of DDT.

Rachel Carson

400

Social activist and prolific author who promoted social ecology where the fundamental assumption is that “ecological ills are social in nature.”

Murray Bookchin

400

Neo-Malthusian and Biologist that took a famous wager in 1980 and lost.

Paul Ehrlich

500

Founder of the Sierra Club and is credited with forerunning the preservationist approach of the wilderness regarding human-environment relations.

John Muir

500

An Italian mathematician that has a numerical sequence named after him that he developed off of a model for breeding rabbits.

Fibonacci

500

Author of Win-Win Ecology (2003) which promoted the reconciliation ecology worldview that since there is not enough space in nature preserves to save biodiversity that biodiversity should be promoted in human-dominated landscapes

Michael Rosenzweig

500

Instigator of the 1950s Green Revolution, which changed the world’s approach to agriculture by bringing in induced intensification.

Norman Borlaug

500

Author of The Communist Manifesto (1848) in which the capitalist mode of production was described to be the conflict between the bourgeoisie (the ruling classes) which control the means of production and the proletariat (the working classes) that sell their labour-power in return for wages.

Karl Marx