BlakeJ.1981: 2 999 999Town and Country Planning50, 252–53.
2.
BrownL.C.1981: The sustainable society. New York: Norton.
3.
BowersJ.K.1982: Is afforestation economic?ECOS3 (1), 4–7.
4.
CaufieldC.1981a: Environment: Britain lags, Europe leads. New Scientist 13 August, 416–18.
5.
CaufieldC., 1981b: Britain's heritage of wildlife drains away. New Scientist 3 September, 583–85.
6.
Centre for Agricultural Strategy1980: Strategy for the UK forest industry. Reading: CAS, University of Reading, Report no. 6.
7.
ClemitsonI.RogersG.1981: A life to live: Beyond full employment. London: Junction Books, 33 Ivor Place.
8.
Committee for the Study of the Economics of Nuclear Electricity1982: Nuclear energy: The real costs. Camesford, Cornwall: CSENE, Worthyvale Manor.
9.
Commons' Select Committee on Energy1981: The government's statement on the new nuclear power programme, H.C. Paper 141 plus appendices, London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office.
10.
Council for the Protection of Rural England1981: Planning–friend or foe?London: CPRE, 4 Hobart Place.
11.
Department of Energy1981: Nuclear power. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, Cmnd 8317.
12.
The Ecology Party1981: Working for a future: An ecological approach to unemployment. London: The Ecology Party, 36–38 Clapham Road.
13.
Economic Commission for Europe1981: Environmental Impact Assessment. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
14.
ElginD.1981: Voluntary simplicity: Toward a way of life that is outwardly simple, inwardly rich. New York: William Morrow.
15.
ENDS1981: Pollution 1990: The environmental implications of Britain's changing industrial structure and technologies. London: Environmental Data Services Ltd, 14 Great Smith Street.
16.
ENDS Report1981a: Environmental mediation: An end to environmental conflict? ENDS Report 79 (August), 11–13.
17.
ENDS Report1981b: Air polution control and recession. ENDS Report 83 (December), 5.
18.
FalkN.1981: New communities and development trusts. Town and Country Planning50, 295–97.
19.
Forestry Commission1977: The wood production outlook for Great Britain: A review. Edinburgh: The Forestry Commission.
20.
Foundation for Alternatives1981: Local initiatives in Great Britain 1981. Banbury: The Rookery, Adderbury.
21.
Friends of the Earth1981: The pressurized water reactor: A critique of the government's nuclear power programme. London: FOE, 9 Poland St.
22.
GroveR. editor, 1982: Report on forestry. ECOS3(1), 1–33.
23.
HerringtonP.1982: Water: A consideration of conservation. Journal of the Royal Society of Arts (in press).
24.
HerringtonP.WebbM.G.1981: Changing policies for water services. Water Services85, (1025).
25.
HillJ.1981: Nuclear power's crisis of confidence. New Scientist 19 November, 516–20.
26.
HinesC.BennettP.PeltonM.PopayJ.1982: Beyond generalizations: Issues in the new technology debate. London: South Bank Polytechnic, Department of Town Planning.
27.
KenwardM.1982: Britain's first pressurized water reactor. New Scientist 28 January, 229–31.
28.
LeonardP.1982: A public role of landscape conversion. The Planner (February), 19–25.
29.
LiroffR.A.1981: NEPA litigation in the 1970s: A deluge or a dribbe?Natural Resources Journal21, 315–20.
30.
Lords' Select Committee on the European Communities1981: Environmental assessment of projects. House of Lords, Paper 69, London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office.
31.
MacEwenM.1981: A farmer's chance to get something for nothing. The Guardian 11 September, 11.
32.
MacEwenA.MacEwenM.1982: National parks: Conservation or cosmetics?Hemel Hemstead: Allen and Unwin.
33.
Monopolies and Mergers Commission1981: Central Electricity Generating Board. H.C. Paper 315, London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office.
34.
MooreN.1982: What parts of Britain's countryside must be preserved?New Scientist 21 January, 147–48.
35.
Natural Water Council1981: River quality–the 1980 survey and future outlook. London: NWC, Queen Annes Gate.
36.
Nature1982: Unemployment and the future. Nature295 (4 February), 355–56.
37.
O'RiordanT.1981a: Beware binding commitments: The British approach to EIA. Environmental Impact Assessment Review2 (1), 89–102.
38.
O'RiordanT., 1981b: Environmental issues. Progress in Human Geography5, 393–407.
39.
O'RiordanT., 1982: Environmental impact assessment in the context of economic recession. Geographical Journal (in press).
40.
O'RiordanT.SewellW.R.D. editors, 1981: Project appraisal and policy review. Chichester: John Wiley.
41.
ParryM.BruceA.HarknessC.1981: The plight of British moorlands. New Scientist 26 May, 550–51.
42.
PearceF.1981a: Water, water everywhere. New Scientist 8 October, 90–93.
43.
PearceF., 1981b: Fear of the dole keeps Britain's dirtiest factory open. New Scientist 18 June, 745.
44.
PeltuN.1982: Microelectronics and unemployment. New Scientist 28 January, 226–28.
45.
PeskinH.M.PortneyP.R.KneeseA.V. editors, 1981: Symposium on environmental regulation and the US economy. Natural Resources Journal21, 441–592.
46.
PriceC.DaleI.1982: Price predictions and economically afforestable area. Journal of Agricultural Economies33, 13–21.
47.
SelfP.1981: Public enterprise and public folly. Town and Country Planning50, 277.
48.
ShoardM.1982: The next task for planners. The Planner (January/February), 4–5.
49.
SouthwoodT.R.E.1981: The rise and fall of ecology. New Scientist 19 November, 512–15.
50.
Tourism and Recreation Research Unit1982: The economy of rural communities in the national parks of England and Wales. Edinburgh: TRRU, Chisholm House, High School Yard.
51.
Turning Point1981: The redistribution of work. Ironbridge: Spring Cottage, 9 New Road.