Environmentalist thought and ideology Books
Bristol University Press All We Want is the Earth: Land, Labour and
Book SynopsisThis book brings together ideas from the environmental humanities, cultural geography, Science and Technology studies, political ecology, postcolonial and decolonial theory in an accessible way, and offers a fresh way to think about environmental politics that is adequate to the challenges facing us in the twenty-first century.Trade Review“An act of recovery, a reclaiming of movements and struggles that have been pushed out of frame by dominant interpretations of what gets to count as environmental politics.” Kai Heron, Lancaster UniversityTable of Contents1. Introduction: Beyond Modern Environmentalism 2. Suburb, Field, Laboratory: Recomposing Geographies of Early Environmentalism First Interlude: Green and White Dreams 3. Revolt Against One-Worldism: Radical Claims on Land and Work Post-1968 Second Interlude: Planetary Icons 4. The Right to Subsist: Transnational Commons Against the Enclosure of Environments and Environmentalism Third Interlude: Witnessing in the Global Resonance Machine 5. Earth Politics: Disagreement and Emergent Indigeneity in the So-Called Anthropocene Fourth Interlude: Making Things Resonate 6. Conclusion: Resonance Beyond Environmentalism Coda: Afterlives
£71.99
WW Norton & Co The Seasons Alter: How to Save Our Planet in Six
Book SynopsisIn November 2015, the world powers came together in Paris with the hope of reaching an agreement on the most urgent issue of our time: climate change. While it was an historic moment that brought solutions within the realm of possibility, the obstacles to enacting real revolution were still many. Now, confronting these controversies head-on, two scholars use a series of ground-breaking arguments to frame the problem in human terms, showing us how vested interests have been able to control the conversation, tracing a line of reasoning that will break through the seemingly impenetrable barriers of political obfuscation. This watershed book evokes the battle cries of Naomi Klein and the exigency of Rachel Carson, laying the groundwork for a path to environmental salvation.Trade Review"...the extended fictional debate illuminates key scientific, social and political complexities, and humanizes an issue often perceived as abstract." -- Nature"Philosophers of science Philip Kitcher and Evelyn Fox Keller call for constructive discourse on climate change in their unusual exploration of this urgent, highly politicized issue. While coherently explaining the science, they use Socratic dialogue to explore differing viewpoints." -- Mary Craig, Highlights of the Season’s Releases - Nature
£12.34
Grey House Publishing Inc The Environmental Debate
Book Synopsis
£131.20
University of Utah Press,U.S. Re-Envisioning the Anthropocene Ocean
Book SynopsisThe world is at a critical moment, when humans must grapple with thinking about the planet’s oceans from ecological, physical, social, and legal perspectives. Warming ocean temperatures, changing currents, cultural displacement, Indigenous resilience, melting polar ice, habitat loss, are but a few of the global issues reflected in the planetary ocean as a front line in the unfolding drama of climate change. Re-Envisioning the Anthropocene Ocean brings together leading scientists, lawyers, humanists, and Indigenous voices to tell of the ocean’s precarious position in the twenty-first century. The contributors affirm that the planetary ocean is crucial to our well-being and overdue for a positive change in public action to enhance the world’s resilience to climate change, ocean acidification, and other stressors. These essays begin that crucial work of positively re-imagining the ocean in the Anthropocene. This volume brings diverse perspectives to the planet’s ocean future. New essays are contextualized with narratives woven from earlier ocean writers, showing readers how past perceptions of the ocean have led us to where we are today in terms of both problems and potential new visions. In this one volume, readers experience both the history of humanity’s multi- and interdisciplinary interactions with the ocean, find new perspectives on that history, and discover ideas for looking forward.Trade Review “The book makes a unique contribution in bringing together thinkers across a wide range of disciplines, from oceanography to law to literary criticism. There are a number of new voices contributing insights into ocean management, ocean protection, and ocean narrative.” —Anastasia M. Telesetsky, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo “This collection is unique and innovative in coordinating the knowledge of scholars from the sciences and the humanities, as well as notably in highlighting the importance of a legal perspective. The writing is engaging and replete with pithy citations along with memorable, helpful details. Re-envisioning the Anthropocene Ocean is at once enjoyable, sobering, and thought-provoking.” —Margaret Cohen, Stanford University Table of Contents 1. Introduction: Why Re- envision the Anthropocene Ocean? By Robin Kundis Craig and Jeffrey Mathes McCarthy Part I. Re- envisioning the Ocean as Connection Editors’ Introduction to Part I 2. Literary Oceans: Ship, Crew, Climate by Jeffrey Mathes McCarthy 3. Creating Ocean: Planetary Immersion and Premodern Globalization by Steve Mentz 4. Minds Tossing on the Ocean: Venice, the Sea, and the Crisis of Imagination by Shaul Bassi 5. Mobilizing Vessels and Voices: “A Climate Movement in the Pacific, for the Pacific, and with the Pacific” by Taylor Cunningham Part II. Re- envisioning Ocean Protection Editors’ Introduction to Part II 6. Humanity’s Changing Relationship with the Ocean by Jeremy B. C. Jackson 7. A Reservation of Water by Thomas Michael Swensen 8. Re-envisioning the Value of Marine Spaces in Law: Massachusetts Lobstermen’s Association v. Ross by Robin Kundis Craig 9. One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Reforming the National Ocean Policy for the Twenty- First Century by Nathaniel E. Broadhurst 10. Rights of Nature: The Answer to Our Oceanic Issues? by Abigail Benesh Part III. Re- envisioning Ocean Action Editors’ Introduction to Part III 11. Plastic in the Pacific: How to Address an Environmental Catastrophe by Christopher Finlayson 12. Recrafting Narratives to Disrupt the Oceanic Plastic Plague by Brenda B. Bowen 13. Adaptive and Interactive Futures: Developing “Serious Games” for Coastal Community Engagement and Decision-Making by Kathryn K. Davies, Benjamin A. Davies, Paula Blackett, Paula Holland, and Nicholas Cradock- Henry 14. The Human Face of the Ocean: Creative Collaboration for Conservation Tierney Thys 15. Conclusion: Ocean Wildlife Photography as a Metaphor for the Anthropocene Ocean by Robin Kundis Craig Appendices: Inspiring Ocean Voices Editors’ Introduction Appendix A: A Deeper Historical Perspective 1. Excerpt from The Free Sea, by Hugo Grotius 2. “They that Occupy Their Business on Great Waters,” excerpt from Atlantic, by Simon Winchester 3. “From Davy Jones’ Locker to the Foot Locker: The Case of the Floating Nikes,” excerpt from The Social Construction of the Ocean, by Philip E. Steinberg Appendix B: A Broader Global Perspective 1. “Our Sea of Islands,” by Epeli Hau‘ofa 2. “Just Where Does One Get a License to Kill Indians?,” excerpt from The Sea Is My Country, by Joshua L. Reid 3. “Praise Song for Oceania,” by Craig Santos Perez 4. Excerpt from “Rehabilitation: A Proposal for a Climate Compensation Mechanism for Small Island States,” by Maxine Burkett Appendix C: A Snapshot of the Last Century of Scientific Calls to Arms 1. “The Encircling Sea,” excerpt from The Sea Around Us, by Rachel Carson 2. “Summary for Policymakers,” excerpt from Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate, by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change About the Contributors Index
£76.50
Texas Tech Press,U.S. Sand, Water, Salt: Managing the Elements in
Book SynopsisJada Ach's scholarship in Sand, Water, Salt: Managing the Elements in Literature of the American West, 1880–1925 seeks to reevaluate the Progressive Era's environmental legacy. Taking an ecocritical approach to turn-of-the-century literature set in the American West, Ach interrogates texts by asking what kinds of environmental, national, and cultural stories the elements have to tell about land and oceanic management. Sand, Water, Salt investigates managerial engagements with dynamic ecologies in three particular Western environments: the arid deserts, the semiarid high plains, and the Pacific Ocean.At different times, and to varying degrees, Americans have deemed these environments economically unproductive, incompatible with Anglo-American settlement, and/or highly unmanageable. Despite these varied complaints, the United States has also intensely desired these "wasteland" spaces, perceiving them as sources of both national wealth and elite pleasure. Sand, Water, Salt moves through a variety of novels, memoirs, and cultural artifacts from the 1880s to the 1920s, including L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Frank Norris's McTeague, Mary Hunter Austin's The Land of Little Rain, The Virginian by Owen Wister, Life among the Piutes by Sarah Winnemucca, as well as Jack London's The Sea-Wolf and Yone Noguchi's The American Diary of a Japanese Girl. Ach ultimately asks what we gain by looking back at fin-de-siècle American literature with a queer, ecological justice-oriented eye, a particularly invigorating conversation that uniquely uses the elements as foci.
£32.21
NewSouth Publishing Living Democracy: An ecological manifesto for the
Book SynopsisExtinction is in the air. There's a mounting sense of desperation in the face of ecological crises, gaping economic inequality and racial injustice, and a post-truth in politics that's divorced from reality.But what if it were possible for us to not just survive, but thrive, in the 21st century? What if the solutions to our ecological, social and political crises could all be found in the same approach?In Living Democracy, Greens activist Tim Hollo offers bold ideas and a positive vision for the future. While it might be the end of the world as we know it, it doesn't have to be the end of the world. In fact, around the globe, people and communities are beginning a whole new journey.Whether you're a concerned community member, or someone who is already active in social or environmental campaigning, this book will inspire and inform you, and get you fired up to co-create a common, more equitable future. A living democracy. Hollo presents lessons for communities, organisations, political parties and individuals, and a recipe for combining all these ingredients into transformative collective action.
£18.86
Wilfrid Laurier University Press Ecologies in Practice: Environmentally Engaged
Book SynopsisWhat is the responsibility, or the task of the arts as we face environmental crisis?Ecologies in Practice is an edited collection of dynamic and multi-formatted contributions that explore the ways in which cultural production informs perceptions, communications, and knowledge of environmental distress in a Canadian context, pointing to the significance of the arts in the creation and sharing of crucial counter narratives and alternative possibilities. Ecologies in Practice identifies the arts as an important mode of inquiry for reimagining, and for public engagement and understanding of pressing environmental and social concerns, while acknowledging the ways in which it contributes important work to the growing interdisciplinary field of Environmental Humanities.Bringing together artistic perspectives from a range of lenses and voices, including artists, writers, scholars, activists, curators, theorists, and makers, Ecologies in Practice offers important tools for artists, scholars, students, and research-creators invested in arts and the environment. Contributors present artistic methods as alternative sites of understanding that contribute significant and affective work to environmental scholarship, while thinking outside of the disciplinary borders and confines of the artworld. Ecologies in Practice aims to initiate vital conversations among practitioners, and together with readers, consider what environmentally engaged arts lend differently to these conversations.Table of ContentsAn Introduction to Making Ecological, Elysia French and Amanda White INTERRUPT: Making as Intervention Notes from a Garden Wedged into the City, Camille Georgeson-Usher Dirty Nature: Pedagogy, Performance, Politics, David Huebert and Tom Cull I Believe in Living: an intertextual curatorial approach to environmental (inter)relations, Ellyn Walker WITNESS: Picturing the Invisible seeds are meant to disperse [to get to the future, a return to the past], Christina Battle Of Passengers and Lost Relations, Lisa Hirmer Carbon Study: Walking in the Dark, Genevieve Robertson(RE)PLACE: Offering Alternative Experiences of Place into steps and breath, leah decter Coney Island MTL: Re-Mediating the Greatest Show on Earth, Natalie Doonan After The Fire, Andreas Rutkauskas Listening in Place, Emma Morgan-Thorp REFLECT: Considerations of a Material Practice Can Ceramics Ever be a Sustainable Cultural Practice? Mary Ann Steggles Mapping Narratives: Methods and Entanglements of Social Practice, Maria Michails 1:10000, Dana Prieto Field Work: Rural Residencies and Environmental Arts, Emily McGiffin Conclusion, Elysia French and Amanda White BibliographyContributor Biographies
£33.11
Wits University Press Emancipatory Feminism in the Time of Covid-19:
Book SynopsisThe Covid-19 pandemic threw into stark relief the multi-dimensional threats created by neoliberal capitalism. Government measures to alleviate the crisis were largely inadequate, leaving women – in particular working-class women – to carry the increased burden of care work while at the same time placing themselves in direct risk as frontline workers. Emancipatory Feminism in the Time of Covid-19, the seventh volume in the Democratic Marxism series, explores how many subaltern women – working class, peasant and indigenous – responded to challenges of increased labour precarity and additional care-work. The book critiques neoliberal feminism, which has overshadowed the experiences of feminist grassroots resistance. Instead, the academics and activists in this volume call to action a new wave feminism that is responsive to socio-ecological and economic exploitation, and the oppression of both women and the environment within the patriarchal capitalist system. Offering a diverse range of approaches to this topic, contributions range from women leading the defence of Rojava – the Kurdish region of Syria, anti-capitalist ecology and building food secure pathways in communities across Africa, championing climate justice in mining-affected communities and transforming gender divisions in mining labour practices in South Africa, to contesting macro-economic policies affecting the working conditions of nurses. These practices demonstrate a feminist understanding of the current systemic crises of capitalism and patriarchal oppression. What is offered here is a focus on subaltern women’s grassroots resistance that advances and enables solidarity-based political projects, deepens democracy, and builds capacities and alliances to advance new feminist alternatives.Table of Contents Acknowledgements Acronyms and Abbreviations Introduction – Vishwas Satgar and Ruth Ntlokotse PART I: Indigenous Emancipatory Feminism and Transformative Resistance Chapter 1 Extractivism and Crises: Rooting Development Alternatives in Emancipatory African Socialist Eco-feminism – Samantha Hargreaves Chapter 2 Jineology and the Pandemic: Rojava’s Alternative Anti-Capitalist-Statist Model – Hawzhin Azeez PART II: Ecology and Transformative Women’s Power in South Africa Chapter 3 Doing ecofeminism in a time of Covid-19: Beyond the limits of liberal feminism – Inge Konik Chapter 4 ‘Our Existence is Resistance’: Women Challenging Mining and the Climate Crisis in a time of Covid-19 – Dineo Skosana and Jacklyn Cock Chapter 5 Women and Food Sovereignty: Tackling Hunger during Covid-19 – Courtney Morgan and Jane Cherry PART III: Economic Transformation, Public Services and Transformative Women’s Power in South Africa Chapter 6 Quiet Rebels: Underground Women Miners and Refusal as Resistance – Asanda Benya Chapter 7 Class, Social Mobility and African Women in South Africa – Jane Mbithi-Dikgole Chapter 8 Government’s Covid-19 Fiscal Responses and the Crisis of Social Reproduction – Sonia Phalatse and Busi Sibeko Chapter 9 Nursing and the Crisis of Social Reproduction - Before and During Covid-19 – Christine Bischoff PART IV: Where to for Emancipatory Feminism? Chapter 10 Crises, Socio-Ecological Reproduction and Intersectionality: Challenges for Emancipatory Feminism – Vishwas Satgar Conclusion: Ruth Ntlokotse and Vishwas Satgar Contributors Index
£24.00
Emerald Publishing Limited Community Campaigns for Sustainable Living:
Book SynopsisThis book is based on research and observations undertaken for the author's PhD thesis at the National University of Ireland, and represents a case study of national and regional campaigns against both the Irish state's Regional Waste Management Plans and the corporate sector's attempts to develop waste incinerators or dumps in various parts of Ireland. This book provides an in depth account of the mobilizing patterns and framing processes of community campaigns which emerged in the wake of the Irish state's introduction of regional plans for waste management, which included plans for municipal 'waste to energy' plants or incinerators. It is the only book with a sole focus on this aspect of Irish society during the 'Celtic Tiger' boom which preceded the current economic downturn, and examines policy, population, development social issues and local and national electoral processes in detail at a time of immense change in the Republic of Ireland. As such, it provides a salient insight into the societal shifts which provide opportunities for social movements to oppose state or corporate plans which may be perceived to have human health or environmental risks associated with them.Table of ContentsAbout the Author. Dedication. Preface. Chapter 1 Introduction. Chapter 2 Theoretical Framework: Mobilising Internal Resources and Exploiting External Opportunities. Chapter 3 The Evolution of POS: Economic Growth and the Mobilisation and Framing of Comparative Cases. Chapter 4 Sustainable Development and the State's Waste Policy Framework. Chapter 5 Framing Perspectives on Waste Management: Political Opportunities and Resource Mobilisation in GSE's Case. Chapter 6 The Democratic Deficit Frame. Chapter 7 The Opportunities and Constraints of the Democratic Deficit Frame in the 2002 General Election. Chapter 8 Conclusion of the Study of the GSE Case. Postscript 1: The Galway Water Crisis. Postscript 2: Ecological Modernisation and Irish Environmental Policy. References. Subject Index. Community Campaigns for Sustainable Living: Health, Waste & Protest in Civil Society. Advances in Ecopolitics. Advances in Ecopolitics. Copyright page. Newspaper and Media Sources, and Interviews. Author Index.
£96.99
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Game Theory and International Environmental
Book SynopsisKey environmental issues, such as biodiversity and climate change, have in recent years become more pressing than ever. Where the critical papers in the early 1990s explained the difficulties of cooperation in tackling transboundary environmental problems, later works have analyzed the various alternatives, and increased our understanding of various institutional designs and negotiation protocols’ impact on the success of cooperation. This collection brings together the most important articles on the game theoretic analysis of international environmental cooperation to both confront the cooperative and non-cooperative approaches to this, and demonstrate the diversity of methods used to analyze international environmental agreements.Trade Review'As the nations of the world struggle to negotiate an effective post-Kyoto international climate agreement, there is no area of economic scholarship that has more to offer than game theory. Michael Finus and Alejandro Caparrós, themselves leading scholars in this realm, have assembled a dream team of authors and a remarkable set of key articles from the best economics journals to produce a book with close to 50 chapters that should be essential reading for novices as well as experienced researchers' -- Robert Stavins, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, USTable of ContentsContents: Acknowledgements Introduction Michael Finus and Alejandro Caparrós PART I FOUNDATIONS 1. Karl-Göran Mäler (1989), ‘The Acid Rain Game’, in H. Folmer and E. van Ierland (eds), Valuation Methods and Policy Making in Environmental Economics, Chapter 12, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier, 231–52 2. Scott Barrett (1994), ‘Self-Enforcing International Environmental Agreements’, Oxford Economic Papers, Special Issue on Environmental Economics, 46, October, 878–94 3. Carlo Carraro and Domenico Siniscalco (1993), ‘Strategies for the International Protection of the Environment’, Journal of Public Economics, 52 (3), October, 309–28 4. Michael Hoel (1992), ‘International Environment Conventions: The Case of Uniform Reductions of Emissions’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 2 (2), March, 141–59 5. Parkash Chander and Henry Tulkens (1997), ‘The Core of an Economy with Multilateral Environmental Externalities’, International Journal of Game Theory, 26 (3), October, 379–401 PART II TECHNICAL ADVANCES 6. Effrosyni Diamantoudi and Eftichios S. Sartzetakis (2006), ‘Stable International Environmental Agreements: An Analytical Approach’, Journal of Public Economic Theory, 8 (2), May, 247–63 7. Santiago J. Rubio and Alistair Ulph (2006), ‘Self-Enforcing International Environmental Agreements Revisited’, Oxford Economic Papers, 58 (2), April, 233–63 8. Larry Karp and Leo Simon (2013), ‘Participation Games and International Environmental Agreements: A Non-Parametric Model’, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 65 (2), March, 326–44 9. Carsten Helm (2001), ‘On the Existence of a Cooperative Solution for a Coalitional Game with Externalities’, International Journal of Game Theory, 30 (1), September, 141–6 PART III COMPLIANCE 10. Rögnvaldur Hannesson (1997), ‘Fishing as a Supergame’, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 32 (3), March, 309–22 11. Michael Finus and Sigve Tjøtta (2003), ‘The Oslo Protocol on Sulfur Reduction: The Great Leap Forward?’ Journal of Public Economics, 87 (9–10), September, 2031–48 12. Henk Folmer, Pierre v. Mouche and Shannon Ragland (1993), ‘Interconnected Games and International Environmental Problems’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 3 (4), August, 313–35 13. Anke Gerber and Philipp C. Wichardt (2009), ‘Providing Public Goods in the Absence of Strong Institutions’, Journal of Public Economics, 93 (3–4), April, 429–39 14. Todd L. Cherry and David M. McEvoy (2013), ‘Enforcing Compliance with Environmental Agreements in the Absence of Strong Institutions: An Experimental Analysis’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 54 (1), January, 63–77 15. David M. McEvoy and John K. Stranlund (2009), ‘Self-Enforcing International Environmental Agreements with Costly Monitoring for Compliance’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 42 (4), April, 491–508 16. Nori Tarui, Charles F. Mason, Stephen Polasky and Greg Ellis (2008), ‘Cooperation in the Commons with Unobservable Actions’, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 55 (1), January, 37–51 17. Prajit K. Dutta and Roy Radner (2009) ‘A Strategic Analysis of Global Warming: Theory and Some Numbers’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 71 (2), August, 187–209 PART IV NEGOTIATIONS, SECOND-BEST DESIGNS AND INSTITUTIONS 18. Michael Finus and Bianca Rundshagen (1998), ‘Toward a Positive Theory of Coalition Formation and Endogenous Instrumental Choice in Global Pollution Control’, Public Choice, 96 (1–2), July, 145–86 19. Scott Barrett (2002), ‘Consensus Treaties’, Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, 158 (4), December, 529–47 20. Pierre Courtois and Guillaume Haeringer (2012), ‘Environmental Cooperation: Ratifying Second-Best Agreements’, Public Choice, 151 (3–4), June, 565–84 21. A. Caparrós, J.-C. Péreau and T. Tazdaït (2004), ‘North-South Climate Change Negotiations: A Sequential Game with Asymmetric Information’, Public Choice, 121 (3–4), December, 455–80 22. Alejandro Caparrós and Jean-Christophe Péreau (2013), ‘Forming Coalitions to Negotiate North–South Climate Agreements’, Environment and Development Economics, Special Issue on Strategic Behaviour and Environmental Commons, 18 (1), February, 69–92 23. Bård Harstad (2012), ‘Climate Contracts: A Game of Emissions, Investments, Negotiations, and Renegotiations’, Review of Economic Studies, 79 (4), October, 1527–57 24. Carlo Carraro, Carmen Marchiori and Sonia Oreffice (2009), ‘Endogenous Minimum Participation in International Environmental Treaties’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 42 (3), March, 411–25 25. Astrid Dannenberg, Andreas Lange and Bodo Sturm (2014), ‘Participation and Commitment in Voluntary Coalitions to Provide Public Goods’, Economica, 81 (322), April, 257–75 26. Scott Barrett (2006), ‘Climate Treaties and “Breakthrough” Technologies’, American Economic Review, 96 (2), May, 22–5 27. Michael Hoel and Aart de Zeeuw (2010), ‘Can a Focus on Breakthrough Technologies Improve the Performance of International Environmental Agreements?’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 47 (3), November, 395–406 PART V TRANSFERS, SHARING AND FAIRNESS 28. Matthew McGinty (2007), ‘International Environmental Agreements among Asymmetric Nations’, Oxford Economic Papers, 59 (1), January, 45–62 29. Hans-Peter Weikard (2009), ‘Cartel Stability Under An Optimal Sharing Rule’, Manchester School, 77 (5), September, 575–93 30. Carlo Carraro, Johan Eyckmans and Michael Finus (2006), ‘Optimal Transfers and Participation Decisions in International Environmental Agreements’, Review of International Organizations, 1 (4), December, 379–96 31. Matthew McGinty, Garrett Milam and Alejandro Gelves (2012), ‘Coalition Stability in Public Goods Provision: Testing an Optimal Allocation Rule’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 52 (3), July, 327–45 32. Stefan Ambec and Yves Sprumont (2002), ‘Sharing a River’, Journal of Economic Theory, 107 (2), December, 453–62 33. Andreas Lange and Carsten Vogt (2003), ‘Cooperation in International Environmental Negotiations due to a Preference for Equity’, Journal of Public Economics, 87 (9–10), September, 2049–67 34. Michael Kosfeld, Akira Okada and Arno Riedl (2009), ‘Institution Formation in Public Goods Games’, American Economic Review, 99 (4), September, 1335–55 PART VI MULTIPLE COALITIONS 35. Francesco Bosello, Barabara Buchner and Carlo Carraro (2003), ‘Equity, Development, and Climate Change Control’, Journal of the European Economic Association, 1 (2–3), April–May, 601–11 36. Johan Eyckmans and Michael Finus (2006), ‘Coalition Formation in a Global Warming Game: How the Design of Protocols Affects the Success of Environmental Treaty-Making’, Natural Resource Modeling, 19 (3), September, 323–58 37. Geir B. Asheim, Camilla Bretteville Froyn, Jon Hovi and Fredric C. Menz (2006), ‘Regional versus Global Cooperation for Climate Control’, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 51 (1), January, 93–109 PART VII UNCERTAINTY, RISK AND CATASTROPHIC EVENTS 38. Seong-lin Na and Hyun Song Shin (1998), ‘International Environmental Agreements under Uncertainty’, Oxford Economic Papers, 50 (2), April, 173–85 39. Michael Finus and Pedro Pintassilgo (2013), ‘The Role of Uncertainty and Learning for the Success of International Climate Agreements’, Journal of Public Economics, 103, July, 29–43 40. Alfred Endres and Cornelia Ohl (2001), ‘International Environmental Cooperation in the One Shot Prisoners' Dilemma’, Schmollers Jahrbuch, Zeitschrift für Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften/Journal of Applied Social Science Studies, 121 (1), 1–26 41. Vincent Boucher and Yann Bramoullé (2010), ‘Providing Global Public Goods under Uncertainty’, Journal of Public Economics, 94 (9–10), October, 591–603 42. Scott Barrett (2013), ‘Climate Treaties and Approaching Catastrophes’, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 66 (2), September, 235–50 43. Alessandro Tavoni, Astrid Dannenberg, Giorgos Kallis and Andreas Löschel (2011), ‘Inequality, Communication, and The Avoidance of Disastrous Climate Change in a Public Goods Game’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 108 (29), July, 11825–9 44. Lata Gangadharan and Veronika Nemes (2009) ‘Experimental Analysis of Risk and Uncertainty in Provisioning Private and Public Goods’, Economic Inquiry 47 (1), January, 146–64 PART VIII DYNAMIC COALITION FORMATION 45. Santiago J. Rubio and Alistair Ulph (2007), ‘An Infinite-Horizon Model of Dynamic Membership of International Environmental Agreements’, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 54 (3), November, 296–310 46. Aart de Zeeuw (2008), ‘Dynamic Effects on the Stability of International Environmental Agreements’, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 55 (2), March, 163–74 47. Marc Germain, Philippe Toint, Henry Tulkens and Aart de Zeeuw (2003), ‘Transfers to Sustain Dynamic Core-Theoretic Cooperation in International Stock Pollutant Control’, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 28 (1), October, 79–99 48. Hans-Peter Weikard, Rob Dellink and Ekko van Ierland (2010), ‘Renegotiations in the Greenhouse’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 45 (4), April, 573–96 49. Michèle Breton, Lucia Sbragia and Georges Zaccour (2010), ‘A Dynamic Model for International Environmental Agreements’, Environmental and Resource Economics, 45 (1), January, 25–48 Index
£439.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Thought, Law, Rights and Action in the Age of
Book Synopsisaa magnificently rich, highly critical, at times deeply challenging and troubling, and perhaps even paradigm-shifting, collection of works that has been authored by some of the most progressive and interrogative scholars of our time. In their analysis, none of the contributors take anything for granted; they relentlessly push against parochial closures that obscure the possible contours of a re-imagined relationship between human rights and the environment. The book ultimately succeeds in offering a new juridical imaginary for those of us who are concerned with the deeply troubled and complex relationship between human rights and the environment.'- Louis J. Kotzé, North-West University, South Africa, University of Lincoln, UK and Global Network for the Study of Human Rights and the EnvironmentIn the climate-pressed Anthropocene epoch, nothing could be more urgent than fresh engagements with the fractious relationships between 'humanity', law and the living order. This timely book intelligently combines theoretical reflections, doctrinal analyses and insights drawn from rights-based praxis to offer thoughtful - and at times provocative - engagements with the limitations of law as it faces the complexities of contemporary socio-ecological life-worlds in an age of climate crisis.Leading scholars in the field discuss, in four parts, Philosophical Investigations, Reconfiguring the Legal, Activism and Praxis, and Multi-level Reformulations, to offer imaginative intellectual engagements with a range of challenges vexing the human-environmental-legal 'interface'.Scholars and students of human rights and environmental law and practitioners in the field alike will find the book to be a timely and thoughtful engagement with urgent human dilemmas.Contributors: D. Bollier, L. Code, S. Coyle, K. Donald, G.N. Gill, E. Grant, A. Grear, T. Kerns, A. Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, M. Pieraccini, B.H. WestonTrade Review‘. . . a magnificently rich, highly critical, at times deeply challenging and troubling, and perhaps even paradigm-shifting, collection of works that has been authored by some of the most progressive and interrogative scholars of our time. In their analysis, none of the contributors take anything for granted; they relentlessly push against parochial closures that obscure the possible contours of a re-imagined relationship between human rights and the environment. The book ultimately succeeds in offering a new juridical imaginary for those of us who are concerned with the deeply troubled and complex relationship between human rights and the environment.’ -- Louis J. Kotzé, North-West University, South Africa, University of Lincoln, UK and Global Network for the Study of Human Rights and the EnvironmentTable of ContentsContents: Introduction: Thought, Law, Rights and Action in an Age of Environmental Crisis – In Search of Better Future Histories Anna Grear and Evadne Grant PART I PHILOSOPHICAL INVESTIGATIONS 1. Doubt and Denial: Epistemic Responsibility Meets Climate Change Scepticism Lorraine Code 2. Actors or Spectators? Vulnerability and Critical Environmental Law Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos 3. Reflections on the Relationship between Environmental Regulation, Human rights and Beyond – with Heidegger Margherita Pieraccini 4. Radicalism and Conservativism in Environmental Law Sean Coyle PART II RECONFIGURING THE LEGAL 5. Human Rights and Environmental Protection in India: The Judicial Journey from Public Interest Litigation to the National Green Tribunal Gitanjali N. Gill 6. Reimagining Adjudication: Human Rights Courts and the Environment Evadne Grant PART III ACTIVISM AND PRAXIS 7. Human Rights Practice: A Means to Environmental Ends? Kate Donald 8. Schopenhaur's Mitleid: Environmental Outrage and Human Rights Tom Kerns PART IV MULTI-LEVEL REFORMULATIONS 9. Reimagining Ecological Governance Through Human Rights and a Rediscovery of the Commons David Bollier and Burns H. Weston 10. Towards New Legal Futures? In Search of Renewing Foundations Anna Grear Index
£121.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Inequality and the Environment
Book SynopsisThis innovative Handbook provides a comprehensive treatment of the complex relationship between inequality and the environment and illustrates the myriad ways in which they intersect.Featuring over 30 contributions from leading experts in the field, it explores the ways in which inequality impacts three of the most pressing contemporary environmental issues: climate change, natural resource extraction, and food insecurity. Laying the conceptual foundations for its analysis of key inequality–environment intersections, the Handbook covers theoretical traditions employed in the environmental inequality literature and examines different approaches to the concept of rights and how these influence scholarship on environmental justice. Chapters further investigate the multifaceted relationships between the natural environment and common forms of social inequalities, including race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, social class, the economy, and the state.Bringing together cutting-edge research on diverse inequality–environment intersections, this comprehensive Handbook will be relevant to both students and researchers in the social sciences and environmental sociology, politics, and geography. Its empirical insights will also prove valuable to public and social policymakers with access to mechanisms that can shape environmental protection policies.Table of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction: inequality and the environment 1 Michael A. Long, Michael J. Lynch, and Paul B. Stretesky PART I THEORETICAL TRADITIONS IN ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUALITY 2 Treadmill of production 11 Amalia Leguizamón 3 Substantive inequality and the alienated metabolism of the capital system 28 Brett Clark, John Bellamy Foster, and Daniel Auerbach 4 Ecologically unequal exchange 44 Kelly F. Austin 5 Social inequalities, environmental crises, and the STIRPAT model 59 Patrick Trent Greiner, Julius Alexander McGee, and Richard York 6 Environmental justice 71 David N. Pellow 7 Money, value, and entropy 86 Alf Hornborg PART II RIGHTS AND ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUALITY 8 Greenwashed relations of genocide 103 Martin Crook and Damien Short 9 Environmental inequality and rights of nature among Indigenous Peoples in North America 125 Julie Schweitzer, Olivia M. Fleming, and Tamara L. Mix 10 Nonhuman Animal rights 147 Corey L. Wrenn PART III RACE/ETHNICITY, INDIGENOUS PEOPLES, AND ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUALITY 11 Race and environmental inequality 162 Md Belal Hossain 12 Environmental inequality in West Africa 181 Jessie K. Luna and Gabin Korbeogo 13 Energy development and sociocultural inequality among First Nation Peoples 200 Duane A. Gill and Liesel A. Ritchie PART IV GENDER AND ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUALITY 14 Gender and environmental inequality 225 Laura A. McKinney and Devin Wright 15 Gender and nonhuman animals 243 Amy Fitzgerald and Nik Taylor 16 Gender, large-scale resource extraction, and environmental inequality in Latin America 262 Inge A.M. Boudewijn and Katy Jenkins PART V THE ECONOMY AND ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUALITY 17 Organizational political economy, corporate power, and the great acceleration of environmental pollution in the United States 285 Harland Prechel 18 Inequality, emissions, and human well-being 305 Jennifer E. Givens, Orla M. Kelly, and Andrew K. Jorgenson 19 Working time, inequality, and sustainability 322 Jared B. Fitzgerald and Juliet Schor PART VI THE STATE AND ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUALITY 20 Democracy and environmental inequality 343 Liam Downey and Brigid Mark 21 Environmental criminal enforcement and environmental justice in the United States 362 Joshua Ozymy and Melissa Jarrell Ozymy 22 Non-criminal enforcement and environmental inequality in the United States 380 Tara O’Connor Shelley and Anne E. Egelston 23 Incarceration and environmental inequality 402 Maggie Leόn-Corwin, Jericho R. McElroy, and Michelle L. Estes 24 Grassland conservation and environmental inequality in Inner Mongolia, China 425 KuoRay Mao, Qian Zhang, and Micaela Truslove PART VII CLIMATE AND INEQUALITY 25 Climate change governance, environment, and inequality in Latin America 446 Ruth E. McKie 26 Social theory and climate change in the interregnum 460 Robert J. Antonio 27 Hurricanes, floods, and environmental inequality 486 Jayajit Chakraborty, Timothy W. Collins, Aaron B. Flores, and Sara E. Grineski PART VIII NATURAL RESOURCES AND INEQUALITY 28 Coal and environmental inequality 502 Ryan Wishart and Pierce Greenberg 29 Hydraulic fracturing and environmental inequality 527 Stephanie A. Malin, Adam Mayer, and Shawn Hazboun 30 Uranium mining, environmental inequality, and Native American health 551 Averi R. Fegadel PART IX FOOD INSECURITY, INJUSTICE, AND INEQUALITY 31 Food insecurity, inequality, and the environment 570 Stephen J. Scanlan 32 Food insecurity and inequality among young people in the United States 597 Lara Gonçalves Index
£250.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on International Development and the
Book SynopsisFifty years after the Stockholm Conference first placed the environment on the international development agenda, this Handbook continues the debate. The Handbook discusses both the profound environmental and theoretical critique against development as modernization and economic growth, and how perspectives on nature have changed from an infinite resource to a fragile subject. Weighing up the successes and failures linked to environmental concerns in development and environment policy and practice, it recognizes the roots of international development as a Western project linked to the expansion of an environmentally destructive capitalism. Through active dialogue across geographical areas, disciplines and epistemologies, chapters critically assess current perspectives on the topic, including decolonialism, degrowth and post-development. Grounded in recent research on topics such as agriculture, fisheries, infrastructure, forest protection, supply chain management, climate negotiations and the renewable transition, the Handbook integrates a range of different viewpoints on international development and the environment to provide a fresh take on this contentious relationship.With an international scope, this expansive Handbook will be integral reading for students and scholars of development and the environment. It will also be a beneficial read for practitioners working in international organizations and development agencies.Table of ContentsContents: Preface xi 1 Introduction to Handbook on International Development and the Environment: from limits to growth to a transformation for the Anthropocene 1 Benedicte Bull and Mariel Aguilar-Støen PART I RETHINKING DEVELOPMENT: CRITIQUE AND DEFENSE OF A CONTESTED IDEA 2 The sticky myth of economic growth and the critique of development 26 Eduardo Gudynas 3 Leaving development behind: the case for degrowth 41 Federico Demaria and Erik Gómez-Baggethun 4 Dismantling the machine: rethinking the role of technology in critical development theory 57 Alf Hornborg 5 Development under scrutiny: environment, geopolitics and a reimagination of Latin America 71 Andrés Rivarola Puntigliano and Gianfranco Selgas 6 A transformative post-developmental state? State institutions as change-makers in the Anthropocene 83 Benedicte Bull 7 A Chinese Communist Party perspective on development and the environment: socialism through environmental development? 100 Bjørn Leif Brauteseth PART II RETHINKING THE ENVIRONMENT: FROM INFINITE RESOURCE TO FRAGILE SUBJECT 8 The river as subject: legal innovations and their consequence for rights and development 122 John A. McNeish 9 Oceans: the new economic frontier? 137 Mads Barbesgaard 10 The Arctic: last frontier for energy and mineral exploitation? 154 Ragnhild Freng Dale and Lena Gross 11 The international development of food and agriculture: global food regimes, environmental change and new configurations of power 170 Jostein Jakobsen 12 Will development kill us? Globalized livestock production in the “Pandemic Era” 185 Mariel Aguilar-Støen and Jostein Jakobsen PART III RECONSIDERING DEVELOPMENT POLICIES AND GOVERNANCE 13 Infrastructure, development and the environment in a landscape of spatial reconfigurations across the Global South: The case of the Belt and Road Initiative 200 Fabricio Rodríguez and Julia Gurol 14 The new middle classes: consumption, development and sustainability 216 Arve Hansen and Ulrikke Wethal 15 New energy transitions, old problems: the challenge of achieving a just electrification with a gendered face 231 Kirsten Campbell and Tanja Winther 16 The business of sustainability as a governance tool 250 Jason Miklian and John Katsos PART IV RECONSIDERING ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES AND GOVERNANCE 17 The challenges of effective international climate cooperation in an unequal world 267 Tora Skodvin 18 The sustainability governance of global supply chains: transnational approaches and the neglect of local development agendas 281 Almut Schilling-Vacaflor 19 Ecosystem services in development: frontier of green colonialism or tool for social justice? 296 Nicolena von Hedemann 20 Reclaiming state capacity in the politics of energy transitions: the cautionary tale of Venezuela’s predatory transition 313 Antulio Rosales Index 328
£155.00
Liverpool University Press Reimagining Urban Nature: Literary Imaginaries
Book SynopsisAn Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and through Knowledge Unlatched.Reimagining Urban Nature questions some of the underlying imaginaries which have for so long allowed us humans to develop technologically at great cost to the more-than-human world and ourselves. In urban places, cultural and more-than-human entities are in frequent contact; however, the non-human is often seen as expendable in these human-centric places. While much important work has been done on improving care for the more rural and wild areas of the globe, to really address environmental damage we must work towards reimagining the city. These are places where the majority of people live and work, and where the majority of decisions are made about the care and protection of many environments within and beyond the city. This book contributes to the still under-developed field of urban ecocriticism by adding a posthumanist perspective, as well as expanding current discussions within urban studies and environmental activism that seek to shift political and cultural imaginaries of urban nature. Importantly, this investigation is grounded in the Australian (and more broadly, the Australasian) context to allow for the analysis of a more diverse set of voices, texts and ecologies in an area still dominated by the northern hemisphere and the Global North.Trade Review'Written from an explicit settler-migrant Antipodean perspective, this book makes a convincing case for a relational understanding of entanglements with nature. Respectful in its handling of material from indigenous writers, it advances in fresh and cogent ways the discussion of the “more than human” in current ecological and environmental humanities.'- Professor Julie Sanders, Principal of Royal Holloway, University of LondonTable of ContentsIntroduction: Towards a Posthuman Urban Ecocriticism1. The Language of Urban Nature2. Writers Who Venture: Posthuman Methodologies3. Private Entanglements: Houses and Gardens4. Bodies of Water5. Public Entanglements: Streets and ParksConclusion: Recipro-city
£38.34
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Elgar Encyclopedia of Ecological Economics
Book SynopsisWith diverse contributions from over 100 authors around the globe, this comprehensive Encyclopedia summarises the developments of ecological economics from the fundamental contributions to the more recent methodological debates in the field.This Encyclopedia further reflects the relevant state of research including past and present major debates about particular concepts, theories, actors and issues at hand. It provides an expansive list of topics including sustainable development, the limits to growth, agroecology, implications of thermodynamic laws for economics, integrated ecologic-economic modelling, valuation of natural resources and services, and renewable and non-renewable resources management. With a strong normative focus, entries include theoretical, methodological, and empirical contributions, as the field orientates its efforts to improve environmental policy and governance to enhance wellbeing, environmental quality, and social justice.This unique reference will be a key tool to students, scholars, policy makers and anyone else seeking to understand the link between economic systems and the environment from the perspective of ecological economics, business management, environmental and urban studies.Key Features: Entries include selected references for further study Entries by both leading scholars and up-and-coming voices Addresses the links between the ecological crisis and economic activity Over 90 entries with accessible explanations of key concepts and methods Multi-disciplinary approach across the fields of economics, ecology, sociology, geography, and also political science and history. Trade Review‘Economics for the twenty-first century? This is what this book is all about. It will become the definitive international reference. Top scholars in the field provide thoughtful summaries of key concepts in ecological economics. By doing this, they offer insights and tools on how to reconcile human development with planetary boundaries, arguably the most important challenge of our time.’ -- Federico Demaria, University of Barcelona, Spain‘This amazing volume reflects that ecological economics has become a mature transdisciplinary field, with consolidated concepts, methods and analytical frameworks. The Editors have done an impressive job in mobilizing contributors to offer stepping stones to those interested in learning how to reconcile our economy with a living planet.’ -- Roldan Muradian, Universidade Federal Fluminense (UFF), BrazilTable of ContentsContents: Preface xvii 1 Agent-based modelling 1 Ivan Savin 2 Agroecology 8 Manuel González de Molina 3 Agrowth 14 Jeroen van den Bergh 4 Anthropocene 21 Jon D. Erickson 5 Biodiversity conservation 25 Eduardo García-Frapolli 6 Bounded openness over natural information 32 Joseph Henry Vogel, María Eugenia Santori-Aymat, Óscar Tomaiconza, Bryan Steven Cortés-Lumbi, and Miguel Fernández-Maldonado 7 Bounded rationality 40 Stefan Drews 8 Carbon taxes 43 Andrea Baranzini and Sylvain Weber 9 Circular economy 49 Ignasi Puig Ventosa and Verónica Martínez Sánchez 10 Climate change and social justice 57 Éloi Laurent 11 Coevolution (socio-biophysical coevolution) 65 Miquel A. Gual and Richard B. Norgaard 12 Common property and environmental governance 70 Sergio Villamayor-Tomás 13 Complex social-ecological systems 75 Pedro L. Lomas 14 Consumption 81 Doris Fuchs and Inge Røpke 15 Cost shifting, competition and economic structure 87 Clive L. Spash and Amelia Fuselier 16 Critical materials 94 Alicia Valero, Guiomar Calvo, and Antonio Valero 17 Degrowth 97 Sam Bliss and Giorgos Kallis 18 Deliberative ecological economics 102 Jasper Kenter 19 Discounting and climate change 111 Cédric Philibert 20 Ecofeminisms 117 Corinna Dengler 21 Ecological distribution conflicts 123 Joan Martínez-Alier 22 Ecological macroeconomics 125 Peter A. Victor 23 Ecological unequal exchange 132 Mario Pérez-Rincón 24 Economic anthropology 138 Clemens M. Grünbühel 25 Economic system 145 José Manuel Naredo 26 Economy as an open system 151 Óscar Carpintero and Jaime Nieto 27 Ecosystem services 157 Brigitte L.G. Baptiste 28 Emergy accounting 161 Silvio Viglia and Sergio Ulgiati 29 Energy return on investment: a unifying principle for socio-ecological sustainability 168 Rigo E.M. Melgar and Charles A.S. Hall 30 Energy transition(s) 179 Mar Rubio-Varas 31 Entropy 186 Alicia Valero, Antonio Valero, and Guiomar Calvo 32 Environmental accounting 189 Maddalena Ripa and Sergio Ulgiati 33 The environmental consequences of inequality 198 James K. Boyce 34 Environmental ethics 202 Joaquín Valdivielso 35 Environmental footprints 208 Kai Fang 36 Environmental governance 214 Jouni Paavola 37 Environmental input– output analysis 220 Mònica Serrano 38 Environmental justice 228 Beatriz Rodríguez-Labajos 39 The environmental Kuznets curve 234 David I. Stern 40 Environmental limits 238 Erik Gómez-Baggethun 41 Environmental stewardship 243 Jennifer Welchman 42 Environmental tax reform 245 Paul Ekins 43 Environmental taxation and the double dividend 249 William K. Jaeger 44 Environmentally extended multi-region input–output analysis 255 Klaus Hubacek and Kuishuang Feng 45 Ethics of quantification 261 Andrea Saltelli and Monica Di Fiore 46 Fetish, commodity fetishism and ecosystem services 266 Nicolas Kosoy 47 Future generations 269 Richard B. Howarth 48 Georgescu-Roegen’s bioeconomics 273 Kozo Torasan Mayumi 49 Green economy 280 Jonathan M. Harris 50 Human appropriation of net primary production (HANPP) 285 Helmut Haberl, Karl-Heinz Erb, and Fridolin Krausmann 51 The human ecological footprint 294 William E. Rees 52 Incommensurable values 301 Jonathan Aldred 53 Industrial ecology 305 Anke Schaffartzik 54 Institutions 309 Arild Vatn 55 Joint production 315 Johannes Schiller and Stefan Baumgärtner 56 Kapp, Karl William 322 Tommaso Luzzati 57 Land grabbing 326 Arnim Scheidel 58 Land-time budget analysis 332 Clemens M. Grünbühel 59 Languages of valuation 338 Christos Zografos 60 The laws of thermodynamics 345 Gabriel A. Lozada 61 Material flow accounting 353 Fridolin Krausmann 62 The maximum power principle 359 Mark T. Brown 63 Metabolic flow 364 Mario Giampietro 64 Methodological pluralism 372 Richard B. Norgaard 65 Multi-criteria evaluation 375 Giuseppe Munda 66 Multi-Scale Integrated Analysis of Societal and Ecosystem Metabolism (MuSIASEM) 381 Mario Giampietro 67 National accounts and macroeconomic indicators 386 Jordi Roca Jusmet 68 Natural capital 390 Robert Costanza 69 Nature-based solutions 393 Francesc Baró and Erik Gómez-Baggethun 70 Nexus approaches in socio-metabolic research 399 Helmut Haberl 71 Payments for ecosystem services 406 Esteve Corbera and Santiago Izquierdo-Tort 72 Peak oil 412 Christian Kerschner 73 Political and institutional ecological economics 421 Peter Söderbaum 74 Population and environment 427 Hernán G. Villarraga 75 Post-normal science 433 Silvio Funtowicz and Jerome R. Ravetz 76 The precautionary principle 436 Andy Stirling 77 Production and economic development 443 José Manuel Naredo 78 Rebound effect and the Jevons paradox 449 Jaume Freire-González 79 Sensitivity analysis 456 Andrea Saltelli, Arnald Puy, and Samuele Lo Piano 80 Sensitivity auditing 463 Andrea Saltelli, Samuele Lo Piano, and Arnald Puy 81 Social ecological economics 468 Clive L. Spash, Adrien Guisan, and Carlotta Verita 82 Social metabolism 475 Manuel González de Molina 83 Spaceship Earth 482 Óscar Carpintero and Jaime Nieto 84 Steady-state economics 487 Herman Daly 85 Sustainability versus monetary reductionism 492 Peter Söderbaum 86 Sustainable development indicators 495 Philip Lawn 87 Uncertainty, risk and ignorance 503 Andrea Saltelli and Jerome R. Ravetz 88 Uncomfortable knowledge 505 Mario Giampietro 89 Unequal caloric exchange 510 Fander Falconí 90 Water footprint 513 Cristina Madrid-López Index 518
£220.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to Applied Green
Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.The Advanced Introduction to Applied Green Criminology provides a comprehensive overview of interventions and practices that contribute to environmental protection. Topics include crime prevention, environmental regulation and law enforcement, environmental forensics, greening of criminal justice institutions, and social activism. Underpinning these topics is the notion of eco-justice, which focuses on environmental justice (humans), ecological justice (ecosystems) and species justice (non-human animals and plants). Key Features: Discusses practical ways to prevent and stop environmental crimes and harms Presents grounded examples and knowledge gained from years of experience and expertise reflecting a 'pracademic' orientation Provides insightful summaries of intervention practices This Advanced Introduction will be invaluable to practitioners, such as green criminologists, conservation scientists, and environmental lawyers and regulators, as well as academics and students interested in preventing, stopping, and deterring environmental crimes and harms.?Trade Review‘Advanced Introduction to Applied Green Criminology is a valuable synthesis of theoretical and philosophical underpinnings with practical approaches and applications. Distinguished Professor Rob White has expertly combined decades of research into a useful text that collates the diverse attempts to prevent and disrupt environmental crime. Furthermore, he offers insights to both academics and practitioners into other elements to consider when tackling environmental crimes and harms. A must read for anyone working in the field of the environment.’ -- Tanya Wyatt, Northumbria University, UK‘Reducing environmental harms is a universal human interest. Again, White offers wayfinding for those of us searching for deeper understanding of why and how green criminology can help smooth the science-to-action interface. He paints a vivid picture of the diversity of environmental harms and the tools criminology offers for positive and just change.’ -- Meredith L. Gore, University of Maryland, College Park, US
£98.67
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to Applied Green
Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.The Advanced Introduction to Applied Green Criminology provides a comprehensive overview of interventions and practices that contribute to environmental protection. Topics include crime prevention, environmental regulation and law enforcement, environmental forensics, greening of criminal justice institutions, and social activism. Underpinning these topics is the notion of eco-justice, which focuses on environmental justice (humans), ecological justice (ecosystems) and species justice (non-human animals and plants). Key Features: Discusses practical ways to prevent and stop environmental crimes and harms Presents grounded examples and knowledge gained from years of experience and expertise reflecting a 'pracademic' orientation Provides insightful summaries of intervention practices This Advanced Introduction will be invaluable to practitioners, such as green criminologists, conservation scientists, and environmental lawyers and regulators, as well as academics and students interested in preventing, stopping, and deterring environmental crimes and harms.?Trade Review‘Advanced Introduction to Applied Green Criminology is a valuable synthesis of theoretical and philosophical underpinnings with practical approaches and applications. Distinguished Professor Rob White has expertly combined decades of research into a useful text that collates the diverse attempts to prevent and disrupt environmental crime. Furthermore, he offers insights to both academics and practitioners into other elements to consider when tackling environmental crimes and harms. A must read for anyone working in the field of the environment.’ -- Tanya Wyatt, Northumbria University, UK‘Reducing environmental harms is a universal human interest. Again, White offers wayfinding for those of us searching for deeper understanding of why and how green criminology can help smooth the science-to-action interface. He paints a vivid picture of the diversity of environmental harms and the tools criminology offers for positive and just change.’ -- Meredith L. Gore, University of Maryland, College Park, US
£21.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook of Anti-Environmentalism
Book SynopsisThis thought-provoking Handbook provides a theoretical overview of the wide variety of anti-environmentalisms and offers an integrative research agenda for future research on the topic. Probing the ways in which groups have organized to oppose environmental movements and pro-environmental policies in recent decades, it examines those involved in these countermovements and studies their motivations and support systems.International contributors investigate the ways in which anti-environmentalism differs across regions and by the nature of the issue, alongside unique coverage of the critiques of environmental movements coming from sources that are not anti-environmental. This Handbook explores core topics in the field, including contestation over climate change, wind power, mining, forestry, food sovereignty, oil and gas pipelines and population issues. Chapters also analyse our understanding of countermovements, the effect of public opinion on environmental policy, and original empirical case studies from North America, Oceania, Europe and Asia.Taking a multidisciplinary approach, the Handbook of Anti-Environmentalism will be a key resource for scholars and students of environmental politics and policy, environmental sociology, environmental governance and social movements.Trade Review‘Over the last decades, many systematic accounts have been provided of the main social and political movements currently active on the globe. Far less attention has been paid to their opponents and critics. Focusing on reactions to environmental movements, and edited by three foremost analysts of environmental politics, this Handbook is likely to have an impact which goes well beyond that particular field. It will appeal to all those interested in the study of “counter-movements” at large.’ -- Mario Diani, University of Trento, Italy‘In an era where scientific misinformation and disinformation are proliferating globally, there is a clear and pressing need for this state-of-the-art overview of anti-environmental actors, messages and campaigns. The editors of the Handbook have assembled a stellar roster of international contributors who interrogate every aspect of the problem from media framing, to climate denial networks, to neoliberal governance. Highly recommended to university libraries and to environmental activists and scholars.’ -- John Hannigan, University of Toronto, CanadaTable of ContentsContents: Foreword: foreign-funded radicals x James Hoggan PART I INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW 1 The contours of anti-environmentalism: an introduction to the Handbook of Anti-Environmentalism 2 Mark C.J. Stoddart, David Tindall and Riley E. Dunlap PART II THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES 2 Understanding countermovements 23 Suzanne Staggenborg and David S. Meyer 3 Against environmentalism for the common good: a theoretical model 43 Nicholas Scott PART III ANTI-ENVIRONMENTALISM DISCOURSE AND FRAMING 4 ‘Total preservation is just as bad as total logging’: forests and environmental attitudes and behaviours in an anti-environmentalist countermovement 63 David Tindall, Mark C.J. Stoddart and Valerie Berseth 5 Climate change scepticism in front-page Czech newspaper coverage: a one man show 84 Petr Ocelík PART IV VALUES, ATTITUDES AND PUBLIC OPINION 6 Understanding opposition to the environmental movement: the importance of dominant American values 108 Riley E. Dunlap 7 The effect of public opinion on environmental policy in the face of the environmental countermovement 133 Kerry Ard, Tiffany Williams and Paige Kelly 8 Anti-environment, or pro-livelihood? Dissecting environmental conflict and its key drivers in Northern New South Wales 153 Vanessa Bible PART V SOCIAL NETWORKS AND ANTI-ENVIRONMENTALISM 9 Climate change counter movement organisations: an international deviant network? 173 Ruth E. McKie 10 Fossil networks and dirty power: the politics of decarbonisation in Australia 192 Adam Lucas 11 Regime of obstruction: fossil capitalism and the many facets of climate denial in Canada 216 William K. Carroll, Shannon Daub and Shane Gunster 12 The Koch Brothers and the climate change denial social movement 234 Patrick Doreian and Andrej Mrvar PART VI EXTRACTIVE DEVELOPMENT AND ANTI-ENVIRONMENTALISM 13 Neoliberal governance of environmentalism in the post-9/11 security era: the case of pipeline debates in Canada 248 S. Harris Ali 14 Fashioning anti-environmentalism in Turkey: the campaign against the Bergama movement 268 Hayriye Özen PART VII AGRICULTURE AND ANTI-ENVIRONMENTALISM 15 Food sovereignty and anti-regulation from the left 284 James S. Krueger 16 Agrarian reform movement in the Betung Kerihun National Park: mobilisation of hunter–gatherer communities against nature protection in Kalimantan 304 Martin C. Lukas 17 Wind energy development and anti-environmentalism in Alberta, Canada 329 Aleksandra Afanasyeva, Debra J. Davidson and John Parkins PART VIII ETHNICITY AND RACE 18 The end of population-environmentalism: dissonance over human rights and societal goals 345 Pamela McMullin-Messier 19 The environmental state and the racial state in tension: does racism impede environmentalism? 365 Ian R. Carrillo PART IX OTHER SPHERES OF ANTI-ENVIRONMENTALISM 20 Skin in the game: the struggle over climate protection within the US labor movement 381 Todd E. Vachon 21 Reflexive religious anti-environmentalism on Indigenous lands: decolonization and religious environmental organizations (REOs) in the Trans Mountain resistance, Canada 399 Victor W.Y. Lam 22 Anti-environmentalism in critical social science and new conservation 423 Helen Kopnina, Haydn Washington and Joe Gray PART X CONCLUSION 23 Moving forward in the study of anti-environmentalism: combining tools from different tool kits 440 David Tindall, Mark C.J. Stoddart and Riley E. Dunlap Index
£213.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Ethics and Politics of Space for the Anthropocene
Book SynopsisFeaturing an international, multidisciplinary set of contributors, this thought-provoking book reimagines established narratives of the Anthropocene to allow differences in regions and contexts to be taken seriously, emphasising the importance of localised and situated knowledge. Envisaging a narrative of change that renders visible the complex transformations taking place across the globe, this book outlines new and radical ways to address the current environmental crisis in a more sustainable and context-specific manner. It presents empirical studies from various contexts, highlighting the potentiality of non-Western knowledge, concepts and categories as well as recognising the entanglement of humans with other beings and ecosystems. In particular, it offers critical engagement with the debates around the Anthropocene by challenging the dominant techno-rational agenda that often prevails in socio-political and academic discussions. This book will be crucial reading for researchers and post-graduate students working in fields from human geography and tourism studies to law, public policy and administration, philosophy, politics and organisation studies who are dealing with intersecting issues of environment, sustainability, indigenous rights, space and ethics. It will also be helpful for policy makers and research consultants in leveraging localised solutions to the current ecological crisis.Trade Review'Have we run out of time to think and live differently? In this timely, globally relevant text, Valtonen, Rantala and Farah invite us to travel with them on a journey of human-earth relationships in relation to ethics, politics and space. Contributors have collectively produced a critical and provocative text which touches. Beautifully and sensitively written, readers will be inspired to radically question the ways in which we have contributed to capitalism's destruction of our planet. What matters is radically rethinking our being with human and non-human others as a political and ethical intervention.' --Alison Pullen, Macquarie University, Australia'Ethics and Politics of Space for the Anthropocene brings us stories that plumb the depths of both theory and grounded insights from the margins of Europe and the Indian sub-continent. With surprising and novel relations generated, this refreshing mix of voices counters growth-based, techno-oriented business as usual at our current climatic juncture and gives perspectives as well as hopes for an uncertain future of our making.' --Edward H. Huijbens, Wageningen University, the NetherlandsTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction: reimagining ways of talking about the Anthropocene 1 Anu Valtonen and Outi Rantala PART I REIMAGINATIONS 2 Imagining place and politics in the Anthropocene 17 Forrest Clingerman 3 Walking with rocks – with care 35 Outi Rantala, Anu Valtonen and Tarja Salmela 4 On scientific fabulation: storytelling in the more-than-human world 51 Emily Höckert PART II STORIES FROM MARGINALIZED COMMUNITIES 5 Rethinking knowledge, power, agency: learning from displaced and slum communities in Bangladesh 72 Afroja Khanam and Tiina Seppälä 6 Spaces of climate justice: towards an ethical politics of intervention in the Anthropocene 107 Paul Routledge 7 Between extractivism and sacredness: the struggle for environmental inheritances by the Adivasi communities of India 124 Arpita Bisht PART III LAW AND TECHNOLOGY 8 Beyond the Capitalocene: an ecocentric perspective for the energy transition 150 Giovanni Frigo 9 Temporality, technology and justice in Hannah Arendt: a critical approach 175 Jana Lozanoska 10 The Anthropocene and climate change in the post-Paris Agreement debate 197 Paolo Davide Farah and Marek Prityi 11 The role of imagination, marginalized communities, law and technology in building an ethical approach to the Anthropocene 210 Paolo Davide Farah Index
£95.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Social Discourse and Environmental Policy: An
Book SynopsisAs governments and the wider public become increasingly concerned about environmental problems, the necessity for competent environmental policies is growing. The contributors to this highly original book attempt to demonstrate how the use of Q methodology can result in the development of more effective, socially sensitive, environmental policy options.The book highlights the history of Q methodology, a technique for systematically studying the subjectivity of individuals, and provides a brief yet comprehensive account of its theory and a detailed guide to the various stages of a Q study. The methodology is then applied, to explore the discourses concerning the relationship between society and a diverse range of environmental issues including, environmental protest, civil aviation policy, forest policy and land use options.The authors demonstrate how the use of Q methodology offers a methodical insight into the public conceptualisation of environmental issues, thus providing improved frameworks for identifying environmental topics and facilitating policy dialogue. They emphasise the deconstructive advantages of Q methodology as a means of re-examining controversial issues and providing policymakers with a more authentic understanding of the beliefs of stakeholders, prior to developing policies. This analytical approach, the book argues, is more 'democratic', as it provides a greater recognition of socio-political attitudes than the findings of conventional polls and surveys.This definitive book will prove a much needed addition to the empirical literature on environmental attitudes and will be invaluable reading for ecological economists, environmental policymakers and organisations, and students, researchers and practitioners of Q methodology.Table of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction 2. Q Methodology 3. Recasting Environmental Controversies: A Q Study of the Expansion of Amsterdam Airport 4. Policy Frames, Policy Making and the Global Climate Change Discourse 5. Using Q Methodology to Facilitate Policy Dialogue 6. Agency Perceptions about Public Involvement in National Forest Management 7. Q Method Using Photographs to Study Perceptions of the Environment in New Zealand 8. If You Go Down to the Woods Today . . . Narratives of Newbury 9. The Multi-layered Discourses of Animal Concern 10. Ecopolitics in the Global South: A Q Method Study of Elites in Seven Nations Index
£107.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Social Environmental Research in the European
Book SynopsisThis book explores the making of international social science, and the parts which academics, policymakers and research managers play in creating European social environmental research. The authors present and analyse a complex picture of overlapping institutional interests within six countries of the EU - The Netherlands, UK, Spain, Greece, Finland and Austria - and develop new models with which to capture the transnational interaction of researchers and funding agencies.The contributors consider the practical and intellectual challenges facing European research managers charged with the task of building a community of social researchers willing to engage with a policy-relevant environmental agenda. The book analyses the shape and character of European social science and the values and commitments of research activity on the environment.This book will be of special interest to those involved in social environmental research, environmental policy, European studies and research management whether at the practical and policy level or in academia.Table of ContentsContents: 1. Researching European Social Environmental Research 2. Social Environmental Research at the National Level 3. New Researchers, New Institutions 4. The Evolution of Ideas 5. The European Dynamics of Social Environmental Research 6. New Agendas, New Dynamics: Charting the Development of Social Environmental Research References Index
£90.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Frontier Environment and Social Order: The
Book SynopsisIn today's political climate, when sustainable development is the perceived goal for farming and forest communities throughout the globe, the experiences of early Canadian settlers force a re-examination of many of the assumptions about the processes through which wilderness has been civilised. The Frontier Environment and Social Order examines the development of civil society within the forest frontier of Upper Canada, using the letters of Francis Codd, a young English doctor, who settled in the Ottawa Valley in 1846 as the textual basis. The letters provide detailed evidence about frontier development: clearing the forest, establishing farming communities, and bringing civil institutions to a developing country.This period was one of intense social and environmental transformation as immigrants began the difficult task of settling a new land. The backdrop to Francis Codd's life in Canada was dramatic, but the detailed observations he provides bring the process of settlement to life. Codd became one of the cornerstones of local society and his letters and the memoirs of his contemporaries document the privations and struggles of the time. They also present new evidence on the establishment of a relationship between nature and culture at a time when ideas of wilderness and civilisation were being forged through civil society and its myths.This fascinating book will appeal to environmental social scientists and economists, historians, geographers and migration specialists as well as the interested reader.Trade Review'This riveting account of frontier expansion in Upper Canada in the nineteenth century gives today's environmentalists plenty of food for thought - can we unlearn social conflict and the exploitation of nature so as to live sustainably today?' -- Andrew Dobson, University of Keele, UKTable of ContentsContents: Part I: The Letters 1. Introduction 2. Francis Codd’s Life and Letters: A Commentary 3. The Letters from Upper Canada (1847–52) Part II: The Context 4. Revisiting the ‘Frontier’ 5. Upper Canada in the Mid-Nineteenth Century References Index
£90.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Choice Modelling Approach to Environmental
Book SynopsisChoice Modelling is a technique that has recently emerged as a means of estimating the demand for environmental goods and the benefits and costs associated with them. The aims of the book are fourfold: to introduce the technique in the environmental context to demonstrate its use in a range of case studies to provide insights into some methodological issues to explore the prospects for the technique. The authors contributing to the book show that choice modelling offers considerable potential for the evaluation of environmental goods and services. Its flexibility to cope with a wide range of applications is well demonstrated. The technique also presents numerous challenges to practitioners. A number of these are addressed in the book.Informed and innovative, this book will prove indispensable to all scholars, researchers and practitioners in the areas of environmental studies and environmental economics.Trade Review'As someone who has used CM in environmental valuation on several occasions, I found this book both useful and interesting. . . I certainly recommend this book to my graduate students, and suggest that you read it too if you are interested in using CM.' -- Nick Hanley, The Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics'. . . a very useful single source for those interested in environmental evaluation using choice models.' -- David A. Hensher, Australian Journal of Environmental Management'. . . this book can serve as a firm basis to start understanding what CM is about. . .' -- Jesús Barreiro Hurle, European Review of Agricultural EconomicsTable of ContentsContents: Introduction Part I: The Technique Part II: Case Studies Part III: Exploring Some Methodological Issues Part IV: Conclusion References
£105.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Game Theory and International Environmental
Book SynopsisSince there is no supranational institution which can enforce international environmental agreements (IEAs), international cooperation proves difficult in practice. Global emissions exhibit negative externalities in countries other than that of their origin and hence there is a high interdependence between countries, and strategic considerations play an important role. Game theory analyses the interaction between agents and formulates hypotheses about their behavior and the final outcomes in games. Hence, international environmental problems are particularly suited for analysis by this method.The book investigates various strategies to provide countries with an incentive to accede, agree and comply to an international environmental agreement (IEA). Finus shows that by integrating real world restrictions into a model, game theory is a powerful tool for explaining the divergence between 'first-best' policy recommendations and 'second-best' designs of actual IEAs. For instance he explains why (inefficient) uniform emission reduction quotas have played such a prominent role in past IEAs despite economists' recommendations for the use of (efficient) market-based instruments as for example emission targets and permits. Moreover, it is stated, that a single, global IEA on climate is not necessarily the best strategy and small coalitions may enjoy a higher stability and may achieve more.This book will be of great interest to scholars, researchers and lecturers in the fields of international environmental economics, game theory and international relations.Trade Review'Finus develops the important insights of game theory for understanding international environmental problems in a rigorous yet accessible manner. The book is extremely comprehensive, and will take readers should they choose to a high level of sophistication. However, Finus also places great emphasis on pointing out the intuition behind results, and this is very welcome. All in all, this is a book which many environmental economists will want on their bookshelves.' -- Nick Hanley, University of Glasgow, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. Important Terms, Notation and Classification of Games 3. Static Games with Discrete Strategy Space 4. Finite Dynamic Games with Discrete Strategy Space: A First Approach 5. Infinite Dynamic Games with Discrete Strategy Space: A First Approach 6. Finite Dynamic Games with Discrete Strategy Space: A Second Approach 7. Infinite Dynamic Games with Discrete Strategy Space: A Second Approach 8. Issue Linkage 9. Static Games with Continuous Strategy Space: Global Emission Game 10. Finite Dynamic Games with Continuous Strategy Space and Static Representations of Dynamic Games 11. Bargaining over a Uniform Emission Reduction Quota and a Uniform Emission Tax 12. Infinite Dynamic Games with Continuous Strategy Space 13. Coalition Models: A First Approach 14. Coalition Models: A Second Approach 15. Coalition Models: A Third Approach 16. Summary and Conclusions Appendices References Index
£132.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Environmental Thought
Book SynopsisDuring the past twenty years there has been an explosive growth in research into environmental issues from a social science perspective. Ecological economics, in particular, has emerged as a true transdiscipline which seeks to conceptualise environmental concerns, thus allowing for the formulation of appropriate policy measures. This volume takes stock of this emerging body of work and offers an authoritative insight into current environmental thought. The book is divided into three broad sections: Disciplinary Approaches, Concepts and Issues. Under the heading of disciplinary approaches, the authors review the state of environmental thinking in the diverse fields of philosophy, politics, sociology, economics and law. The concepts addressed include the precautionary principle, sustainable development, environmental security and ecological modernisation. Finally, in the last section, they assess a range of crucial environmental issues such as consumption, biodiversity, global climate change and population. Each of the specially commissioned chapters is written by a recognised expert in the field, while the book as a whole offers a unique interdisciplinary perspective. Ecological economists, environmental researchers and environmental policy analysts will all find this an accessible and highly rewarding introduction to contemporary environmental thinking.Table of ContentsContents: Preface 1. An Introduction to Environmental Thought Part I: Disciplinary Approaches 2. Philosophy 3. Politics 4. Sociology 5. Economics 6. Law Part II: Concepts 7. The Precautionary Principle 8. Sustainable Development 9. Environmental Security 10. Ecological Modernisation Part III: Issues 11. Consumption 12. Biodiversity 13. Global Climate Change 14. Population Index
£121.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Economic Growth and Valuation of the Environment:
Book SynopsisThe debate on the valuation of nature and the environment, sustainable national income and economic growth is one of prime importance in environmental economics. Economic Growth and Valuation of the Environment deals with the fundamental approaches to calculating sustainable national income and their implications for the valuation of the environment. Leading economists present their views on how the UN system of national accounts could be adjusted to include environmental impacts and the depletion of natural resources. The discussion centres on the appropriateness of national income as an indicator for welfare, and specific attention is paid to the question of how to value changes in environmental quality or emissions of pollutants.Centred around the topics raised by the seminal publications of Roefie Hueting, this book will be of great interest to environmental economists and students focusing on environmental and natural resource economics. Environmental policymakers will welcome the lively and up-to-date discussion of a range of policy issues.Table of ContentsContents: 1. Valuation of Nature and the Environment Part I: Setting the Stage 2. Environmental Valuation and Sustainable National Income According to Hueting 3. Three Persistent Myths in the Environmental Debate 4. Key Issues in Environmental Economics Part II: Reflections 5. Roefie Hueting’s Perpendicular ‘Demand Curve’ and the Issue of Objective Value 6. Values, Valuation, and Valuing Processes 7. Technical Progress, Finite Resources and Intergenerational Justice Part III: Green Accounting and Sustainable National Income 8. Steering by the Right Compass: The Quest for a Better Assessment of the National Product 9. Valuing Nature 10. Nature Capital, the Greened National Product and the Monetization Frontier 11. Alternative Calculations of a Sustainable National Income for the Netherlands According to Hueting Part IV: Conclusion 12. An Appreciation of Dr Roefie Hueting’s Ecological Work 13. Rejoinders to Symposium Authors Index
£132.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Environmental Policy in the European Union
Book SynopsisThis important book presents a comprehensive and systematic investigation of the effectiveness of environmental policy within the European Union at the dawn of the twenty-first century.The development of environmental policy, including the policymaking process, is analysed from an historical perspective. The authors then examine implementation and enforcement and present a critical appraisal of the impact of environmental policy throughout Europe. Key issues discussed include: trade and the environment environmental protection and the maintenance of industrial competitiveness agriculture and the environment energy and environmental policy transport and the environment tourism and the environment The authors provide insight into the problems of reconciling differing national interests, and present a number of proposals for environmental policy in the future. They conclude that what is required for effective environmental policy is not more radical measures but the opportunity for the measures already in place to be effectively implemented.This book will be of interest to a wide audience including students interested in environmental issues and the European Union, as well as postgraduates and academics working in the fields of environmental management and environmental studies. It will also be of use to environmental policymakers, consultants, advisers and non-government organizations.Trade Review'In the space of some 300 pages, the authors present the reader with a comprehensive treatment of the key features of EU environmental policy. . . This is an excellent addition to the literature and can be recommended to both the academic and practice-based readers of Business Strategy and the Environment.'Table of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction: The Rationale for a European Union Policy on the Environment 2. Developing the EU’s Environmental Perspective 3. The Makers of Environmental Policy 4. Implementation and Enforcement of Policy 5. Market Forces and the Environment 6. Trade and the Environment 7. Environmental Protection and the Maintenance of Industrial Competitiveness 8. Agriculture and the Environment 9. Energy and Environmental Policy 10. Transport and the Environment 11. Tourism and the Environment 12. The Future for Environmental Policy within the EU Bibliography Index
£38.90
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Frontiers in Ecological Economic Theory and
Book SynopsisResearch on the cutting edge of economics, ecology, and ethics is presented in this timely study. Building from a theoretical critique of the tradition of cost-benefit analysis, the contributors lay the foundation for a macroeconomics of environmental sustainability and distributive justice. Attention is then turned to three of the most critical areas of social and environmental applied research - biodiversity, climate change, and energy. The contributors redefine progress away from growth and toward development. To this end, the first section of the book tackles the dominant framework used in the US today to evaluate tradeoffs between economic growth and its inherent externalities. Succeeding chapters cover a wide variety of studies related to biodiversity health and energy. Each section is anchored with overviews by top scholars in these areas - including Herman Daly, Carl McDaniel, Stephen Schneider, and Nathan Hagens - and followed by detailed analyses reflecting the transdisciplinary approach of ecological economics.Students and scholars of ecological, environmental, and natural resource economics, sustainability sciences, and environmental studies will find this book of great interest. Non-profit and government agencies in search of methods and cases that merge the study of ecology and economics will also find the analyses of great practical value.Trade Review'. . . because of the high quality of many of the chapters and the selection of topics, the book is a valuable contribution to the literature on ecological economics. . . the book adds much that is helpful to the burgeoning literature on ecological economics.' -- Peter Victor, Ecological Economics'This book presents the best evidence yet that ecological economists in the United States are becoming a strong and unified voice on biodiversity loss, climate change, and energy options. The arguments presented here are rich, sound, convincing, timely, and are not about to lose their saliency any time soon.' -- Richard B. Norgaard, University of California, Berkeley, US'Erickson and Gowdy have put together a wonderful collection of contributions from a wide range of scholars that will greatly advance ecological economics.' -- Herman E. Daly, University of Maryland, College Park, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface Jon D. Erickson and John M. Gowdy PART I: ECOLOGICAL ECONOMIC THEORY An Overview of Part I Herman E. Daly 1. Wrong in Retrospect: Cost–Benefit Analysis of Past Successes Frank Ackerman, Lisa Heinzerling and Rachel I. Massey 2. Reorienting Macroeconomic Theory Towards Environmental Sustainability Jonathan M. Harris 3. Growth and Equity: Dismantling the Kaldor–Kuznets–Solow Consensus Brendan P. Fisher and Jon D. Erickson 4. Ecological Economics as a Basis for Distributive Justice Frank G. Müller PART II: BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEM HEALTH An Overview of Part II Carl N. McDaniel 5. The Technological Juggernaut and Nature’s Ecological Systems Paul P. Christensen 6. Assessing Ecosystem Health in Dutchess County, New York Karin E. Limburg and Karen M. Stainbrook 7. Safe Minimum Standard Analysis of the Florida Manatee Barry D. Solomon, Cristi M. Corey-Luse and Kathleen E. Halvorsen 8. Development in the Adirondack Park, New York: Projections and Implications Michale J. Glennon and William F. Porter PART III: CLIMATE CHANGE An Overview of Part III Stephen H. Schneider 9. Problems in Economic Assessments of Climate Change with Attention to the United States of America Clive L. Spash 10. Climate Change in the Pacific Northwest: Valuing Snowpack Loss for Agriculture and Salmon Eban Goodstein and Laura Matson 11. A Contingent Behavior Analysis of the Effects of Climate Change on National Park Visitation Robert B. Richardson 12. Second-Best Pollution Taxes in the Economics of Climate Change Richard B. Howarth 13. Ranking the Adaptive Capacity of Nations to Climate Change when Socio-Political Goals are Explicit Brent M. Haddad PART IV: ENERGY An Overview of Part IV Nathan John Hagens 14. Energy Quality, Net Energy and the Coming Energy Transition Cutler J. Cleveland 15. The Hydrogen Futures Simulation Model: Pathways to a Hydrogen Future Thomas E. Drennen and Jennifer E. Rosthal 16. Measuring Sustainable Energy Development with a Three-Dimensional Index Brynhildur Davidsdottir, Daniel A. Basoli, Sarah Fredericks and Claire Lafitte Enterline 17. The Elasticity of Substitution, the Capital–Energy Controversy and Sustainability David I. Stern Index
£126.00
John Hunt Publishing GreenSpirit Path to a New Consciousness
Book SynopsisThe definitive book on 21st Century 'green spirituality' and its key role in creating a peaceful, just and sustainable world.
£11.99
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Environment, Land Use and Urban Policy
Book SynopsisThis comprehensive collection of previously published material traces the development of thought and research on land use and urban policy over the past 100 years.Through carefully selected readings, Environment, Land Use and Urban Policy charts the evolution of modern urban planning, the development of public health and the survival of the city. Key papers on planning theory and modelling form the heart of the collection together with the debates over rationality, the scientific method, social organization, Marxism and the politics of planning.Trade Review'The intelligent selection of papers in this book paints a vivid picture of the richness of planning research and practice. . . By identifying a number of important and still unresolved issues, this book is a very valuable research resource. It should also be a very useful teaching reference.' -- Jean-Daniel Saphores, Transportation Research Part A 37'. . . there is some very useful material in here. . .' -- Chris Wood, Place'. . . this is a very useful collection of essays and modern day students should appreciate finding some of the "classics" reproduced at the beginning. . .' -- David Pearce, Environment and Planning BTable of ContentsContents: Acknowledgements • Introduction Part I: Classic Papers 1. William Alonso (1966), ‘Cities, Planners, and Urban Renewal’ 2. Colin Clark (1958), ‘Transport – Maker and Breaker of Cities’ 3. Peter Hall (1989), ‘The Turbulent Eighth Decade: Challenges to American City Planning’ 4. David Harvey (1978), ‘On Planning the Ideology of Planning’ 5. Melvin M. Webber (1963), ‘Order in Diversity: Community Without Propinquity’ Part II: Planning Theory 6. Manuel Castells (1980), ‘Cities and Regions beyond the Crisis: Invitation to a Debate’ 7. Andreas Faludi (1983), ‘Critical Rationalism and Planning Methodology’ 8. John Friedmann and Barclay Hudson (1974), ‘Knowledge and Action: A Guide to Planning Theory’ 9. Richard E. Klosterman (1985), ‘Arguments For and Against Planning’ Part III: Modelling Approaches and Evaluation 10. Michael Batty (1989), ‘Urban Modelling and Planning: Reflections, Retrodictions and Prescriptions’ 11. N. Lee and F. Walsh (1992), ‘Strategic Environmental Assessment: An Overview’ 12. Nathaniel Lichfield (1970), ‘Evaluation Methodology of Urban and Regional Plans: A Review’ 13. Richard F. Muth (1985), ‘Models of Land-Use, Housing, and Rent: An Evaluation’ 14. R. Andrew Sayer (1976), ‘A Critique of Urban Modelling: From Regional Science to Urban and Regional Political Economy’ 15. R.H. Williams (1986), ‘E.C. Environment Policy, Land Use Planning and Pollution Control’ Part IV: Urban Policy and the Environment 16. William P. Anderson, Pavlos S. Kanaroglou and Eric J. Miller (1996), ‘Urban Form, Energy and the Environment: A Review of Issues, Evidence and Policy’ 17. Andrew Blowers (1993), ‘Environmental Policy: The Quest for Sustainable Development’ 18. John Friedmann (1989), ‘Planning, Politics, and the Environment’, Benjamin Chinitz, ‘Growth Management from an Economist’s Perspective’ and Hilda Blanco and Michael Neuman, ‘The Environment as Common Ground: Learning from Practice’ 19. Herbert Girardet (1990), ‘The Metabolism of Cities’ 20. Kevin Lynch (1961), ‘The Pattern of the Metropolls’ 21. Michael A. Toman (1994), ‘Economics and “Sustainability”: Balancing Trade-offs and Imperatives’ Part V: Sustainable Cities 22. D. Banister, S. Watson and C. Wood (1997), ‘Sustainable Cities: Transport, Energy, and Urban Form’ 23. Michael Breheny and Ralph Rookwood (1993), ‘Planning the Sustainable City Region’ 24. Scott Campbell (1996), ‘Green Cities, Growing Cities, Just Cities? Urban Planning and the Contradictions of Sustainable Development’ 25. Robert Cervero (1994), ‘Rail Transit and Joint Development: Land Market Impacts in Washington, D.C. and Atlanta’ 26. Robert Cervero and John Landis (1997), ‘Twenty Years of the Bay Area Rapid Transit System: Land Use and Development Impacts’ 27. Peter Gordon and Harry W. Richardson (1997), ‘Are Compact Cities a Desirable Planning Goal?’ 28. Peter W.G. Newman and Jeffrey R. Kenworthy (1991), ‘Transport and Urban Form in Thirty-Two of the World’s Principal Cities’ 29. David Satterthwaite (1997), ‘Sustainable Cities or Cities that Contribute to Sustainable Development?’ Name Index
£266.00
Huia Publishers M?ori and the Environment
Book SynopsisThe New Zealand environment has been allowed to deteriorate, but it is not too late to undo the damage. This book advocates the adoption of the kaupapa of kaitiakitanga (guardianship) to preserve what is left and to restore the lakes, streams, rivers.
£27.16
George F. Thompson Gettysburg Contested: 150 Years of Preserving America's Cherished Landscapes
Book SynopsisAfter the American Revolution, sites representing key events in American history were crucial to the young nation's efforts to formalize its story. Following the Civil War, national history became a primary vehicle for patriotic and spiritual reconstruction, and sites such as historic battlefields served important roles in remembering the past during the nation's subsequent challenging periods, including the Great Depression and the Vietnam War.Gettysburg Contested traces patterns of commemoration back to the well-known field of battle of July 1 3, 1863, which earned a legacy as sacred ground that remains today, more than 150 years later. But the landscape history and record of preservation at Gettysburg are complicated, for Gettysburg has wrestled with large issues, ranging from public versus private development, to the role of local, state, and federal governments, to the actual implementation of memorialization on the battlefield.Although the story of the battle is ingrained in the fabric of American memory, Brian Black's account considerably broadens the scope. Never before has Gettysburg's story been told so completely, offering layer upon layer, story upon story. Gettysburg thus becomes a springboard to understanding more fully the nation's need for sacred sites and symbols of America's past, including cherished landscapes such as Gettysburg. In Gettysburg Contested, America's treasured battlefield becomes the great laboratory for how Americans preserve and honor the past.
£26.96
University of Nevada Press Reimagining Environmental History: Ecological
Book SynopsisChristian Knoeller presents a radical reinterpretation of environmental history set in the heartland of America. In an excellent model of narrative-based scholarship, this book dynamically reimagines American environmentalism across generations of writers, artists, and scientists. Knoeller starts out with Audubon, and cites Thoreau’s journals in the 1850s as he assesses an early 17th century account of New England’s natural resources by William Wood, showing the epic decline in game and bird populations in Concord. This reading of environmental history is replicated throughout with a gallery of novelists, poets, essayists, and other commentators as they explore ecological memory and environmental destruction. In apt discussions of Matthiessen, Lopez, Wendell Berry, William Stafford and many others, Knoeller offers vibrant insights into literary history. He also cites his own memoir of perpetual development on his family’s farm in Indiana, enriching the scholarship and making an urgent plea for the healing aesthetics of the imagination. Reading across centuries and genres, Knoeller gives us a vibrant new appraisal of Midwestern/North American interior literary traditions and makes clear how vital environmental writing is to this region. To date, no one has written such an eloquent and comprehensive cross-genre analysis of Midwestern environmental literature.Trade ReviewReimagining Environmental History provides a chronological and cross genre analysis of the environmental history of the Midwest. Knoeller provides a fresh and compelling perspective on many landscapes of the Midwest that include the Ohio River Valley, the Boundary Waters of Minnesota and lands of the Great Lakes, to stretches of tallgrass prairie and the High Plains of North America. The book is well-supported through careful reading of primary texts and parsing of secondary literature."" - Susan Naramore Maher, author of Deep Map Country: Literary Cartography of the Great Plains""Knoeller’s book is an important addition to ongoing scholarship on environmental history in literature, eco criticism, and the intersection of landscape and imaginative vision in literature. It is extremely well written in a voice that will reach scholarly communities and the general public pursuing insights and solutions to dealing with climate change. The research is meticulously careful and thorough. The approach is a close reading of texts leading to new insights on literary history, an urgent plea for the healing aesthetics of the imagination, and an exquisitely clear memoir on the author’s experiences which enrich the scholarship."" - Ronald Primeau, author of Herbert Woodward Martin and the African American Tradition in Poetry
£26.96
University of Nevada Press Here is Where I Walk: Episodes From a Life in the
Book SynopsisWhile living in the Presidio National Park, Leslie Carol Roberts became enchanted with the park's 125-year old forest, native plant and habitat restoration, serpentine rock formations, and wild beaches just outside the Golden Gate. Roberts unearths stories of scientists, spiritualists, and artists around the globe engaged with specific and peculiar places, from the Indiana Dunes to Tasmanian euc forests to the work of landscape painters, to Iowa classrooms in this memoir pursuing an understanding what it means to live a life of creativity and creation.
£15.96
Springer Nature Switzerland AG Climate Psychology: On Indifference to Disaster
Book SynopsisThis book investigates the psycho-social phenomenon which is society’s failure to respond to climate change. It analyses the non-rational dimensions of our collective paralysis in the face of worsening climate change and environmental destruction, exploring the emotional, ethical, social, organizational and cultural dynamics to blame for this global lack of action. The book features eleven research projects from four different countries and is divided in two parts, the first highlighting novel methodologies, the second presenting new findings. Contributors to the first part show how a ‘deep listening’ approach to research can reveal the anxieties, tensions, contradictions, frames and narratives that contribute to people’s experiences, and the many ways climate change and other environmental risks are imagined through metaphor, imagery and dreams. Using detailed interview extracts drawn from politicians, scientists and activists as well as ordinary people, the second part of the book examines the many different ways in which we both avoid and square up to this gathering disaster, and the many faces of alarm, outrage, denial and indifference this involves. Table of ContentsChapter 1: Introduction; Paul Hoggett.- Part I: Mostly Methods.- Chapter 2: New Methods for Investigating New Dangers; Renee Lertzman.- Chapter 3: Children & Climate Change: Exploring Children’s Feelings about Climate Change using Free Association Narrative Interview Methodology; Caroline Hickman.- Chapter 4: An Integrative Methodology for Investigating Lived Experience and the Psychosocial Factors Influencing Environmental Cognition and Behaviour; Nadine Andrews.- Chapter 5: Emotional Work as a Necessity: A Psychosocial Analysis of Low-Carbon Energy Collaboration Stories; Rosie Robison.- Chapter 6: Climate Change, Social Dreaming and Art: Thinking the Unthinkable; Julian Manley & Wendy Hollway.- Chapter 7: Researching Climate Engagement: Collaborative Conversations and Consciousness Change; Sally Gillespie.- Part II: Mostly Findings.- Chapter 8: Emotions, Reflexivity and the Long Haul: What we do About how we Feel About Climate Change; Jo Hamilton.- Chapter 9: Leading with Nature in Mind; Rembrandt Zegers.- Chapter 10: Attitudes to Climate Change in some English Local Authorities: Varying Sense of Agency in Denial and Hope; Gill Westcott.- Chapter 11:We Have to Talk About….Climate Change; Robert Tollemache.- Chapter 12: Engaging with Climate Change: Comparing the Cultures of Science and Activism; Ro Randall & Paul Hoggett.- Chapter 13: Conclusion; Paul Hoggett.
£23.74
Springer International Publishing AG A Sustainable Philosophy—The Work of Bryan Norton
Book SynopsisThis book provides a richly interdisciplinary assessment of the thought and work of Bryan Norton, one of most innovative and influential environmental philosophers of the past thirty years. In landmark works such as Toward Unity Among Environmentalists and Sustainability: A Philosophy of Adaptive Ecosystem Management, Norton charted a new and highly productive course for an applied environmental philosophy, one fully engaged with the natural and social sciences as well as the management professions. A Sustainable Philosophy gathers together a distinguished group of scholars and professionals from a wide array of fields (including environmental philosophy, natural resource management, environmental economics, law, and public policy) to engage Norton’s work and its legacy for our shared environmental future. A study in the power of intellectual legacy and the real-world influence of philosophy, the book will be of great interest scholars and students in environmental philosophy, public policy and management, and environmental and sustainability studies. By considering the value and impact of Norton’s body of work it will also chart a course for the next generation of pragmatic environmental philosophers and sustainability scholars grappling with questions of environmental value, knowledge, and practice in a rapidly changing world.Trade Review“Carl Griffin and Briony McDonagh have made an important contribution to the field of British protest studies. … in my view this is a very well-researched, informative and deeply committed collection, and it undoubtedly strengthens and enhances what is already a venerable canon of work on British protest history.” (Peter Jones, Family & Community History, Vol. 22 (2), July, 2019)Table of ContentsChapter 1. Norton on Sustainability as Such (Paul B. Thompson).- Chapter 2. Ecological Sustainability (J. Baird Callicott).- Chapter 3. Norton vs Callicott on Interpreting Aldo Leopold: A Jamesian View (Piers H.G. Stephens).- Chapter 4. The Language of Environmental Ethics: Escaping The Emotivist Trap (Daniel W. Bromley).- Chapter 5. Environmental Pragmatism, Decision Theory, and Systematic Conservation Planning (Sahotra Sarkar).- Chapter 6. Values Pluralism and “Sustainability” (Richard Howarth).- Chapter 7. Shared Values and Scientific Knowledge in Environmental Decision-making (Evelyn Brister).- Chapter 8. Adaptive Management as a Theory of Intergenerational Justice? (Clark Wolf).- Chapter 9. Leadership for Sustainability (R. Bruce Hull).- Chapter 10. The Power of Process: A Role for Norton’s Deliberative Approach to Sustainability in Building Constituencies for Change (Paul D. Hirsch) etc.
£85.49
Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden Moritz Schlick. Naturphilosophische Schriften
Book SynopsisVorwort der Herausgeber.- Einleitung.- Anhang zur Einleitung: Nachlassforschung zu verschiedenen Stücken aus Schlicks Wiener Zeit.- Einführung in die Naturphilosophie/Naturphilosophie.- Naturphilosophie [1927].- Gegenwartsfragen der Naturphilosophie (1934).- Naturphilosophie [1932/33 & 1936].- Anhang: Naturphilosophie (Notizen II).- Anhang: Literaturverzeichnis, Moritz Schlick Bibliographie, Aufbau und Editionsprinzipien der Moritz Schlick Gesamtausgabe, Personenregister, Sachregister.
£125.99
AMOR RADICAL
Book Synopsis
£23.32
Editorial Kairos Así Habla La Tierra
Book Synopsis
£15.97
Taylor & Francis Environmental Humanities and the Uncanny Ecoculture Literature and Religion Routledge Explorations in Environmental Studies
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£128.25
Taylor & Francis Poetics of the Earth
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£128.25
Taylor & Francis Ecoactivism and Social Work New Directions in Leadership and Group Work Indigenous and Environmental Social Work
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£128.25
Taylor & Francis Environmental Ethics and Uncertainty
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£128.25
Taylor & Francis Environmental Ethics and Uncertainty Wrestling with Wicked Problems
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£35.14
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Routledge Handbook on Ecosocialism
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£204.25
Taylor & Francis Greening PostIndustrial Cities
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£43.69
Taylor & Francis Climate Change Ethics and the NonHuman World
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£128.25
Taylor & Francis Environmental Humanities and Theologies
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£39.99