Environmentalistm and conservationist Books
The Energy and Resources Institute, TERI Biodiversity, Communities and Climate Change
Book SynopsisThe book "Biodiversity, Community, and Climate Change" emphasizes biodiversity conservation, climate change, and community engagement. It discusses biodiversity assessment tools, allelopathic compounds' impacts, geospatial monitoring of urban ecosystems, community forestry, and participatory conservation methods.
£34.19
Crown Confessions of An EcoWarrior
Book SynopsisA book that will set the course for the environmental movement for years to come, Confessions of an Eco-Warrior is an inspiring ecological call to arms by America's foremost and most controversial environmental activist. Rude and brilliant. Read it and you will see the future.--William Kittredge.
£11.89
Cambridge University Press EcologicalEconomic Modelling for Biodiversity Conservation
Book SynopsisEcologists and economists both use models to help develop strategies for biodiversity management. The practical use of disciplinary models, however, can be limited because ecological models tend not to address the socioeconomic dimension of biodiversity management, whereas economic models tend to neglect the ecological dimension. Given these shortcomings of disciplinary models, there is a necessity to combine ecological and economic knowledge into ecological-economic models. Gradually guiding the reader into the field of ecological-economic modelling by introducing mathematical models and their role in general, this book provides an overview on ecological and economic modelling approaches relevant for research in the field of biodiversity conservation. It discusses the advantages of and challenges associated with ecological-economic modelling, together with an overview of useful ways of integration. Although being a book about mathematical modelling, ecological and economic concepts plTrade Review'… the book aims to give a comprehensive survey of useful mathematical methods relevant to environmental policy design. The author stops to explain core concepts and provide historical context where necessary.' Chay Paterson, zbMATHTable of ContentsPart I. Modelling: 1. What is a model?; 2. Purposes of modelling; 3. Typical model features; Part II. Ecological Modelling: 4. Homogenous deterministic population models; 5. Homogenous stochastic population models; 6. Spatial population models; 7. Models with individual variability; 8. Models of biodiversity; Part III. Economic Modelling: 9. Instruments for biodiversity conservation; 10. Game theory; 11. Incentive design; 12. Modelling human decisions; 13. The agglomeration bonus; Part IV. Ecological-Economic Modelling: 14. Foundations of ecological-economic modelling; 15. Benefits and challenges of ecological-economic modelling; 16. Integration of ecological and economic models; 17. Examples of ecological-economic modelling; 18. Outlook.
£105.00
Echo Point Books & Media, LLC This Hill, This Valley: A Memoir (American Land Classics)
£22.48
IGI Global Disruptive Technologies and Eco-Innovation for Sustainable Development
Book SynopsisThe rise of technology in human culture has changed almost every facet of society. Technology is especially useful regarding sustainable development. These technologies can cause significant greenhouse gas reductions and other benefits in terms of logistics and smart cities. New technology applied in this way can greatly help the human effort to restore the environment. Disruptive Technologies and Eco-Innovation for Sustainable Development provides an in-depth look into the new techniques, strategies, and technologies for achieving environmental sustainability through best business and technology practices. The book covers topics such as eco-innovation, green criteria, Agriculture 4.0, and topics related to logic, philosophy, and history of science and technology from the green/sustainable point of view. It is essential for managers, academicians, scientists, students, and researchers in various government, public, and private sectors.
£147.60
Quarto Publishing PLC Plant a Tree and Retree the World
Book Synopsis This handbook explains all the ways trees are essential for our climate, our urban and rural environment, our society and our mental health Table of ContentsIntroduction 6 1 TREES AND THE WORLDTrees and the Climate 14Trees, Soil and Fungi 20Trees and Wildlife 26Agroforestry 32 2 TREES AND HAPPINESSShade and Shelter 42Trees and Pollution 46Why Climbing Trees is Good for You 50Expanding Tree-based Play 52Trees and Mental Health 54Community and Reduced Crime 58 3 GROWING TREESRaising Your Own Trees 64Growing Apple Trees on Their Own Roots 68How to Plant a Tree 70Keeping Your Tree Healthy 74Using Woodchip in Your Garden 76 4 THE FORTY BEST TREESMapleAlderBanksiaBirch BottlebrushChestnutBean TreeCedarCercisDogwoodHazelHawthornHandkerchiefGum TreeSpindleBeechFigAshHoney LocustHollyWalnutMagnoliaAppleRedwoodMulberry IronwoodPinePlane AspenAlmondCherryPlumPearOakMangroveBlack LocustWillowElderSorbusElm Guide to Tree Identification 160 5 TREES AND THE ECONOMYBuy Wood to Save the World 166Working With Trees 170 Further Reading 173Index 174Acknowledgments 176
£15.29
Harriman House Publishing Conscious Investing
Book SynopsisConscious investors are part of a growing movement who believe they can do better things with their money when they deeply connect with their money and when they allow themselves to see the big picture: namely, the wider systemic impact that their investment decisions entail.Humanity's current social and environmental challenges require us to dramatically rethink global growth for long-term prosperity and to transform capital markets into a force for good. This will need a fundamental shift towards a regenerative economy as well as a regenerative form of investing. Consciously reflecting and consciously acting upon one's own personal- and financial choices will definitely be part of the solution. Conscious investors are profoundly connected to their mission in life, to humanity and to all the planet. To them investing is an extension of their life's calling and they are aware that everything is not only connected, but also co-evolves in the web-of-life.Conscious investing enlarges the picture beyond the intention to create a positive social and environmental impact, next to achieving a financial return, and brings a systemic view to the investor. It is both a state of awareness as well as a holistic form of impactful investing.This book aims to share approaches to conscious investing that are valid for everyone: a normal person with a family to take care of, as well as dedicated impact investing enthusiasts. Throughout, you will find personal investment stories that have created tangible real-life outcomes and positive impact in multiple ways.Conscious investors represent a new, enlightened group of investors who are not only value-driven but who proactively point their money towards the future they want for themselves, their children and their planet.Trade Review"Conscious investing makes the investor as happy as the investee, it is the joint creation of value for society." --Martin Essl, Founder of the Essl Foundation. "Now is the time to rethink growth and radically change the way of investing in order to save the planet. With her book "Conscious Investing", Christin ter Braak-Forstinger provides a comprehensive guide for the societal shift towards sustainability." --Dr. Franz Fischler, President of the European Forum Alpbach. "... After reading this book investors will have gained a holistic insight into how they can use their capital to benefit the issues that matter to them, as well as make a proft along the way. Not only might Conscious Investing make you a better investor, it might also make you a better person." --Richard Gill, Master Investor Magazine. "These days stakeholders deal with a drastic change in investment approach facing an unavoidable responsibility for sustainable development. In her book "Conscious Investing", Christin ter Braak-Forstinger outlines a series of impact-investing stories that provide vivid examples of how you can pursue positive economic outcomes and scalable societal impact in the same time". --Ruben Vardanyan, entrepreneur, Investor & philanthropistTable of ContentsUli Grabenwarter / Foreword 1. Christin ter Braak-Forstinger / An introduction to conscious investing: why my investments can save the planet as well as my soul 2. John Fullerton / Investing in a regenerative civilization 3. Charly Kleissner, Ph.D. / Conscious investing as practiced by 100% impact investors 4. Joseph Tenzin Oliver / The next generation of conscious investors: values redefined 5. Ditte Lysgaard Vind / Experience of a next-gen investor: finding my ground the circular way 6. Kate Poole / The spiritual dimension of conscious investing 7. Peter Scheuch and Julia Oestreich / Foundations as conscious investors: a case study 8. Adam Seitchik / Money in place: catalyzing local impact investing 9. Luke Gillott / The practices of conscious companies 10. Peter Wuffli and Andreas Kirchschlaeger / Conscious and ethical investing: investor life cycle and investment process 11. Thomas Goldfuss / Money is a means to transform society 12. Philipp Kauffmann / Save the earth, it's the only planet with chocolate: can a chocolate business escape the commodity trap and participate in restoring grace, justice and beauty to the world?
£25.49
Black Rose Books Solving History: The Challenge of Environmental
Book Synopsis
£16.10
PublicAffairs,U.S. The Snow Leopard Project: And Other Adventures in
Book SynopsisPost-war Afghanistan is fragile, volatile, and perilous. It is also a place of extraordinary beauty. Evolutionary biologist Alex Deghan came to Afghanistan and created a startup, Conservation X Labs, to save Afghanistan's unique and extraordinary wildlife and natural landscape after decades of war. His workplace was so remote that roads themselves would disappear, and travel was by foot, yak, or mule, following ancient pathways for weeks into the mountain kingdoms and desolate landscapes.Conservation, it turned out, provided a common bond between Alex's team and the people of Afghanistan, where his international team worked unarmed in some of the most dangerous places in the country. They successfully built the country's first national park, completed the first wildlife survey in thirty years, and worked to stop the poaching of the country's iconic endangered animals, including the elusive snow leopard. In doing so, they restored a part of Afghan identity that is ineffably tied to the land itself. For a people who had spent decades as refugees or subject to the horrors and desolation of war, the quest to restore Afghanistan's wildlife became the restoration of Afghanistan's very culture and deep history.
£20.90
PM Press A Line In The Tar Sands: Struggles fo
Book Synopsis
£21.59
Nomad Publishing Empires in Collision: The Green versus Black
Book Synopsis
£17.95
LID Publishing Global Planet Authority: How we're about to save
Book SynopsisThe world is functioning outside the lines. The governance structures currently abided by are not supportive enough when it comes to fighting climate change and other environmental degradation. Perhaps it's time to start anew. In his first book, Forbes advocates for global taxation and regulation to protect this global asset, the planet. Packed full of facts, data, statistics, and figures, Forbes' book offers a compelling argument to save the planet. Angus Forbes has a long experience working at the coal face of capitalism, consumerism, and capital allocation, and his passion for progressive governance and sound knowledge of environmental degradation have led him to advocate for quite a unique solution, the Global Planet Authority.
£8.54
The University of Chicago Press Dealing with Risk Why the Public and the Experts
Book SynopsisPostulates that for decades, both policymakers and analysts have been frustrated by conflicts between expert and lay perceptions of environmental risk. This work examines the role of intuition, mental habits, and cognitive frameworks in the construction of public opinion.
£28.00
University of Washington Press The Environmental Moment
Book SynopsisCollection of documents revealing the significance of the years 1968-1972 to the environmental movementTrade Review"It is a representative collection that can supplement a textbook for American environmental history courses. . . . He rightly sees the years 1968-1972 as pivotal for the modern environmental movement. Recommended." * Choice *Table of ContentsForeword by William Cronon Acknowledgments Introduction Part 1. Warnings “Air Pollution in Donora, PA: Epidemiology of the Unusual Smog Episode of October 1948, Preliminary Report” Paul Shepard, “The Place of Nature in Man’s World,” The Atlantic Naturalist (1958) Howard Zahniser, “Wilderness Forever” (1961) Rachel Carson, Silent Spring (1962) Carl Carmer, Testimony before the Federal Power Commission in the Matter of Consolidated Edison (1964) Part 2. A Dying Planet Paul R. Ehrlich, The Population Bomb (1968) Stewart Brand, Whole Earth Catalog (1969) Jack Newfield, “Lead Poisoning: Silent Epidemic in the Slums,” Village Voice (1969) Daniel W. Hannan, Testimony before the Allegheny County Commissioners (1969) United Auto Workers, Letter Initiating Down River Anti-Pollution League (1969) Dr. N. K. Sanders, “The Santa Barbara Oil Spill: Impact on Environment” (1969) Seattle–King County Department of Public Health, Annual Report, 1969 Part 3. Earth Year 59 The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 Editorial, National Review Bulletin (1970) Citizens Association of Beaufort County, “Is This What You Want for South Carolina’s Waters?” Columbia Record (1970) Richard Nixon, “Special Message to the Congress on Environmental Quality” (1970) Frank Herbert, “How Indians Would Use Fort,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer (1970) Barry Commoner, Harvard University Lecture (1970) Walt Kelly, Pogo Poster: “We Have Met the Enemy, and He Is Us” (1970) Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day Speech, Denver, Colorado (1970) Nathan Hare, “Black Ecology,” The Black Scholar (1970) Letters from Schoolchildren to Carl Stokes, Mayor of Cleveland (1970) Representative Louis Stokes, Address in Congress Supporting Rivers and Harbors and Flood Control Act of 1970 (1970) Ray Osrin, “Someday Son, All This Will Be Yours,” Cleveland Plain Dealer (1970) Eleanor Phinney, Letter to the Oregon Environmental Council (1970) Group Against Smog and Pollution (GASP), Public Service Announcements (1970) Clean Air Act Amendments (1970) Part 4. Is Cata strophe Coming? A Select Committee of the University of Montana, “Report on the Bitterroot National Forest” (1970) Dale A. Burk, Photograph of the Bitterroot Forest, Montana (1971) Governor Ronald Reagan, Remarks before the American Petroleum Institute (1971) Dr. Joseph T. Ling, Testimony Regarding the Water Pollution Control Act (1971) Council of the Southern Mountains, “We Will Stop the Bulldozers” (1972) William O. Douglas, Dissent, Sierra Club v. Morton (1972) John Maddox, “Is Catastrophe Coming?,” The Doomsday Syndrome (1972) Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972) Part 5. Continuation Jimmy Carter, “The Energy Problem: Address to the Nation” (1977) Robert A. Roland, Statement Regarding Superfund (1979) A Mother’s Reflections on the Love Canal Disaster (1982) Dr. James E. Hansen, Testimony Regarding the Greenhouse Effect and Global Climate Change (1987) Bibliographical Essay Index
£25.32
University of California Press Contesting Earths Future
Book SynopsisRadical ecology typically brings to mind media images of ecological activists standing before loggers' saws, staging anti-nuclear marches, and confronting polluters on the high seas. This book offers a balanced appraisal of radical ecology's principles, goals, and limitations.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction I. Deep Ecology's Wider Identification with Nature 2. Deep Ecology and Counterculturalism 3. Deep Ecology, Heidegger, and Postmodem Theory 4. Social Ecology and Its Critique of Deep Ecology 5. Radical Ecology, Transpersonal Psychology, and the Evolution of Consciousness 6. Ecofeminism's Critique of the Patriarchal Domination of Woman and Nature 7. Ecofeminism and Deep Ecology 8. Chaos Theory, Ecological Sensibility, and Cyborgism Notes Index
£27.90
University of California Press Human Impacts on Salt Marshes
Book SynopsisSalt marshes are vitally important coastal ecosystems that filter water, buffer against storm erosion, and provide essential nursery habitat for important fishery species. This book details how humans have modified salt marshes around the world and why these critical habitats desperately need protection.Trade Review"A summary and synthesis of relevant recent research on and management recommendations for yet another vital, sensitive and endangered habitat." -- Michael Stachowitsch Marine Ecology
£60.35
University of California Press Coastal Sage Peter Douglas and the Fight to Save
Book SynopsisThere are moments when we forget how fortunate we are to have the California coast. The state is home to 1,100 miles of uninterrupted coastline defined by long stretches of beach and jagged rocky cliffs. Coastal Sage chronicles the career and accomplishments of Peter Douglas, the longest-serving executive director of the California Coastal Commission. For nearly three decades, Douglas fought to keep the California coast public, prevent overdevelopment, and safeguard habitat. In doing so, Douglas emerged as a leading figure in the contemporary American environmental movement and influenced public conservation efforts across the country. He coauthored California's foundational laws pertaining to shoreline management and conservation: Proposition 20 and the California Coastal Act. Many of the political battles to save the coast from overdevelopment and secure public access are revealed for the first time in this study of the leader who was at once a visionary, warrior, and coastal sage.Trade Review"A succinct, engaging analysis of the issues that define California coastal preservation." * Environmental History *"Coastal Sage will be of great interest to scholars working on California environmental history and coastal history and, perhaps more importantly, to California environmental activists." * Western Historical Quarterly *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgments 1 • Few Safe Harbors: Peter M. Douglas’s Formative Years 2 • California’s Coast: Its Origins and Pre-Commission Development 3 • Sea Change: California’s Environmental Surge 4 • Coastal Conservation, Politics, and a New Commission 5 • High Tide: Th e Executive Director Years 6 • Ebb Tide: Th e Receding Years 7 • Footprints in Sand: Peter Douglas’s Legacy Appendix A: A Selected Time Line: California Coastal Conservation and Peter Douglas Appendix B: A Selected List of Peter Douglas’s Accomplishments and Honors Notes Bibliography Index
£64.00
University of California Press Coastal Sage Peter Douglas and the Fight to Save
Book SynopsisTrade Review"A succinct, engaging analysis of the issues that define California coastal preservation." * Environmental History *"Coastal Sage will be of great interest to scholars working on California environmental history and coastal history and, perhaps more importantly, to California environmental activists." * Western Historical Quarterly *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgments 1 • Few Safe Harbors: Peter M. Douglas’s Formative Years 2 • California’s Coast: Its Origins and Pre-Commission Development 3 • Sea Change: California’s Environmental Surge 4 • Coastal Conservation, Politics, and a New Commission 5 • High Tide: Th e Executive Director Years 6 • Ebb Tide: Th e Receding Years 7 • Footprints in Sand: Peter Douglas’s Legacy Appendix A: A Selected Time Line: California Coastal Conservation and Peter Douglas Appendix B: A Selected List of Peter Douglas’s Accomplishments and Honors Notes Bibliography Index
£27.00
MP-KAN Uni Press of Kansas The Restless and Relentless Mind of Wes Jackson
Book SynopsisIn more than four decades as president of The Land Institute, Wes Jackson became widely known as one of the founders of the sustainable agriculture movement. Robert Jensen provides a short, elegant introduction to Jackson's ideas on ways to provide humanity with a truly sustainable foundation in grain agriculture.Trade ReviewThis is a pithy yet deeply satisfying introduction to the life and work of ecological visionary Wes Jackson. Robert Jensen captures Jackson's 'restless and relentless' style of thinking but also shows him to be witty, passionate, and concerned. The ideas consolidated here offer a roadmap to overcome the tragic condition of humanity at this time in history, although the proposed shifts in consciousness may seem dauntingly out of reach." - Scott Slovic, university distinguished professor of environmental humanities, University of Idaho"Philosopher, farmer, scientist, teacher, prophet: Wes Jackson is, most importantly, the cocreator of a movement-what we now call environmental sustainability. To Jackson, we owe a new understanding of agriculture's mostly disastrous history and the radical rethinking required for its turn to a sustainable future. A timely tribute to the Sage of Kansas and the hugely influential Land Institute he founded. It's not too much to say that the future of the planet lies in the hands of those who would follow in his footsteps and read this book." - Gillen D'Arcy Wood, associate director, Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and the Environment, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign"Even for those who know Wes Jackson well, this is an excellent introduction to the philosophy of one of America's most important environmental thinkers. We see how Jackson's life and personality helped shape a way of thinking that is much needed in these challenging times. The prose is refreshingly clear and entertaining. Reading this book is like spending a long afternoon walking with Wes over his beloved prairies." - Angus Wright, professor emeritus of environmental studies, California State University, Sacramento"Robert Jensen has given us a concise introduction to the thought of one of our seminal thinkers, Wes Jackson. Rather than synthesizing Wes's significant body of work, Jensen lets us look into the mind and imagination that produced it. Wes Jackson's searching and restless intelligence looks at the prairie and sees the future, not just as a metaphor but as the laboratory that nature itself produced. We are told to 'take nature as the measure' Jensen here tells us why." - Gerald Torres, professor of environmental justice, Yale School of the Environment and Yale Law School
£29.66
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Ecology and Society An Introduction
Book Synopsisaeo This book introduces environmental ideas to a sociology audience. It is designed for a growing field in the sociology of environmental issues, and will be of great use to sociologists wanting to fill a gap in teaching.Trade Review'Its unusual perspective makes this an interesting text. It does more than just catalogue ideas and events, it tries to analyse these so that key strands can be extracted.' TEG News 'Martell has pulled off a difficult trick: he has written a book that will both inform students and engage professional scholars, and he has secured himself a place in future discussions regarding the relationship between environment and society.' The Sociological review 'In aiming to provide a theoretically informed undergraduate text on contemporary green issues, the book goes some way to filling a gap where the level of support material is widely regarded as insufficient.' Antipode "Ecology and Society makes an important contribution to this emerging literature by providing an introduction to green ideas for students of social science. This book will appeal to both students and researchers. It is written in an accessible style, provides useful summaries of key literature and suggests further reading at the end of each chapter ... a useful contribution to the literature on environment-society relations and a valuable addition to student reading lists.' Local EnvironmentTable of ContentsIntroduction. 1. Ecology and Industrialism. 2. The Sustainable Society. 3. Green Philosophy. 4. The Green Movement. 5. Ecology and Political Theory. 6. Rethinking Relations Between Society and Nature. 7. The Future of Environmentalism. Notes. References. Index.
£17.09
University of British Columbia Press The First Green Wave
Book SynopsisIn The First Green Wave, Ryan O'Connor traces the rise of the environmental movement in Toronto, home to one of Canada's earliest and most dynamic communities of environmental activists, from the mid-1960s to the mid-1980s. At the heart of the story is Pollution Probe, an organization founded in 1969 by students and faculty at the University of Toronto. Living up to its motto (Do it!) in its first year of operation, Pollution Probe confronted Toronto's City Hall over its use of pesticides, Ontario Hydro over air pollution, and the detergent industry over pollution of the Great Lakes. The organization's successes inspired the founding of other environmental organizations across Canada and led to the development of initiatives now taken for granted, such as waste reduction and energy policy. This book describes the heady days of Canada's early environmental movement and examines the forces that reshaped the activist landscape in the 1980s.
£73.80
University of British Columbia Press Breaching the Peace
Book SynopsisAward-winning journalist Sarah Cox recounts the prolonged battle, led by farmers and First Nations, to stop the cripplingly expensive and environmentally irresponsible Site C dam.Trade Review[This is] a breathtaking examination of how Site C was rammed through despite its devastating impacts on public finances and an ecological treasure trove … Cox delivers science journalism of the highest order, presented with passionate intensity and relentless curiosity. -- Charlie Smith * The Georgia Straight *Environmental journalist Cox presents a well-researched, accessible history of the Site C dam, a British Columbia project that’s drawn international attention for pork barrel politics, violations of First Nations rights, and threats to the ecosystem in the Peace River Valley. With energetic prose and extensive on-the-ground reporting, Cox profiles the people and issues behind the divisive project. * Publishers Weekly *Sarah Cox has written a searing new book about the scandalous Site C Dam in British Columbia … [she] expertly provides the context to the Site C saga that allows readers to understand what has happened here. Few people, except those who stand to profit immensely, have ever been enthusiastic about this project. -- Michael Harris * iPolitics *Breaching the Peace is an excellent title for Sarah Cox’s important book about the Site C Dam. That title yields a cascade of kaleidoscopic connotations — insights into this complex history of a river being broken up, of communities being divided, of “breach of the peace” lawsuits, and of byzantine machinations by BC Hydro to overcome the resistance. -- John Gellard * BC BookLook *The prose in [Breaching the Peace] is lapidary, beautifully crafted to give the reader a keen sense of the unique beauties of the Peace as well as some of the personalities in the indigenous/settler alliance that is fighting to protect it. -- Tom Sandborn * Columbia Journal *This book is important reading for scholars, activists, and policy-makers interested in environmental justice and community mobilization. In short, Cox’s work will appeal to a wide range of readers; her prose is accessible, passionate, and privileges the words and perspectives of those determined to protect their homes and homeland. -- Lianne C. Leddy * NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy *Cox supplements her journalistic account of the movement with extensive ethnographic work with the people at its forefront… the resistance has been immensely instructive of how social movements emerge and evolve to make a difference. Breaching the Peace is therefore a must-read for students and scholars of development studies, environmental studies, and social movements. Summing Up: Highly Recommended. -- R.C. Cottrell, California State University * CHOICE *Table of ContentsForeword / Alex Neve, Secretary-General of Amnesty International CanadaPrologue1 The Announcement2 Treaty 8 Stewards of the Land3 Slapped by Lawsuits4 The Birth of a Goliath5 Treaty Lands and Corporate Plans6 They Call It Progress, We Call It Destruction7 Subdivide and Conquer8 The Nature of the Peace9 Harnessing Political Power10 The Renewal Revolution11 Fight or Flight?12 The DecisionNotes; Selected Bibliography; Index
£17.99
University of Pittsburgh Press History of Environmental Politics Since 1945 A
Book SynopsisAn overview of contemporary environmental affairs, from 1940s to the present—with an emphasis on nature in an urbanized society, land developments, environmental technology, the structure of environmental politics, environmental opposition, and the results of environmental policy.
£42.63
University of Pittsburgh Press The American People and the National Forests
Book SynopsisA history of the role of American society in shaping the policies of the United States Forest Service.
£38.95
University of Toronto Press Creating Spaces of Engagement
Book SynopsisPolicy justice requires engagement of diverse people, knowledges, and forms of evidence at all stages of the policy-making process, from problem definition through to dissemination.Table of ContentsIntroduction: Why Create Spaces of Engagement? Connecting Theory, Policy, and Practice Leah R.E. Levac, University of Guelph and Sarah Marie Wiebe, University of Hawai’i, Manoa Part One: Across Disciplines and Beyond the Academy: Stretching Deliberative Democratic Theory 1. Revelatory Protest, Deliberative Exclusion, and the B.C. Missing Women Commission of Inquiry: Bridging the Micro/Macro Divide Genevieve Fuji Johnson, Simon Fraser University 2. The Alberta Energy Futures Lab: A Case Study in Socio-Cultural Transition Through Public Engagement Stephen Williams, Energy Futures Lab 3. Deliberative Democracy and Collective Impact: Seeing and Believing Shared Outcomes and Shared Participation Ellen Szarleta, Indiana University Northwest 4. Northern Women’s Conceptualizations of Wellbeing: Engaging in the "Right" Policy Conversations Leah R.E. Levac, University of Guelph and Jacqueline Gillis, University of Guelph 5. Unsettled Democracy: The Case of the Grandview-Woodlands Citizen Assembly Rachel Magnusson, City of Vancouver 6. Opening to the Possible: Girls and Women with Disabilities Engaging in Vietnam Deborah Stienstra, University of Guelph and Xuan Thuy Nguyen, Carleton University Part Two: Centring Voices from the Margins: Expanding and Evaluating Engagement Practices 7. How OpenMedia.ca Has Used Social Media to Engage Thousands in "Policy Hacking" for Regulatory Reforms at the CRTC and Other Government Bodies Tara Mahoney, Simon Fraser University 8. An Experiment in Engaging the "Heart and Mind": Building Community Capacity on Post-Secondary Campuses Catriona Remocker, University of Victoria, Tim Dyck, University of Victoria, and Dan Reist, University of Victoria 9. Art-Full Methods of Democratic Participation: Listening, Engagement, and Connection Joanna Ashworth, Simon Fraser University 10. Power, Privilege, and Policy-Making: Reflections on “Changing Public Engagement from the Ground Up” Alana Cattapan, University of Waterloo, April Mandrona, Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, Tammy Findlay, Mount Saint Vincent University, and Alexandra Dobrowolsky, Saint Mary’s University 11. Engaging with Women in Low-Income: Implications for Government-Convened Public Engagement Initiatives and Deliberative Democracy Leah R.E. Levac, University of Guelph Part Three: Effective and Affective Spaces of Deliberation 12. The heART of Engagement: Experiences of a Community-Created Mobile Art Gallery in Brazil Bruno de Oliviera Jayme, Royal Roads University 13. Temporary Labour Migrants’ Engagement and (Dis)engagement with the Policy Process Ethel Tungohan, York University 14. Storytelling as Engagement: Learning from Youth Voices in Attawapiskat Sarah Marie Wiebe, University of Hawai’i, Manoa 15. Making Spaces for Truth: Exploring the Lived Meanings of Deliberating Reconciliation in Higher Education Derek Tannis, Saskatchewan Polytechnic 16. Global Development Agendas with Local Relevance? "Glocal" Approaches, Tensions, and Lessons on Measuring Aid Effectiveness Astrid Pérez Piñán, University of Victoria Conclusion: Concluding Reflections on Policy Justice Deliberative Democracy, Citizen Participation, and the Future of Policy-Making Leah R.E. Levac, University of Guelph and Sarah Marie Wiebe, University of Hawai’i, Manoa
£68.00
University of Toronto Press Carbon Province Hydro Province
Book SynopsisCarbon Province, Hydro Province is a major contribution to both academic understanding and the vital question of how our federal and provincial governments can effectively work together, and thereby, for the first time, achieve a Canadian climate-change target.Trade Review"Macdonald has written a book of transcendent importance for the development of a genuinely effective climate change plan. His formulation of negotiating scenarios, in particular, offers a constructive path forward, one that moves away from federal-provincial stalemates and the easy agreements that avoid actual solutions. And his masterful grasp of Canada's so far lame efforts in this arena is a major contribution to understanding where we have been and where we must go." -- Geoff White * Literary Review of Canada *Table of ContentsA Parable of West and East 1. Introduction 1.1 Subject 1.2 Purpose 1.3 Methodology 1.4 Theoretical approach 1.5 Format 2. Energy and climate change intergovernmental relations 2.1 Historical evolution of Canadian intergovernmental relations 2.2 Mechanisms of Canadian intergovernmental relations 2.3 A flawed policy making process 2.4 Intergovernmental policy co-ordination 2.5 Energy and climate change jurisdiction 2.6 Energy and climate-change policy co-ordination 2.7 Federal government energy and climate-change strategy 3. Historical overview: Canadian energy and climate politics 3.1 Energy policy 1867 to 1989 3.2 National climate change policy in the 1990s 3.3 The Martin government 3.4 Public opinion on climate change 3.5 The Harper government 3.6 Provincial climate change policies 3.7 Energy policy 1989 to 2019 3.8 The Justin Trudeau government 3.9 Summary 4. Three underlying challenges 4.1 The West-East divide . Differing fossil fuel energy interests . Differing interests respecting climate change policy . Alberta's planned emission increases undercut reductions elsewhere . Western alienation 4.2 The inherent need to allocate greenhouse gas emission reductions 4.3 The weak intergovernmental process 5. Canadian national energy policy, 1973 - 1981 5.1 Narrative 5.2 Analysis 6. The first national climate change process 1990-1997 6.1 Narrative 6.2 Analysis 7. The second national climate change process 1998 - 2002 7.1 Narrative 7.2 Analysis 8. The Canadian Energy Strategy 2005-2015 8.1 Narrative 8.2 Analysis 9. The Pan-Canadian Framework 2015-2019 9.1 Narrative 9.2 Analysis 10. Drawing lessons 10.1 The three challenges and federal strategy 10.2 Factors affecting case outcomes 11. Putting in place an effective national climate change program
£51.85
University of Toronto Press An Anthropogenic Table of Elements
Book SynopsisWith stories of life in the Anthropocene, this book places Dmitri Mendeleev's periodic table of elements and his groundbreaking theory of elementality into modern context.Table of ContentsIntroduction Timothy Neale, Courtney Addison, and Thao Phan 1. 1080 Courtney Addison 2. Carbon Timothy Neale 3. Cement Eli Elinoff 4. Cheese Xenia Cherkaev, Heather Paxson, and Stefan Helmreich 5. Copper Manuel Tironi 6. Ice Alexis Rider 7. Kerosphere Émélie Desrochers-Turgeon, Ozayr Saloojee, and Zoe Todd 8. Lithium Scott Wark 9. Mould Alison Kenner and Sarah Stalcup 10. Mylar Derek P. McCormack 11. Seeds Xan Chacko 12. Sperm Janelle Lamoreaux and Ayo Wahlberg 13. Strontium Brad Bolman 14. Tectonics Zeynep Oguz 15. Testosterone J.R. Latham and Kate Seear 16. Virus Frederic Keck 17. Elements-to-Come Thao Phan Contributors Index
£52.70
University of Toronto Press The Canadian Environment in Political Context
Book SynopsisThe Canadian Environment in Political Context is an introductory book on environmental policy in Canada for those with little background in politics and government.Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgements Preface Part I: Institutions, Actors, and Processes 1. The Canadian Environment 2. Canadian Politics and Institutions 3. Making Policy in Canada 4. Canada’s Environmental History in Waves and Eras Part II: Environmental Issues 5. The Conservation of Species at Risk 6. Water 7. Air and Chemical Pollution 8. The Politics and Policy of Land: From Agriculture to Forests to Cities 9. Energy Policy and Climate Change Part III: Looking Further – The Arctic and Beyond 10. Politics and Policy in the North and Far North 11. The Canadian Environment in a Global Context 12. The Canadian Environment in the Twenty-First Century Glossary References Index
£36.00
University of Toronto Press The Canadian Environment in Political Context
Book SynopsisThe Canadian Environment in Political Context is an introductory book on environmental policy in Canada for those with little background in politics and government.Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgements Preface Part I: Institutions, Actors, and Processes 1. The Canadian Environment 2. Canadian Politics and Institutions 3. Making Policy in Canada 4. Canada’s Environmental History in Waves and Eras Part II: Environmental Issues 5. The Conservation of Species at Risk 6. Water 7. Air and Chemical Pollution 8. The Politics and Policy of Land: From Agriculture to Forests to Cities 9. Energy Policy and Climate Change Part III: Looking Further – The Arctic and Beyond 10. Politics and Policy in the North and Far North 11. The Canadian Environment in a Global Context 12. The Canadian Environment in the Twenty-First Century Glossary References Index
£76.50
University of Toronto Press Global Ecopolitics
Book SynopsisDespite sporadic news coverage of extreme weather events, high-level climate change diplomacy, special UN days of celebration, and popular media references to impending ecological collapse, most students are not exposed to the detailed presentation and analysis of the international relations and diplomacy of environmental policy-making. Comprehensive and accessibly written for first-year or second-year undergraduates, the second edition of Global Ecopolitics provides students with a panoramic view of the policymakers and the structuring bodies involved in the creation of environmental policies. Detailing a considerable amount of environmental activity since its initial 2012 publication, this up-to-date second edition uses an applicable framework of systemic analysis and important case studies that push students to form their own conclusions about past efforts, present needs, and future directions. Table of ContentsList of Acronyms Preface to the Second Edition Acknowledgments 1. Planetary Anxiety and Collective Dilemmas Sovereignty, Global Governance, and Public Goods Shades of Green The Crosscutting Dilemma: Our Growing Numbers War, Conflict, and Ecology Delving Deeper into Global Ecopolitics 2. International Arrangements: Actors and Effectiveness Multi-Scaled Adaptive Governance Individuals and Communities Governments and Governance International Law and Institutions Wicked Problems: Measuring Effectiveness in International Arrangements 3. Conserving Biodiversity and Wildlife Rising Concerns: The Historical Context The Convention on Biological Diversity The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna Redefining the Wealth of Nations 4. Deforestation and Land Degradation Deforestation The International Tropical Timber Agreement Desertification The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification Taking Root 5. Air Pollution and Climate Change Atmospheric Pollution The Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP) The Ozone Layer Arrangement The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Deep Breaths 6. Blue Peril: Oceans and Rivers The Poles The Oceans Crises UNCLOS Freshwater Scarcity The Veins of Life: Shared River Arrangements Surviving the Tides 7. Trade and the Global Environment Toxic Trade The Basel Convention on Trade in Hazardous Substances The WTO and the Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS) Toward Ethical Investments 8. Governance Gaps and Green Goals Invasive Alien Species Nanotechnology Global Tourism Food Security A Global Energy Strategy? Our Plastic World Conclusion: Fatigue or Momentum? 9. Concluding Thoughts toward a Humane Global Ecopolitics Moving From Angst to Resolve Afterword: What Can You Do? References Index
£25.19
Bristol University Press Too Hot to Handle?: The Democratic Challenge of
Book SynopsisScientists are clear that urgent action is needed on climate change, and world leaders agree. Yet climate issues barely trouble domestic politics. This book explores a central dilemma of the climate crisis: science demands urgency; politics turns the other cheek. Is it possible to hope for a democratic solution to climate change? Based on interviews with leading politicians and activists, and the author’s twenty years on the frontline of climate politics, this book explores why climate is such a challenge for political systems, even when policy solutions exist. It argues that more democracy, not less, is needed to tackle the climate crisis, and suggests practical ways forward.Trade Review“If politicians know the seriousness of the climate crisis, why don’t they act? This highly readable book explains.” Shaun Spiers, Green Alliance"The political process that is central to our democracy is faltering just as we need it most to lead on the climate crisis. Rebecca Willis articulates the problem elegantly and outlines options with great insight.” Juliet Davenport, Good Energy“A wonderful insight into the evolution of democracy that we need in order to deal with the climate crisis - and, even better, says what any of us can do to help bring that change about.“ Mike Berners-Lee, Lancaster University and author of There is No Planet B"Understanding the messy relationship between science and politics is key to delivering on the Paris climate commitments. In this book Rebecca Willis helps navigate a progressive course through these stormy waters." Kevin Anderson, Universities of Manchester (UK) and Uppsala (Sweden)“Asks the most important question in today’s Climate Emergency: how can we manage the most comprehensive transition in the history of humankind while putting citizens at the heart of it? The answer is to ramp up the opportunities for more democratic engagement at every level.” Jonathan Porrit, Forum for the Future"Politics and business as usual has failed us on climate – that’s why I joined Extinction Rebellion. Rebecca Willis argues convincingly that we will find a way through the climate and ecological crisis by renewing democracy, not ignoring it." Farhana Yamin, environmental lawyerTable of ContentsIntroduction: Democracy on hold? A minute to midnight: Governing the planet The energy elephant Dual realities: Living with the climate crisis 20 years of climate action, but emissions are still rising More, and better, democracy A strategy for the climate emergency The personal is political: How to be a good climate citizen
£12.34
Bristol University Press Realism and the Climate Crisis: Hope for Life
Book SynopsisIn the teeth of climate emergency, hope has to remain possible, because life insists on it. But hope also has to be realistic. And doesn’t realism about our plight point towards despair? Don’t the timid politicians, the failed summits and the locked-in consumerism all just mean that we have left things far too late to avoid catastrophe? There is a deeper realism of transformation which can keep life powerful within us. It comes at the price of accepting that our condition is tragic. That, in turn, calls for a harsher, more revolutionary approach to the demands of the emergency than most activists have yet been prepared to adopt. This is a book to think with, to argue and disagree with – and to hope with.Table of ContentsIntroduction: Hope, Realism and the Climate Crisis 1. The Demands of Realism 2. Transformation? 3. Creating Possibility 4. Responsibility Beyond Morality 5. The Bounds of Utopia 6. Climate Crisis as Tragedy 7. On the Way to Revolution 8. The New Revolutionary Dynamic 9. The Vanguard of Hope
£76.50
Bristol University Press Realism and the Climate Crisis: Hope for Life
Book SynopsisIn the teeth of climate emergency, hope has to remain possible, because life insists on it. But hope also has to be realistic. And doesn’t realism about our plight point towards despair? Don’t the timid politicians, the failed summits and the locked-in consumerism all just mean that we have left things far too late to avoid catastrophe? There is a deeper realism of transformation which can keep life powerful within us. It comes at the price of accepting that our condition is tragic. That, in turn, calls for a harsher, more revolutionary approach to the demands of the emergency than most activists have yet been prepared to adopt. This is a book to think with, to argue and disagree with – and to hope with.Table of ContentsIntroduction: Hope, Realism and the Climate Crisis 1. The Demands of Realism 2. Transformation? 3. Creating Possibility 4. Responsibility Beyond Morality 5. The Bounds of Utopia 6. Climate Crisis as Tragedy 7. On the Way to Revolution 8. The New Revolutionary Dynamic 9. The Vanguard of Hope
£25.64
Texas Tech Press,U.S. The West Texas Power Plant that Saved the World:
Book SynopsisWhat if the harbinger of our greener future was a small power plant set in the middle of nowhere in West Texas? Longtime alternative energy executive Andy Bowman's book makes exactly this case, outlining what he suggests is a more sustainable future for American capitalism. The West Texas Power Plant that Saved the World takes the Barilla solar plant in Pecos County as a test case for the state of renewable energy in the twenty-first century United States.For author Andy Bowman, this is a very personal story. Bowman grew up in Galveston and acutely remembers watching stormwater climb up seawalls and wreak havoc on his home. He weaves these memories into his coming of age over two decades in the alternative energy industry, beginning in the 1990s, and tracks it's the industry's fits and starts that lead to the Barilla project. Barilla was the first solar project to be built "on spec": essentially, the plant was built without a contract in place and with the assumption that customers would come. That trailblazing wager represents a tidal shift in the alternative energy industry.In a clear voice, Bowman explains the climate science that necessitated this shift and makes business-based arguments for what the future should look like. The result is a book that tells a personal story of West Texan innovation, gumption, and vision, while also outlining how our society needs to equip itself to confront climate change.
£21.71
Texas Tech Press,U.S. The West Texas Power Plant That Saved the World: Energy, Capitalism, and Climate Change, Revised and Expanded Edition
£21.71
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Violence of Conservation in Africa: State,
Book SynopsisOffering insights on violence in conservation in Africa, this timely book demonstrates how and why the state pursues conservation objectives to the detriment of its citizens. It focuses on how the dehumanization of black people and indigenous groups, the insertion of global green agendas onto the continent, a lack of resource sovereignty, and neoliberal conservation account for why violence is a permanent feature of conservation in Africa. Chapters uncover various forms of violence experienced on the continent, revealing the local and global conditions that enable them, and propose pathways towards non-violent conservation. The book concludes that the ideology of conservation is also an ideology about people. Crucially, it highlights the implications of increasing investment in violent instruments and the institutionalization of militarized approaches for conservation, the state, and ordinary people. Scholars and students of political ecology and environmental policy and planning will greatly benefit from this book’s drawing together of perspectives encompassing green violence and the militarization of conservation. It will also be an invigorating read for African studies researchers looking at coloniality and the re-evaluation of the African state, particularly through the lens of nature conservation.Trade Review‘This volume traces the trajectory of the dominant conservation narratives and approaches in Africa, and reveals the myriad ways in which contemporary conservation ideologies and practices reproduce colonial conservation ideologies and practices. The chapters compiled into this volume illuminate the contradictions and contestations of the dominant conservation approaches, and propose alternatives that can produce beneficial outcomes for both people and nature. This book is an important contribution to our understanding of conservation, and is a must read for those who want to envision a conservation which will guarantee sustainable outcomes.’ -- James C. Murombedzi, United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, Ethiopia‘The Violence of Conservation in Africa presents a sobering assessment of the toll in human suffering paid by ordinary citizens living in or near Africa's national parks and reserves. The essays reveal the undeniable coloniality of thought permeating twenty-first century nature conservation practices, linking the preservation of Africa’s charismatic wildlife to a long history of “violence against black bodies”. The editors have brought together mostly authors based in African NGOs and universities, giving voice to those close to events on the ground. This is a must read for anyone interested in protecting Africa’s biodiversity without sacrificing the human rights of common citizens.’ -- Rod Neumann, Florida International University, US‘The Violence of Conservation in Africa explores the vexed question of why conservation action in Africa is so often associated with violence and militarisation. Maano Ramutsindela, Frank Matose and Tafadzwa Mushonga have brought together a strong team of African researchers and practitioners to explore this strain of “green” violence through case studies. In a far-reaching and important book, they ask where conservation violence emerged, why it persists, and whether it is inevitable. They call for a future of non-violence in nature conservation, for the sake of both people and non-human nature.’ -- Bill Adams, University of Cambridge, UK, and The Graduate Institute, SwitzerlandTable of ContentsContents: Preface xii PART I DIMENSIONS OF VIOLENT CONSERVATION IN AFRICA 1 Conservation and violence in Africa 2 Maano Ramutsindela, Frank Matose and Tafadzwa Mushonga PART II THE MILITARIZATION OF CONSERVATION 2 The state and contested natural resources in Africa 23 Frank Matose, Dina Dabo, Tichayana Konono and Simphiwe Tsawu 3 The violence of greening the state in Africa 38 Emmanuel Mogende and Maano Ramutsindela 4 The coloniality of “crisis conservation”: the transnationalization and militarization of Virunga National Park from an historical perspective 53 Esther Marijnen 5 Violent forests, local people and the role of the state in Zimbabwe 73 Tafadzwa Mushonga 6 The new turn in the militarization of conservation in Cameroon, Central Africa 90 Guy Patrice Dkamela and Samuel Nguiffo PART III LOCAL IMPACT AND AGENCY 7 ‘We just saw the fence’: infrastructural violence, fencing and the legacy of South Africa’s bantustan 113 Amber Abrams 8 Postcolonialism, protected areas and Basarwa of Central Kalahari Game Reserve 134 Joseph E. Mbaiwa and Olekae T. Thakadu 9 Green violence along the value chain of illicit trade 155 Shaun Cozett 10 Transgression and the making of local heroes in Mozambique: the conflict of contested illegality 168 Nelisiwe L. Vundla PART IV ALTERNATIVES 11 Protecting (with) Mount Mabo: is another form of nature conservation possible? 188 Anselmo Matusse 12 Princess Vlei – a story of entangled vitality 203 Tania Katzschner and Bridget Pitt 13 Non-violent conservation: the need and possibilities 223 Maano Ramutsindela, Tafadzwa Mushonga and Frank Matose Index
£104.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Global Environmental Politics in a Turbulent Era
Book SynopsisWith the rapid destabilization, escalation and convergence of various environmental crises, global environmental politics is facing extreme turbulence. Tracing the causes, consequences and dangers of planetary turbulence, this essential book identifies the emerging opportunities to improve governance in environmental politics and transition the world order toward greater equity, justice and sustainability.Providing a comprehensive understanding of the nature and breadth of global environmental politics, leading scholars investigate the intersecting crisis events of this turbulent era. Chapters explore the political, environmental and economic issues surrounding growing inequality: soaring food and fuel prices; record numbers of migrants and refugees fleeing persecution and destitution; and the intensification of climate change. Finding the sources of turbulence to be overlapping and reinforcing, the book digs deeper into how various actors generate turbulence, looking closely at state sovereignty, civil society and societal organizations. Forward thinking, it reflects how different practices, conditions, lenses, and tools can create future avenues to imagine, facilitate, and actualize solutions for global sustainability during times of extreme turbulence.Interdisciplinary and international in scope, this insightful book will be an invaluable resource to students and scholars of environmental politics, policy, and governance; alongside policymakers and organizations looking to realize the Sustainable Development Goals.Trade Review‘A genuinely novel take on the broad nature of global environmental politics is a rare thing, but Dauvergne and Shipton have succeeded with gusto. Deploying the concept of turbulence – the sense of constant churn, multiple intersecting crises that never resolve but transform, disrupting lives in myriad ways – to great effect, this book provides an overarching framework for understanding how we might pursue sustainability in this context. It also details this in relation to a wide range of familiar and unfamiliar cases alike. All that is solid may be melting into air, but Dauvergne and Shipton help us guide our way through the turbulence.’ -- Matthew Paterson, University of Manchester, UK‘Dauvergne and Shipton’s remarkable volume brings together an amazing array of scholars who collectively provide a deep engagement with the unsettling forces at the root of overlapping global environmental crises, while also highlighting the opportunities that turbulence brings to transform our world for the better. It is a must read.’ -- Matthew Hoffmann, University of Toronto, CanadaTable of ContentsContents: INTRODUCTION 1 Understanding environmental politics in a turbulent era 1 Leah Shipton and Peter Dauvergne PART I THE NATURE AND BREADTH OF GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL TURBULENCE 2 Turbulence, converging crises, and environmental justice 13 David Schlosberg 3 Plastic turbulence: illusions of containment, clean-up, and control, and the emergent promise of diverse economies 25 Ekaterina Chertkovskaya, Jacob Hasselbalch, and Johannes Stripple 4 Rights, resilience, and water in turbulent times 37 Ekta Patel and Erika Weinthal 5 Promoting environmental rights in turbulent times: Latin America and the Escazú Agreement 49 Hayley Stevenson 6 Compound urban crises in global environmental politics 62 Marielle Papin, Linda Westman, Rachel Macrorie, Ahmad Shoaib Azizi, Michael Dede, Julie Greenwalt, Ibinabo Johnson, and Barbara Summers 7 Extractive industries and mineral resources: turbulence all around 75 Stacy D. VanDeveer, Hyeyoon Park, Yixian Sun, and Michele M. Betsill PART II ACTORS AS AGENTS OF TURBULENCE OR TRANSFORMATION 8 People power, disruption, and survival 91 Peter J. Jacques 9 State sovereignty, turbulence, and environmental disasters in global environmental politics 103 Susan Park 10 How philanthropic foundations fuel transformations and with what consequences for sustainable food systems 116 Agni Kalfagianni PART III PATHWAYS TO GLOBAL SUSTAINABILITY IN A TURBULENT ERA 11 Thinking gender in times of crisis: reflecting on gender, turbulence, and global environmental politics 130 Nicole Detraz 12 Is technological turbulence sustainable? 142 Leslie Paul Thiele 13 Beyond islands of sustainability? Opportunities and challenges of jurisdictional approaches in tropical forest governance 156 Philip Schleifer 14 Advancing global environmental politics research through systems-oriented analysis 169 Henrik Selin 15 Turbulence and transition to healthy governance 184 D.G. Webster, Mark Axelrod, and Semra A. Aytur 16 Ratcheting-up through competition: global environmental governance in the era of rising geopolitical tensions between China and the West 197 Yixian Sun and Chuyu Liu CONCLUSION 17 Navigating turbulence for sustainability 211 Leah Shipton and Peter Dauvergne Index 224
£95.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook of Critical Environmental Politics
Book SynopsisThis timely Handbook offers a comprehensive outlook on global environmental politics, providing readers with an up-to-date view of a field of ever-increasing academic and public significance. Its critical perspective interrogates what is taken for granted in current institutions and social and power relations, highlighting the issues preventing meaningful change in the relationship between human societies and their biophysical underpinnings.Featuring contributions from over 60 established and emerging international scholars, the Handbook is organized into six thematic sections. It addresses theoretical approaches, contested notions, key issues, governance processes, mobilizations and emergent directions of inquiry, presenting a vital contemporary analysis of the major social science and political ecology debates over environmental questions.Scholars and students in the social sciences, in particular those studying politics and public policy, with an interest in the environment and climate change will find this Handbook to be essential reading. It will also be useful to academics in other disciplines related to ecology and environmental politics, as well as politicians and practitioners involved in green transition policies.Trade Review‘This terrific new Handbook is “critical” in multiple senses. First, it is critical of the tired and inadequate politics of global environmental summitry. Second, the established and emerging European scholars collected here demonstrate the rich and varied insights that a critical environmental politics can offer in the face of our multi-dimensional climate crisis. And finally, it is critical to the work of envisioning, strategizing, and building a more just future.’ -- John M. Meyer, California Polytechnic State University, Humboldt, US‘This magnificent Handbook shows how 21st century politics occupies the interstices of everyday life – from the digitised molecule to the spouse tax; from geopower to post-work. The editors are relational thinkers, well aware that the environment, so-called, is not the same as “nature”; rather, their title conveys an academic field subjecting itself to a reflexive process of decolonisation. This open textured epistemological stance owes much to the Frankfurt School's refusal of modernity. The spectrum of contested themes runs through debates over financialisation of nature, smart cities, genetic engineering, even a psychoanalysis of sustainability narratives! The call is for regulatory proposals and grassroots transitions sensitive to both feminist critique and to epistemic extractivism from Indigenous cultures. That said, the editors want to see discourse deconstruction replaced by a prefigurative politics, grounded in embodied practices. As they say, the task of critique is to make visible other ways of worlding.’ -- Ariel Salleh, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa‘This is an excellent collection of different schools of thought that offer critical insights to modern environmental politics. Useful for students and researchers alike.’ -- Giorgos Kallis, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, SpainTable of ContentsContents: Introduction: what is critical environmental politics? 1 Luigi Pellizzoni, Emanuele Leonardi and Viviana Asara PART I THEORETICAL STRANDS 1 Critical theory: praxis and emancipation beyond the mastery of nature 23 Christoph Görg 2 Decolonial ecologies: beyond environmentalism 40 Malcom Ferdinand 3 Feminisms and the environment 58 Corinna Dengler and Birte Strunk 4 Marxism and ecology: an ongoing debate 71 Emanuele Leonardi and Salvo Torre PART II CONTESTED NOTIONS 5 Anthropocene 91 Marija Brajdić Vuković and Mladen Domazet 6 Buen Vivir 104 Philipp Altmann 7 Degrowth 116 Ekaterina Chertkovskaya 8 Limits 129 Erik Gómez-Baggethun 9 Sustainability: buying time for consumer capitalism 141 Ingolfur Blühdorn PART III KEY ISSUES 10 Agrarian development and food security: ecology, labour and crises 157 Maura Benegiamo 11 Bioeconomies 170 Kean Birch 12 Cities and the environment 181 Hug March 13 Climate justice and global politics 192 Stefan Gaarsmand Jacobsen and Oliver Hunt 14 The Common(s) 206 Angelos Varvarousis 15 The cultural political economy of research and innovation: meeting the problem of growth in the Anthropocene 217 David Tyfield 16 Disasters and catastrophes 232 Laura Centemeri and Isabella Tomassi 17 Energy politics and energy transition 245 Natalia Magnani, Dario Minervini and Ivano Scotti 18 Expertise, lay/local knowledge and the environment 257 Rolf Lidskog and Monika Berg 19 Extractivism and neo-extractivism 270 Maristella Svampa 20 Religion and ecology 282 Jens Koehrsen 21 Social metabolism 295 Dario Padovan, Osman Arrobbio and Alessandro Sciullo 22 Technological fixes: nonknowledge transfer and the risk of ignorance 308 Matthias Gross 23 The values of Nature 318 Clive L. Spash and Tone Smith PART IV GOVERNANCE 24 Democracy and democratisation 333 Marit Hammond 25 Environmental violence 347 Gloria Pessina 26 Environment-related human mobility 362 Eleonora Guadagno 27 Financialisation of nature 374 Tone Smith 28 Fossil fuels and state–industry relations: a case study in environmental non-compliance 388 Edwin A. Edou, Debra J. Davidson and Sydney Karbonik 29 Global environmental governance and the state 402 Alina Brad, Ulrich Brand and Etienne Schneider 30 Just transition: a conflict transformation approach 416 Damian McIlroy, Seán Brennan and John Barry 31 Sustainable welfare: urban areas and transformational action 431 Kajsa Emilsson and Max Koch PART V MOBILIZATIONS 32 Climate change consensus: a depoliticized deadlock 443 Erik Swyngedouw 33 Ecological mobilizations in the Global South 456 Pallav Das 34 Engaging the everyday: sustainability, practices, politics 468 Alice Dal Gobbo 35 Environmental movements 483 Viviana Asara 36 More-than-social movements: politics of matter, autonomy, alterontologies 505 Andrea Ghelfi and Dimitris Papadopoulos PART VI NEW DIRECTIONS 37 Decolonising environmental politics 521 Patrick Bresnihan and Naomi Millner 38 Digitalisation as promissory infrastructure for sustainability 540 Ingmar Lippert 39 Eco-feminism and the commons: the Feminization of Resistance in Latin America 554 Silvia Federici 40 Geopower: genealogies, territories and politics 564 Miriam Tola 41 Post-work and ecology 577 Luigi Pellizzoni 42 Transformative innovation 593 Andreas Novy, Nathan Barlow and Julia Fankhauser Index
£250.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd From Environmental Action to Ecoterrorism?:
Book SynopsisThis book scrutinizes the growth of the ecoterrorism movement operating on a global scale, focusing on the main groups and their more radical offshoots, both historically and currently active. These include Earth First!, the Earth Liberation Front, the Animal Liberation Front and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Gerry Nagtzaam critically examines how these groups formed and how they have evolved, their key personnel, their strategies and tactics, principles, motivating philosophies and attitudes to violence. Specifically, this book seeks to understand whether groups such as these inevitably evolve from activists to militants to terrorists who gravitate towards political violence on behalf of the environment. Particular attention is paid to the future of such groups, predicting whether they will become more prominent as more people become ecologically aware and as global environmental conditions deteriorate, or whether groups like these have peaked as a force for environmental change. Gerry Nagtzaam compares and contrasts the selected ecoterrorist groups, highlighting their similarities and differences as regards to their use of political violence and pathways of radicalization. This book will be of interest to a number of different audiences, including scholars, teachers and students of law enforcement, terrorism, environmental politics, environmental law, international relations theory, geography, environmental science, sociology and development studies. It will also be relevant for activists and environmental NGOs.Trade Review‘From Environmental Action to Ecoterrorism? offers perhaps the clearest and most comprehensive examination of radical environmental groups and tactics to date, and does so in a balanced and richly narrated manner. Taking the Animal Liberation Front, Earth First! and the Sea Shepherds as case studies, Nagtzaam focuses upon the processes by which persons and groups undergo radicalization and come to embrace political violence. Tracing the evolution of group strategies, leaders, and philosophies, his detailed narrative and careful theoretical and empirical analysis underscore the need for a better understanding of radicalization processes. Scholars and students interested in the development of radical environmentalism or in the dynamics of more militant forms of environmental resistance will find much to explore. Those merely interested in the history and internal dynamics of radical environmentalism as a social movement, and the cautionary tale that it contains, will also find much to admire in this engaging book.' -- Steve Vanderheiden, University of Colorado at Boulder, US'In a volume that is non-alarmist in tone, yet inherently attentive to the fact that such groups can constitute challenges to law enforcement and society more generally, Nagtzaam enhances our understandings of radicalisation, reaffirming that it is a process not just currently confined and relevant to Islamist groups and exclusivist nationalist organizations. He approaches and frames radical actors and radicalisation in a neutral, technical manner, advocating that neither should be inherently associated or equated with violence and terrorism. His study also reinforces that while mainstream environmental and animal rights groups and their more militant counter-parts occasionally share affinities, they are distinguished by very different philosophies and modes of operation on resolving ecological crises.' -- Peter Lentini, Monash University, AustraliaTable of ContentsContents: Introduction PART I 1. Cage Fighting: the Animal Liberation Front 2. Rattling the Cages: Animal Liberation Front Actions 3. By Other Means: The Animal Liberation Front and its Purported Splinter Groups PART II 4. Direct Action in Defence of Living Systems: Earth First! 5. Elves Running through the Forest: the Earth Liberation Front PART III 6. Gaia’s Navy: the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society 7. Ramming Speed: Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Actions 8. Vigilante Justice: The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society and the Law Conclusion Bibliography Index
£121.00
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
£121.00
Taylor & Francis Ltd Direct Action in British Environmentalism
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Ltd Direct Action in British Environmentalism
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£47.49
Taylor & Francis Environmental Activism in China
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£137.75
Taylor & Francis Ltd Earth First AntiRoad Movement
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£43.99
Taylor & Francis Natural Protest
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£128.25
Taylor & Francis Ltd Environmental Movements Local National and Global Environmental Politics
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£87.39
Taylor & Francis Ltd Green Parties in National Governments Environmental Politics
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£137.75
Taylor & Francis Ltd Environmental Movements Local National and Global Environmental Politics
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£32.99