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Sustainable Development [Multiple-component retail product]

Edited by (Aston University, UK)
  • Formaat: Multiple-component retail product, 2360 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 4176 g, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sari: Critical Concepts in the Environment
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Aug-2013
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415520150
  • ISBN-13: 9780415520157
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Multiple-component retail product, 2360 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 4176 g, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sari: Critical Concepts in the Environment
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Aug-2013
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415520150
  • ISBN-13: 9780415520157
Teised raamatud teemal:
The United Nations has pithily defined sustainable development as progress that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. But sustainable development remains highly contested and is subject to a wide variety of interpretations, applications, and criticisms. Moreover, those seeking fully to understand this critical concept are confronted with a (sometimes dispiritingly) voluminous body of scholarly, polemical, and journalistic writing.

Edited by the acclaimed author of Understanding Sustainable Development (Earthscan, 2008), this new title from Routledges Critical Concepts in the Environment series answers the need for an authoritative reference work to make sense of the vast literature on sustainable development, and the continuing explosion in research output.

Drawing on a wide variety of sources that take full cognizance of the rich background and necessary adaptability of the concept to the imperatives of time, place, and culture, and which emphasize its connected and transdisciplinary nature, the editor has brought together in four volumes the canonical and the best cutting-edge work to produce an indispensable mini library. The collection covers the history, mediation, application, and likely future orientations of sustainable development, both conceptually and as a continually emerging practice.

Sustainable Development is fully indexed and includes comprehensive introductions, newly written by the editor, which place the collected materials in their historical and intellectual context. It is an essential reference collection and is certain to be valued by scholars and studentsas well as serious policy-makers and practitionersas a vital one-stop research and pedagogic resource.
VOLUME I
Editor's acknowledgements xix
Acknowledgements xxi
Chronological table of reprinted articles and chapters xxv
Introduction to Volume I
1(6)
John Blewitt
PART 1 Sustainable development: issues and perspectives
7(224)
1 Squaring the circle? Some thoughts on the idea of sustainable development
9(23)
John Robinson
2 "Sustainability" as a dialogue of values: challenges to the sociology of development
32(19)
Blake D. Ratner
3 Planetary boundaries: exploring the safe operating space for humanity
51(67)
Johan Rockstrom
4 The idea of sustainable development
118(11)
Partha Dasgupta
5 Post-sustainable development
129(18)
Stephen Morse
6 The population bomb revisited
147(14)
Paul R. Ehrlich
Anne H. Ehrlich
7 Driving the human ecological footprint
161(10)
Thomas Dietz
Eugene A. Rosa
Richard York
8 The responsibilities of place
171(5)
Doreen Massey
9 Gendering sustainability: reframing sustainable development as gender justice
176(3)
Yvonne A. Braun
10 The problem of the future: sustainability science and scenario analysis
179(18)
R. J. Swart
P. Raskin
J. Robinson
11 The future of the commons
197(7)
David Harvey
12 Human rights and human capabilities
204(3)
Martha Nussbaum
13 Democracy and the sustainability transition
207(15)
Timothy O'Riordan
14 Envisioning a sustainable world
222(9)
Donella H. Meadows
PART 2 Sustainable development: a systems approach
231(94)
15 Leverage points: places to intervene in a system
233(19)
Donella H. Meadows
16 Resilience and sustainable development: building adaptive capacity in a world of transformations
252(8)
Carl Folke
Steve Carpenter
Thomas Elmqvist
Lance Gunderson
C. S. Holling
Brian Walker
17 Social and ecological resilience: are they related?
260(21)
W. Neil Adger
18 Assessing long term sustainability of global supply of natural resources and materials
281(44)
K. V. Ragnarsdottir
H. U. Sverdrup
D. Koca
PART 3 Sustainability tools and frameworks
325(120)
19 A general framework for analyzing sustainability of social-ecological systems
327(8)
Elinor Ostrom
20 How to recognize sustainable development? Looking for indicators
335(14)
Hartmut Bossel
21 An assessment of The Natural Step theory of sustainability
349(16)
Paul Upham
22 Life cycle assessment
365(10)
Richard Welford
23 Accounting for the environment: towards a theoretical perspective for environmental accounting and reporting
375(33)
Michael John Jones
24 Essence of backcasting
408(19)
Karl H. Dreborg
25 Development and human needs
427(18)
Manfred Max-Neef
PART 4 Risk, sustainability ethics and the precautionary principle
445
26 The parameters of the risk society: a review and exploration
447(22)
Merryn Ekberg
27 The social amplification and attenuation of risk
469(10)
Roger E. Kasperson
Jeanne X. Kasperson
28 The precautionary principle: protecting against failures of scientific method and risk assessment
479(22)
D. Santillo
R. L. Stringer
P. A. Johnston
J. Tickner
29 Green reason: communicative ethics for the biosphere
501(15)
John S. Dryzek
30 Ecocentrism explained and defended
516(43)
Robyn Eckersley
31 A perfect moral storm: climate change, intergenerational ethics and the problem of moral corruption
559
Stephen M. Gardiner
VOLUME II
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction to Volume II
1(4)
John Blewitt
PART 5 Climate change
5(170)
32 Dangerous human-made interference with climate: a GISS modeIE study
7(45)
J. Hansen
33 Carbon metabolism: global capitalism, climate change, and the biospheric rift
52(35)
Brett Clark
Richard York
34 A new climate for society
87(20)
Sheila Jasanoff
35 Adaption to climate change in the developing world
107(19)
W. Neil Adger
Saleemul Huq
Katrina Brown
Declan Conway
Mike Hulme
36 Climate change and food security
126(20)
P. J. Gregory
J. S. I. Ingram
M. Brklacich
37 The implications of population growth and urbanization for climate change
146(29)
David Satterthwaite
PART 6 Conservation and sustainable development
175(82)
38 Construction nature: elements for a post-structuralist political ecology
177(23)
Arturo Escobar
39 Ecosystem services: exploring a geographical perspective
200(24)
Marion B. Potschin
Roy H. Haines-Young
40 Ignoring nature: why we do it, the dire consequences, and the need for a paradigm shift to save animals, habitats, and ourselves
224(9)
Marc Bekoff
Sarah Bexell
41 Acknowledging conservation trade-offs and embracing complexity
233(10)
Paul D. Hirsch
William M. Adams
J. Peter Brosius
Asim Zia
Nino Bariola
Juan Luis Dammert
42 Use of traditional ecological knowledge in marine conservation
243(14)
Joshua A. Drew
PART 7 Water, energy and food
257(130)
43 Water for sustainable development in the 21st century: a global perspective
259(9)
Asit K. Biswas
44 Water news: bad, good and virtual
268(11)
Vaclav Smil
45 A `must-go path' scenario for sustainable development and the role of nuclear energy in the 21st century
279(16)
Hae-Yong Jeong
Young-In Kim
Yong-Bum Lee
Kwi-Seok Ha
Byung-Chool Won
Dong-Uk Lee
Dohee Hahn
46 Renewable energy strategies for sustainable development
295(16)
Henrik Lund
47 Prioritizing climate change adaptation needs for food security in 2030
311(8)
David B. Lobell
Marshall B. Burke
Claudia Tebaldi
Michael D. Mastrandrea
Walter P. Falcon
Rosamond L. Naylor
48 The greening of the "barrios": urban agriculture for food security in Cuba
319(16)
Miguel A. Altieri
Nelso Companioni
Kristina Canizares
Catherine Murphy
Peter Rosset
Martin Bourque
Clara I. Nicholls
49 The health equity dimensions of urban food systems
335(13)
Jane Dixon
Abiud M. Omwega
Sharon Friel
Cate Burns
Kelly Donati
Rachel Carlisle
50 Learning democracy through food justice movements
348(17)
Charles Z. Levkoe
51 Organic farming and sustainable rural development: a multifaceted and promising convergence
365(22)
Patrizia Pugliese
PART 8 Industrial ecology, design and technology
387
52 On the concept of industrial ecology
389(28)
T. E. Graedel
53 Industrial ecology and ecological engineering: opportunities for symbiosis
417(27)
David Rogers Tilley
54 Science, technology and sustainable development: a world review
444(21)
Allam Ahmed
Josephine Anne Stein
55 Gandhi's technoscience: sustainability and technology as themes of politics
465(21)
Anup Sam Ninan
56 Pursuing geoengineering for atmospheric restoration
486(10)
Robert B. Jackson
James Salzman
57 Future technologies, dystopic futures and the precautionary principle
496(10)
Steve Clarke
58 Ecological ethics and media technology
506(22)
Richard Maxwell
Toby Miller
59 Cradle-to-cradle design: creating healthy emissions - a strategy for eco-effective product and system design
528(23)
Michael Braungart
William Mcdonough
Andrew Bollinger
60 Designing from place: a regenerative framework and methodology
551
Pamela Mang
Bill Reed
VOLUME III
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction to Volume III
1(6)
John Blewitt
PART 9 Sustainable cities
7(206)
61 Dimensions of the eco-city
9(11)
Mark Roseland
62 Sustainable cities or cities that contribute to sustainable development?
20(32)
David Satterthwaite
63 City profile: Curitiba
52(22)
Joseli Macedo
64 The environmental impact of cities
74(26)
Peter Newman
65 Urbanism in the anthropocene: ecological urbanism or premium ecological enclaves?
100(18)
Mike Hodson
Simon Marvin
66 Excavating Lefebvre: the right to the city and its urban politics of the inhabitant
118(19)
Mark Purcell
67 Living cities: towards a politics of conviviality
137(19)
Steve Hinchliffe
Sarah Whatmore
68 Assessing the sustainability of major cities in China
156(30)
Peilei Fan
Jiaguo Qi
69 Sustainable urban forms: their typologies, models, and concepts
186(27)
Yosef Rafeq Jabareen
PART 10 Building sustainable communities
213(134)
70 Healthy places: exploring the evidence
215(12)
Howard Frumkin
71 Mind the gap: why do people act environmentally and what are the barriers to pro-environmental behavior?
227(25)
Anja Kollmuss
Julian Agyeman
72 Building the sustainable community: is social capital the answer?
252(15)
Jeffrey C. Bridger
A. E. Luloff
73 Promoting sustainable behavior: an introduction to community-based social marketing
267(11)
Doug Mckenzie-Mohr
74 Meeting the challenge of learning from what works in the development of sustainable communities
278(17)
Mark Deakin
75 People, land and sustainability: community gardens and the social dimension of sustainable development
295(10)
John Ferris
Carol Norman
Joe Sempik
76 `Helping people make better choices': exploring the behaviour change agenda for environmental sustainability
305(22)
Stewart Barr
Andrew Gilg
Gareth Shaw
77 Open sourcing our way to an online commons: contesting corporate impermeability in the new media ecology
327(20)
Kate Milberry
Steve Anderson
PART 11 Environmental justice
347(92)
78 Mining conflicts, environmental justice, and valuation
349(20)
Joan Martinez-Alier
79 Exploring the nexus: bringing together sustainability, environmental justice and equity
369(17)
Julian Agyeman
Robert D. Bullard
Bob Evans
80 Social inequalities and environmental conflict
386(11)
David N. Pellow
81 North-South relations and the ecological debt: asserting a counter-hegemonic discourse
397(29)
James Rice
82 No climate justice without gender justice: an overview of the issues
426(13)
Geraldine Terry
PART 12 Communication, learning and education
439
83 Tampering with nature: `nature' and the `natural' in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology
441(23)
Anders Hansen
84 Why it matters how we frame the environment
464(12)
George Lakoff
85 The best of both worlds: a critical pedagogy of place
476(21)
David A. Gruenewald
86 The making of green knowledge: the contribution from activism
497(15)
Andrew Jamison
87 Environmental citizenship: towards sustainable development
512(13)
Andrew Dobson
88 Higher education, sustainability, and the role of systemic learning
525(23)
Stephen Sterling
89 "Sustainability" in higher education: from doublethink and newspeak to critical thinking and meaningful learning
548(12)
Arjen E. J. Wals
Bob Jickling
90 "Ignorance was bliss, now I'm not ignorant and that is far more difficult": transdisciplinary learning and reflexivity in responsible management education
560
Carole Parkes
John Blewitt
VOLUME IV
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction to Volume IV
1(4)
John Blewitt
PART 13 Economics and capitalism
5(186)
91 Accounting for the value of ecosystem services
7(12)
Richard B. Howarth
Stephen Farber
92 The economic growth debate: what some economists have learned but many have not
19(17)
Herman E. Daly
93 Financing sustainable development in Mexico through alternative banks or `green banks'
36(8)
Luisa Montes
94 Sustainable growth revisited: technology, economics and policy
44(33)
Paul Ekins
95 Sustainable de-growth: mapping the context, criticisms and future prospects of an emergent paradigm
77(18)
Joan Martinez-Alier
Unai Pascual
Franck-Dominique Vivien
Edwin Zaccai
96 The problems of relative deprivation: why some societies do better than others
95(21)
Richard G. Wilkinson
Kate E. Pickett
97 Live better by consuming less? Is there a "double dividend" in sustainable consumption?
116(25)
Tim Jackson
98 Moving beyond wage-based society
141(35)
Andre Gorz
99 Cooperation for economic success: the Mondragon case
176(15)
Ramon Flecha
Ignacio Santa Cruz
PART 14 Business and corporate responsibility
191(176)
100 Partnerships from Cannibals with Forks: The Triple Bottom Line of 21st-Century Business
193(20)
John Elkington
101 Do corporations rule the world? And does it matter?
213(12)
David C. Korten
102 Corporate social responsibility: the good, the bad and the ugly
225(30)
Subhabrata Bobby Banerjee
103 Producer responsibility for e-waste management: key issues for consideration - learning from the Swiss experience
255(26)
Deepali Sinha Khetriwal
Philipp Kraeuchi
Rolf Widmer
104 Standards as a new form of social contract? Sustainability initiatives in the coffee industry
281(19)
Daniele Giovannucci
Stefano Ponte
105 Conceptualising global strategic sustainability and corporate transformational change
300(22)
Helen Borland
106 Sustainability entrepreneurs: could they be the true wealth generators of the future?
322(18)
Fiona Tilley
William Young
107 "Making it do" at the movie theatres: communicating sustainability in the workplace
340(9)
Oliver Laasch
Roger N. Conaway
108 Women workers and the promise of ethical trade in the globalised garment industry: a serious beginning?
349(18)
Angela Hale
Linda M. Shaw
PART 15 Ecological modernization
367(66)
109 Ecological modernization and the global economy
369(24)
Arthur P. J. Mol
110 Ecological modernization theory: what about consumption?
393(16)
Michael S. Carolan
111 Ecological modernization and the "gene revolution": the case study of Bt cotton in India
409(24)
Ashok Kumbamu
PART 16 Political consumerism
433(72)
112 Fashioning social justice through political consumerism, capitalism, and the Internet
435(19)
Michele Micheletti
Dietlind Stolle
113 Shopping for sustainability: can sustainable consumption promote ecological citizenship?
454(17)
Gill Seyfang
114 Consuming narratives: the political ecology of `alternative' consumption
471(34)
Raymond L. Bryant
Michael K. Goodman
Index 505