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Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Encyclopaedias & reference works > Reference works
The interconnectedness of global society is increasingly visible
through crises such as the current global health pandemic, emerging
climate change impacts and increasing erosion of biodiversity. This
timely Handbook navigates the challenges of adaptive governance in
these complex contexts, stressing the necessarily compounded nature
of bio-physical and social systems to ensure more desirable
governance outcomes. Highlighting the dynamics and diversity of
governance systems across the globe, leading experts in the field
examine the successes and failures of these systems. Synthesising
theory with methodology and practical case studies, chapters
explore adaptive governance in forest management, marine
environments and open data ecosystems, looking closely at the role
of adaptive governance in climate mitigation and disaster risk
reduction. Answering the call for large-scale transformations that
move societies away from unsustainable development trajectories,
this prescriptive Handbook explores the existing adaptive
governance measures that have driven reflexive, sustainable change.
Reflecting on the past decade of research in the field, it
concludes by outlining new areas of contention and inquiry for the
next decade of adaptive governance research. Interdisciplinary in
scope, this comprehensive Handbook will prove an invigorating read
for students and scholars of environmental law, governance and
regulation, and political science and public policy. Policymakers
looking to innovate their adaptive governance approaches will also
find this a beneficial companion.
Winner of both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award,
Robert Lowell has left a prodigious literary legacy that includes
several verse plays as well as numerous volumes of poetry. His
private papers and other unpublished materials provide an
illuminating record of a distinguished career and cast light on
personal and creative issues of interest to both readers and
scholars. The Robert Lowell collection at the Houghton Library at
Harvard University comprises some 2,916 items. These include family
and literary correspondence, poetic notebooks, and manuscripts
covering a period of more than thirty-five years. This annotated
guide to the collection is the product of detailed study of
Lowell's work, both published and unpublished, and benefits from
the poet's own review of some of the papers. Researchers will
appreciate the index to the poems, which offers a key to the
various drafts of each work. This book will be of interest to all
Lowell scholars and to students of twentieth-century American
poetry.
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