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Books > Earth & environment > The environment
In recent years, shrimpers on the Louisiana coast have faced a
historically dire shrimp season, with the price of shrimp barely
high enough to justify trawling. Yet, many of them wouldn't
consider leaving shrimping behind, despite having transferrable
skills that could land them jobs in the oil and gas industry. Since
2001, shrimpers have faced increasing challenges to their trade: an
influx of shrimp from southeast Asia, several traumatic hurricane
seasons, and the largest oil spill at sea in American history. In
Last Stand of the Louisiana Shrimpers, author Emma Christopher
Lirette traces how Louisiana Gulf Coast shrimpers negotiate land
and blood, sea and freedom, and economic security and networks of
control. This book explores what ties shrimpers to their boats and
nets. Despite feeling trapped by finances and circumstances, they
have created a world in which they have agency. Lirette provides a
richly textured view of the shrimpers of Terrebonne Parish,
Louisiana, calling upon ethnographic fieldwork, archival research,
interdisciplinary scholarship, and critical theory. With evocative,
lyrical prose, she argues that in persisting to trawl in places
that increasingly restrict their way of life, shrimpers build
fragile, quietly defiant worlds, adapting to a constantly changing
environment. In these flickering worlds, shrimpers reimagine what
it means to work and what it means to make a living.
This book offers an assessment of new opportunities available for
the agricultural sector and provides technical assistance to the
Greek authorities with regards to its rural development and fishery
sector. Karantininis follows a value chain approach and analyzes
the Greek agri-food industry, breaking it down vertically and
horizontally. Vertically, the Greek agri-food chain is stripped to
its main upstream and downstream components: inputs, primary
production, distribution and retail. Horizontally, the agri-food
value chain is analyzed in terms of size, ownership, governance and
space. The author pays special attention to policy formation,
policy implementation, the political and industrial structure, land
and credit markets, education, extension and research. The author
focuses on this through three subcategories of fruits and
vegetables, aquaculture and olive oil. A number of opinions and
recommendations are presented in each section, concluding with
propositions for a new institutional structure for Greek
agriculture.
This book provides recent developments and future perspectives of
pulp and paper processing based on biotechnology to replace
conventional environmental unfriendly chemical processes. The use
of microorganism and microbial enzymes in various processes such as
bleaching, deinking, refining, dissolving pulp, debarking &
pitch removal, slime control, wastewater treatment and waste
material valorisation are discussed.
1.2 billion people on Earth still don't have electricity. Even
where cell phones are now common, like sub-Saharan Africa and parts
of India, villagers still walk miles to charge them. But new
large-scale, sustainable solutions will not only usher in a new era
of light, but be an important first step in lifting people from
poverty and putting them on a road of sustainable economic
development. Also, a unique, transforming opportunity for Western
thinkers and practitioners will be created. These areas have
largely skipped the analog stage of power development, and have
moved straight from the middle ages to the digital age. They are
not encumbered by existing infrastructure, dependence on fossil
fuels, or too many outdated laws and regulations. An ideal
innovation incubator, the developing world might just be the best
way to make progress on our own energy issues at home. Jim Rogers
is leading a grand collaborative effort to bring sustainable, clean
electrical power to everyone who lacks it. This reverse
engineering, he contends, could solve the energy crises of America
and Europe, while also making the world a cleaner, smarter place.
But it won't be easy. In Lighting the World, Rogers details the
bold thinking, international cooperation, and political will
required to illuminate the future for everyone.
In this book practitioner and researcher Louise Ann Wilson examines
the expanding field of socially engaged scenography and promotes
the development of scenography as a distinctive type of applied art
and performance practice that seeks tangible, therapeutic, and
transformative real-world outcomes. It is what Christopher Baugh
calls 'scenography with purpose'. Using case studies drawn from the
body of site-specific walking-performances she has created in the
UK since 2011, Wilson demonstrates how she uses scenography to
emplace challenging, marginalizing or 'missing' life-events into
rural landscapes - creating a site of transformation - in which
participants can reflect upon, re-image and re-imagine their
relationship to their circumstances. Her work has addressed
terminal illness and bereavement, infertility and childlessness by
circumstance, and (im)mobility and memory. These works have been
created on mountains, in caves, along coastlines and over beaches.
Each case-study is supported by evidential material demonstrating
the effects and outcomes of the performance being discussed. The
book reveals Wilson's creative methodology, her application of
three distinct strands of transdisciplinary research into the
site/landscape, the subject/life-event, and with the
people/participants affected by it. She explains the 7
'scenographic' principles she has developed, and which apply
theories and aesthetics relating to land/scape art and walking and
performance practices from Early Romanticism to the present day.
They are underpinned by the concept of the feminine 'material'
sublime, and informed by the attentive, autotopographic,
therapeutic and highly scenographic use of walking and landscape
found in the work of Dorothy Wordsworth and her female
contemporaries. Case studies include Fissure (2011), Ghost Bird
(2012), The Gathering (2014), Warnscale (2015), Mulliontide (2016),
Dorothy's Room (2018) and Women's Walks to Remember: 'With memory I
was there' (2018-2019).
How is water scarcity becoming a serious problem
worldwide-including in the United States? This book provides a
broad overview of water, sanitation, and hygiene problems faced by
both developing and developed nations around the globe and suggests
how these problems can be solved by imaginative and innovative
thinking. Human society depends on sufficient clean water. In many
parts of the world, however, this most basic commodity is in very
short supply. Even in developed, first-world nations, climate
change and other factors have begun to create alarming water supply
issues. The Global Water Crisis: A Reference Handbook provides a
detailed overview of this important topic, enabling readers to
understand the nature of the world's water, sanitation, and hygiene
(WASH) problems and to know what resources are best for conducting
their own research on the topic. The first chapter of the book
provides the historical background information pertaining to the
world's water and sanitation problems; the second chapter documents
the problems, explores the issues, and presents potential solutions
for understanding the nature of WASH issues. The other sections
provide the needed resources for readers to study the issue of the
global water crisis further: perspective essays, primary documents,
biographical profiles, data and documents, an extended annotated
bibliography, a chronology, and a glossary. Provides readers with
an understanding of the severity of the water scarcity in the world
today Explains the nature of various sanitation issues around the
world, how they arise, the problems for which they are responsible,
and some possible solutions Outlines the reasons that droughts are
becoming a more serious problem in many parts of the world and what
can be done to deal with these water shortages Highlights the new,
specialized problems concerning water supply raised by climate
change
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Hope Rediscovered
(Hardcover)
David Atkinson; Foreword by Rowan Williams
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R906
Discovery Miles 9 060
Save R167 (16%)
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'Think globally, act locally' has become a call to environmentalist
mobilization, proposing a closer connection between global
concerns, local issues and individual responsibility. "A History of
Environmentalism" explores this dialectic relationship, with ten
contributors from a range of disciplines providing a history of
environmentalism which frames global themes and narrates local
stories.Each of the chapters in this volume addresses specific
struggles in the history of environmental movements, for example
over national parks, species protection, forests, waste,
contamination, nuclear energy and expropriation. A diverse range of
environments and environmental actors are covered, including the
communities in the Amazonian Forest, the antelope in Tibet, atomic
power plants in Europe and oil and politics in the Niger Delta. The
chapters demonstrate how these conflicts make visible the intricate
connections between local and global, the body and the environment,
and power and nature. "A History of Environmentalism" tells us much
about transformations of cultural perceptions and ways of
production and consuming, as well as ecological and social changes.
More than offering an exhaustive picture of the entire
environmentalist movement, "A History of Environmentalism"
highlights the importance of the experience of environmentalism
within local communities. It offers a worldwide and polyphonic
perspective, making it key reading for students and scholars of
global and environmental history and political ecology.
The Sequel to Trash Talk Book One. This second book in the series
offers more ways to live life with a smaller ecological footprint.
Concentrating on Living Consciously, Gardening, and Energy and
Water. It goes beyond recycling and reusing and looks at reducing
and other green activities that individuals can easily employ at
home, in their office or condo.
How was Istanbul, once the capital of the Ottoman Empire and now
the financial heart of contemporary Turkey, provisioned in the
early 19th century? Tracing how the sovereign's duty to provision
the city and protect his subjects from hunger was gradually
transferred to the market and became a responsibility of the
subjects (later, citizens) alone, Feeding Istanbul makes a
compelling case for situating food politics, and politics of urban
provisioning in particular, at the centre of the way we think about
the relationship between the sovereign and the political
community..
In recent years, the global economy has struggled to meet the
nutritional needs of a growing populace. In an effort to circumvent
a deepening food crisis, it is pertinent to develop new
sustainability strategies and practices to provide a stable supply
of food resources. Urban Agriculture and Food Systems:
Breakthroughs in Research and Practice is an authoritative resource
on the latest technological developments in urban agriculture and
its ability to supplement current food systems. The content within
this publication represents the work of topics such as sustainable
production in urban spaces, farming practices, and urban
distribution methods. This publication is an ideal reference source
for students, professionals, policymakers, researchers, and
practitioners interested in recent developments in the areas of
agriculture in urban spaces.
Spaces in-between goes beyond the emphasis on externalities
signalled by the term 'environment' to address the isolation of
modern technological culture from nature. Solutions require more
than an awareness of 'natural surroundings' and human
destructiveness. We think in terms of the re-conceptualization,
re-design and re-negotiation of space. The book is concerned with
social practices, belief systems, urban designs, the organization
and representation of landscapes and modes of living. These aspects
of 'spatiality' suggest how to conceive and practice the
intermingling of nature and culture and how to develop public
commitment to such practices. In the process we show how concern
for the environment as an aspect of space helps us to reconceive
and reinterpret what it means to be human.
Research presented at the 7th International Conference on Disaster
Management and Human Health: Reducing Risk, Improving Outcomes is
contained in this volume. These contributions from academics and
experts focus on public health, security and disaster management
with the goal to assess the potential risk from various types of
disaster and highlight ways to prevent or alleviate any damage.
There is a need for academia and practitioners to exchange
knowledge and experience on the way to handle the increasing risk
of natural and human-made disasters. Recent major earthquakes,
tsunamis, hurricanes, floods and other natural phenomena have
resulted in huge losses in terms of human life and property
destruction. A new range of human-made disasters have afflicted
humanity in modern times; terrorist activities have been added to
more classical disasters such as those due to the failure of
industrial installations for instance. It is important to
understand the nature of these global risks to be able to develop
strategies to prepare for these events and plan effective responses
in terms of disaster management and the associated human health
impacts. The papers included in this volume cover such topics as
Public health risk; Socio-economic issues; Environmental issues;
Emergency preparedness and risk mitigation.
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