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Showing 1 - 14 of 14 matches in All Departments

The Fuelwood Trap - A study of the SADCC region (Hardcover): Barry Munslow, Yemi Katerere, Adriaan Ferf, Phil O'Keefe The Fuelwood Trap - A study of the SADCC region (Hardcover)
Barry Munslow, Yemi Katerere, Adriaan Ferf, Phil O'Keefe
R2,698 Discovery Miles 26 980 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Over 60 million people live in the SADCC countries; by 2000 AD the number will be over 100 million. The vast majority, city-dwellers as well as farmers, rely on wood fuel for domestic use. Supplies are diminishing as consumption grows. The quality of life is deteriorating yet further and the environment is more and more degraded. But these phenomena are not simply the consequence of a wood shortage which might be cured by some cropping and management policy. They flow from a complex network of causes each contributing in its way to growing poverty and want which has, as one obvious symptom, the shortage of fuel for life's basic purposes. The authors, by means of case studies, examine those causes throughout the nine SADCC countries and consider the policies that can be developed there which will not only help to alleviate the symptom but will help to prevent the imminent catastrophe which it represents. Originally published in 1988

The Earthscan Reader in Sustainable Development (Paperback): John Kirkby, Phil O'Keefe, Lloyd Timberlake The Earthscan Reader in Sustainable Development (Paperback)
John Kirkby, Phil O'Keefe, Lloyd Timberlake
R974 Discovery Miles 9 740 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Such a huge number of books, journals and papers have been devoted to defining, assessing and implementing 'sustainable development' that students and other readers face information overload. Earthscan alone has published hundreds of essays and books on the subject. Now, though, the most authoritative writings have been carefully assessed and collected together in the Earthscan Reader in Sustainable Development. The contributions included span five years of the debate, and cover all the principal themes: the history of the concept; the problems in defining it; the issues surrounding it; and national and international policies and schemes to implement it. For ease of use, the essays have been split into key subject areas - such as agriculture, population and the commons - and they include practical case studies and examples, together with analyses from a number of different viewpoints from both the North and South. These seminal essays will provide readers with a unique overview of the subject, as well as the long-awaited basic course material for students of environmental studies, economics, geography, politics, planning and the social sciences.

Regional Restructuring Under Advanced Capitalism (Paperback): Phil O'Keefe Regional Restructuring Under Advanced Capitalism (Paperback)
Phil O'Keefe
R1,054 Discovery Miles 10 540 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Originally published in 1984. At that time many formerly prosperous regions were becoming impoverished and many former "core" areas were being demoted to peripheral status. This book considers this crisis, its nature and manifestations and its implications. It looks in particular at how the regional crisis affects the socialist analysis of capitalism and it analyses how the crisis affects the political outlook and political actions of the working class in afflicted regions. The theories and analysis put forward apply throughout the world in both advanced and less developed countries.

Regional Restructuring Under Advanced Capitalism (Hardcover): Phil O'Keefe Regional Restructuring Under Advanced Capitalism (Hardcover)
Phil O'Keefe
R3,085 Discovery Miles 30 850 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Originally published in 1984. At that time many formerly prosperous regions were becoming impoverished and many former "core" areas were being demoted to peripheral status. This book considers this crisis, its nature and manifestations and its implications. It looks in particular at how the regional crisis affects the socialist analysis of capitalism and it analyses how the crisis affects the political outlook and political actions of the working class in afflicted regions. The theories and analysis put forward apply throughout the world in both advanced and less developed countries.

The Fuelwood Trap - A study of the SADCC region (Paperback): Barry Munslow, Yemi Katerere, Adriaan Ferf, Phil O'Keefe The Fuelwood Trap - A study of the SADCC region (Paperback)
Barry Munslow, Yemi Katerere, Adriaan Ferf, Phil O'Keefe
R1,405 Discovery Miles 14 050 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Over 60 million people live in the SADCC countries; by 2000 AD the number will be over 100 million. The vast majority, city-dwellers as well as farmers, rely on wood fuel for domestic use. Supplies are diminishing as consumption grows. The quality of life is deteriorating yet further and the environment is more and more degraded. But these phenomena are not simply the consequence of a wood shortage which might be cured by some cropping and management policy. They flow from a complex network of causes each contributing in its way to growing poverty and want which has, as one obvious symptom, the shortage of fuel for life's basic purposes. The authors, by means of case studies, examine those causes throughout the nine SADCC countries and consider the policies that can be developed there which will not only help to alleviate the symptom but will help to prevent the imminent catastrophe which it represents. Originally published in 1988

The Future of Energy Use (Paperback, 2nd edition): Phil O'Keefe, Nicola Pearsall, Geoff O'Brien The Future of Energy Use (Paperback, 2nd edition)
Phil O'Keefe, Nicola Pearsall, Geoff O'Brien
R1,300 Discovery Miles 13 000 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Following the success of its predecessor, this second edition of The Future of Energy Use provides essential analysis of the use of different forms of energy and their environmental and social impacts. It examines conventional, nuclear and renewable sources and technologies, using relevant case studies and providing a vital link between technology and related policy issues. The new edition has been comprehensively developed and updated, including new text, diagrams and tables, with entire new sections that reflect the significant changes that have occurred since the first edition. New material includes: a stronger focus on climate change policy and energy security; a discussion of the long run marginal costs of oil; coverage of the biofuels debate in both the developed and developing worlds; an outline of developments in the built environment (including transport issues); and the relationship between behaviour and energy use. It reviews policy shifts with relation to energy efficiency, carbon capture and storage, combined heat and power, and combined cycle gas turbines. There is new coverage of nuclear waste, storage and proliferation, and new material on microgeneration and biofuels, as well as essential new information on carbon markets and the hydrogen economy. The result is a unique introduction and guide to all the vital issues within energy for students, academics and professionals new to the field.

Managing Adaptation to Climate Risk - Beyond Fragmented Responses (Hardcover, New): Geoff O'Brien, Phil O'Keefe Managing Adaptation to Climate Risk - Beyond Fragmented Responses (Hardcover, New)
Geoff O'Brien, Phil O'Keefe
R4,144 Discovery Miles 41 440 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Climate change is the single largest threat to the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and sustainable development. Addressing climate risk is a challenge for all. This book calls for greater collaboration between climate communities and disaster development communities. In discussing this, the book will evaluate the approaches used by each community to reduce the adverse effects of climate change. One area that offers some promise for bringing together these communities is through the concept of resilience. This term is increasingly used in each community to describe a process that embeds capacity to respond to and cope with disruptive events. This emphasizes an approach that is more focused on pre-event planning and using strategies to build resilience to hazards in an adaptation framework. The book will conclude by evaluating the scope for a holistic approach where these communities can effectively contribute to building communities that are resilient to climate driven risks.

The Southern African Environment - Profiles of the SADC Countries (Hardcover): Sam Moyo The Southern African Environment - Profiles of the SADC Countries (Hardcover)
Sam Moyo; Edited by Phil O'Keefe; Michael Sill
R3,536 Discovery Miles 35 360 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Southern African Environment provides a comprehensive and up-to-date description of the countries of the SADC region, Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe. The area is one of rapid political, economic and social change, and each of the 10 country profiles in this book provides full and detailed information on the physical and human geography, environmental problems, resource base, institutional structures for environmental management and the issues associated with institutional change. Each profile was drafted by local environmental experts and is based on extensive fieldwork and research originally commissioned by the Dutch government. The report provides a unique synthesis of this richly-endowed but troubled region.

Cities Demanding the Earth - A New Understanding of the Climate Emergency (Paperback): Peter Taylor, Geoff O'Brien, Phil... Cities Demanding the Earth - A New Understanding of the Climate Emergency (Paperback)
Peter Taylor, Geoff O'Brien, Phil O'Keefe
R773 Discovery Miles 7 730 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This urgent book brings our cities to the fore in understanding the human input into climate change. The demands we are making on nature by living in cities has reached a crisis point and unless we make significant changes to address it, the prognosis is terminal consumption. Providing a radical new argument that integrates global understandings of making nature and making cities, the authors move beyond current policies of mitigation and adaption and pose the challenge of urban stewardship to tackle the crisis. Their new way of thinking re-orients possibilities for environmental policy and calls for us to reinvent our cities as spaces for activism.

Cities Demanding the Earth - A New Understanding of the Climate Emergency (Hardcover): Peter Taylor, Geoff O'Brien, Phil... Cities Demanding the Earth - A New Understanding of the Climate Emergency (Hardcover)
Peter Taylor, Geoff O'Brien, Phil O'Keefe
R2,142 Discovery Miles 21 420 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This urgent book brings our cities to the fore in understanding the human input into climate change. The demands we are making on nature by living in cities has reached a crisis point and unless we make significant changes to address it, the prognosis is terminal consumption. Providing a radical new argument that integrates global understandings of making nature and making cities, the authors move beyond current policies of mitigation and adaption and pose the challenge of urban stewardship to tackle the crisis. Their new way of thinking re-orients possibilities for environmental policy and calls for us to reinvent our cities as spaces for activism.

Managing Adaptation to Climate Risk - Beyond Fragmented Responses (Paperback): Geoff O'Brien, Phil O'Keefe Managing Adaptation to Climate Risk - Beyond Fragmented Responses (Paperback)
Geoff O'Brien, Phil O'Keefe
R1,409 Discovery Miles 14 090 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Climate change is the single largest threat to the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and sustainable development. Addressing climate risk is a challenge for all. This book calls for greater collaboration between climate communities and disaster development communities. In discussing this, the book will evaluate the approaches used by each community to reduce the adverse effects of climate change. One area that offers some promise for bringing together these communities is through the concept of resilience. This term is increasingly used in each community to describe a process that embeds capacity to respond to and cope with disruptive events. This emphasizes an approach that is more focused on pre-event planning and using strategies to build resilience to hazards in an adaptation framework. The book will conclude by evaluating the scope for a holistic approach where these communities can effectively contribute to building communities that are resilient to climate driven risks.

The New Forester (Paperback): Berry Van Gelder, Phil O'Keefe The New Forester (Paperback)
Berry Van Gelder, Phil O'Keefe
R557 R522 Discovery Miles 5 220 Save R35 (6%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In general, subsistence economies in developing countries are biomass economies. Housing itself, energy, furniture and utensils are still biomass products. The yield of trees and shrubs provides thatch, fodder and a host of other products which serve each family household. Woody biomass yields food for people and animals.;Deforestation is an erosion of local entitlement to subsistence resources as well as being an environmental problem that destroys local, national and global common property resources. The challenge for foresters and other rural development professionals is to build new landscapes which provide a range of biomass products to local users. This text will contribute to that task by helping professionals see new ooportunities by working with, not against, local people.;Foresters have traditionally increased wood supplies with large scale approaches that favoured monoculture plantations and the policing of forests and woodlands to address wood removal. Their rationale has been to plant as many trees as quickly as possible. Unfortunately, and all too often, decisions to spend large sums of money planting trees have been taken without considering other options. Fortunately a re-thinking of the biomass problem is under way, and this new thinking and its options are what this book describes.;This text is, of course, addressed to foresters, but its practical approach is worth the attention of all rural development practitioners, as well as individuals within a range of professional backgrounds from engineering to sociology.

The Adaptation Continuum (Paperback): Geoff O'Brien, Tahia Devisscher, Phil O'Keefe The Adaptation Continuum (Paperback)
Geoff O'Brien, Tahia Devisscher, Phil O'Keefe
R2,104 Discovery Miles 21 040 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Adapting to the consequences accelerated climate change and increasing variability is a huge challenge, particularly for poorer countries. This book reports on research with 14 developing countries on climate adaptation. It finds that there is an urgent need to build the resilience of communities to ensure that they can respond to, and cope with, climatic disturbances. We can no longer separate risk and development. We need holistic and continuing approaches to adapting to climate change.

Redefining Sustainable Development (Paperback): Neil Middleton, Phil O'Keefe Redefining Sustainable Development (Paperback)
Neil Middleton, Phil O'Keefe
R1,029 Discovery Miles 10 290 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Development and assistance in disasters is about helping people to help themselves. It is to do with facilitating 'sustainable livelihoods' and addressing the ills of social discrimination. These seem to be self-evident propositions. In fact, they are a minefield. If development workers intervene to assist in the creation of environmentally sustainable livelihoods, what judgemental codes are contained in the everyday cultural and linguistic assumptions of development practitioners? What account do they give of the environment and people's relationship to it? If livelihoods are to be economically sustainable, by which economic criteria is the judgement made? Is the objective to keep projects going until the funds run out, or, like cancer patients, to survive for five years, or to knit people into the world's trading systems? If projects are to be sustainable, they must be socially just. By whose justice do we judge? At present much development and disaster relief work derives its importance solely from providing opportunities for honing survival skills. The authors of this book examine these questions and others in detail and argue that the assumptions of the social-democratic world, including those of international NGOs, are tied to the perpetuation of capitalism. Neil Middleton and Phil O'Keefe suggest that the issue, in the face of anarchic global financial power, is to re-think the nature of class in a late capitalist world and to recognise indigenous NGOs as the new political vehicles for its struggle.

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