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The Environment Dictionary provides an essential source of information on all aspects of the environment. It includes all the basic scientific terms and concepts along with socio-economic, cultural, historical and political elements which impact on the environment. This dictionary provides the interdisciplinary approach required to understand environmental issues worldwide. Designed for a wide range of readers, the dictionary is up-to-date, easy to read and to reference and clearly and attractively presented. Selected environmental issues which have particular importance are treated in greater depth through a series of boxed case studies. A wide range of maps, diagrams, figures and photos illustrate the texts and extensie cross-referencing between entries ensures readers can build on their knowledge. References and further reading sections are drawn from a wide range of accessible sources - from newspaper articles and popular magazines to academic texts and journals and provide easy access to further study and development of readers' specific interests.
Global warming, ozone depletion, drought, acid rain - their causes are viewed as extraordinarily complex; their effects are assumed catastrophic. Global Environmental Issues provides the key to understanding our potential environmental crisis through an analysis of the common component to all environmental issues: the atmosphere. This book provides a balanced introduction to both the dangers and advantages of human interference with the environment. Socio-economic, cultural and political factors are assessed and sophisticated scientific ideas are expressed in a clear, non-technical manner. This new edition of a best selling text is completely updated, revised and expanded. eBook available with sample pages: 0203425308
This book provides a balanced account of the global environmental
issues which threaten our society and which we neglect at our
peril. Analysing both social and environmental components of the
issues - global warming, ozone depletion, acid rain and drought -
the book offers a valuable integrative approach and a detailed
analysis of environmental issues in a clear, non-technical manner.
Emphasising the climatological dimension common to all
environmental issues, Global Environmental Issues recognises the
multi-faceted nature of the issues, their common causes and the
possibility of common solutions. Assessment of socio-economic,
cultural amd political factors provides a balanced introduction to
both the dangers and advantages of human interference with the
environment. What have we done to deserve our current environmental
crisis? Can we solve our current environmental problems, or is it
too late?This new edition of a best selling text is completely
updated and expands to include greater detail and new material such
as a new section on atmospheric modelling. A glossary has been
added together with a bibliography for further reading at the end
of each chapter, allowing readers to develop their interest in
specific areas. The interdisciplinary text will prove invaluable to
students in geography, environmental studies and other courses in
whcih the environmental approach is emphasised.
Consent of the People: Human Dignity through Freedom and Equality
1966-2021 explores how Australia's founding Enlightenment ideals
were embodied in democratic institutions and shared values, and
shaped into a unique national liberalism. Despite intense partisan
loyalties, a politics of unequal power, and conservative and
radical resistance, inequality was addressed and personal freedom
strengthened. This final book in David Kemp's landmark five-volume
Australian Liberalism series examines the role of liberal ideals in
the legacies of prime ministers from Harold Holt to Malcolm
Turnbull and the significance of challenges to the liberal project
arising in response to the pandemic of 2020-21.It shows how reform
urgency led to the nation's greatest political crisis in 1975, how
prime ministers Fraser and Hawke struggled to manage an economy
dominated by powerful union, business and global interests, how
during seventeen crucial years Keating and Howard led one of the
nation's greatest reform eras, and how social reform continued
despite the leadership instability of the post-Howard era. In
Consent of the People Kemp assesses political parties as the
instruments of reform, highlighting the dangers of factionalism and
loss of purpose. He examines how an international revival of
liberal thought and rising levels of education revolutionised
Australian society and politics, creating a moral-and
moralistic-ruling class. In a remarkable half-century, Australian
political parties and their leaders contested the impacts of
government policies on personal freedom, on the distribution of
political influence and power, and on wealth and opportunity.
Throughout this period, Australians strove, with growing success,
to achieve their dreams.
Grassland ecosystems are deeply affected by human activities and
need appropriate management to optimise trade-offs between
ecosystem functions and services. Until now they have mainly been
analysed as agro-ecosystems for animal production but this book
looks beyond the role of grassland as a feeding ground, and
evaluates other important processes such as carbon sequestration in
soils, greenhouse gas regulation and biodiversity protection. This
authoritative volume expertly highlights the need for an immediate
balance between agriculture and ecological management for
sustainability in the future.
A Liberal State: How Australians Chose Liberalism over Socialism
1926-1966 explores the revival of Australian political liberalism
after the Great Depression of the 1930s, and its sweeping domestic
political triumph after World War II over utopian socialism and
Labor's statism. The fourth title in a landmark five-volume
Australian Liberalism series, A Liberal State examines how
Australians reasserted their claim to control their own lives,
following decades of expanded government control over economic and
social life, and intrusive wartime and post-war restrictions. From
the 1920s Robert Menzies became the major voice for liberal thought
in the nation's political life and David Kemp looks at his role in
reconstructing liberal and conservative politics. The book
highlights the importance of the factional struggles within the
Labor Party arising from its adoption of a Socialist Objective, and
the domestic and international advance of utopian socialist
ideology during World War II and the Cold War. A Liberal State
tells of Jack Lang's advocacy of the socialisation of industry in
New South Wales in the 1930s, and of Menzies as war-time prime
minster and his key relationship with John Curtin. It assesses
Menzies's historic Forgotten People statement of liberal ideas, the
formation of the Liberal Party of Australia, and how, after his
election victory in 1949, Menzies rebuilt a liberal basis for
national policy during sixteen and a half years as prime minister.
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