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provides an overview of the limits to the circular economy,
emphasising the relationship between integrated resource use and
more systemic leadership-management approaches. provides a hands-on
contribution toward building the knowledge and skill-sets of
current and future decision-makers who face these complex-systemic
crises in their day-to-day business. is essential reading for
scholars and students of natural resource use, sustainable
business, environmental economics and sustainable development, as
well as decision-makers and experts from the fields of policy
development, industry and civil society.
"Factor X: Re-source Designing the Recycling Society" explores the
role of recycling in efforts to achieve the sustainable world
envisioned in the Federal Environment Ministry s Resource
Efficiency Programme, known as ProgRess. The chapters build a
roadmap to a Recycling Society in which the decoupling of resource
consumption and economic growth is accomplished.
The editors of Factor X explore and analyze this trajectory,
predicting scarcities of non-renewable materials such as metals,
limited availability of ecological capacities and shortages arising
from geographic concentrations of materials. They argue that what
is needed is a radical change in the ways we use nature's resources
to produce goods and services and generate well-being. The goal of
saving our ecosystem demands a prompt and decisive reduction of
man-induced material flows. Before 2050, they assert, we must
achieve a significant decrease in consumption of resources, in the
line with the idea of a factor 10 reduction target. EU-wide and
country specific targets must be set, and enforced using strict,
accurate measurement of consumption of materials. Their arguments
are drawn from empirical evidence and observations, as well as
theoretical considerations based on economic modeling and on
natural science.
The fourth Factor X publication from the German Environment Agency
(Umweltbundesamt, UBA), Sustainable Development and Resource
Productivity: The Nexus Approaches explores the interdependencies
of sustainable development paths and associated resource
requirements, describing and analysing the necessities for a more
resource efficient world. The use of and competition for
increasingly scarce resources are growing worldwide with current
production and consumption patterns of industrialised economies
soon to reach the point where the ecosphere will be overtaxed far
beyond its limits. Against this background, this volume examines
the important initiatives to monitor resource use at the
international, EU and national level. The current trends and
challenges related to sustainable resource use are discussed,
including international challenges for a resource efficient world,
megatrends, justice and equitable access to resources. In the
second part of the book, contributions examine implementation
strategies. They assess the concept known as circular economy and
discuss the theory of growth and the role of the financial and
education systems. The final section places special emphasis on
practical examples. Overall, the book presents concrete ways and
examples of achieving more sustainability in practice. Discussing
solutions for a more sustainable use of natural resources, this
book is essential reading for scholars and students of natural
resources and sustainable development and decision-makers and
experts from the fields of policy development, industry and civil
society. The Open Access version of this book, available at
https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781003000365, has been made
available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
License.
The fourth Factor X publication from the German Environment Agency
(Umweltbundesamt, UBA), Sustainable Development and Resource
Productivity: The Nexus Approaches explores the interdependencies
of sustainable development paths and associated resource
requirements, describing and analysing the necessities for a more
resource efficient world. The use of and competition for
increasingly scarce resources are growing worldwide with current
production and consumption patterns of industrialised economies
soon to reach the point where the ecosphere will be overtaxed far
beyond its limits. Against this background, this volume examines
the important initiatives to monitor resource use at the
international, EU and national level. The current trends and
challenges related to sustainable resource use are discussed,
including international challenges for a resource efficient world,
megatrends, justice and equitable access to resources. In the
second part of the book, contributions examine implementation
strategies. They assess the concept known as circular economy and
discuss the theory of growth and the role of the financial and
education systems. The final section places special emphasis on
practical examples. Overall, the book presents concrete ways and
examples of achieving more sustainability in practice. Discussing
solutions for a more sustainable use of natural resources, this
book is essential reading for scholars and students of natural
resources and sustainable development and decision-makers and
experts from the fields of policy development, industry and civil
society. The Open Access version of this book, available at
https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781003000365, has been made
available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
License.
Factor X: Re-source-Designing the Recycling Society explores the
role of recycling in efforts to achieve the sustainable world
envisioned in the Federal Environment Ministry's Resource
Efficiency Programme, known as ProgRess. The chapters build a
roadmap to a Recycling Society in which the decoupling of resource
consumption and economic growth is accomplished.
Kurt Symanzik was certainly one of the most outstanding theoretical
physicists of our time. For thirty years, until his untimely death
in 1983, he helped to shape the present form of quantum field
theory and its application to elementary particle physics. In
memoriam of Kurt" Symanzik leading scientists present their most
recent results, giving, at the same time, an overview of the state
of the art. This collection was originally published in Vol. 97,
1/2 (1985) of Communications in Mathematical Physics. They range
over various inter related topics of interest to Kurt Symanzik. We
hope that making this collection available in an accessible and
inexpensive way will benefit the physics community. The Publisher
Contents To the Memory of Kurt Symanzik 1 By A. Jaffe, H. Lehmann,
and G. Mack Monte Carlo Simulations for Quantum Field Theories
Involving Fermions. By M. Karowski, R. Schrader, and H. J. Thun
(With 8 Figures) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 SU(2)
Lattice Gauge Theory: Standard Action Versus Symanzik's
Tree-Improved Action. By B. Berg, A. Billoire, S. Meyer, and C.
Panagiotakopoulos (With 13 Figures). . . . . . . . . . 31 .
On-shell Improved Lattice Gauge Theories By M. Luscher and P. Weisz
(With 3 Figures) . . . . . 59 On the Modular Structure of Local
Algebras of Observables By K. Fredenhagen . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . 79 . . . The Intersection of Brownian Paths as a Case Study
of a Renormalization Group Method for Quantum Field Theory By M.
Aizenman (With 3 Figures). . . . . . . . . . . . 91 Intersection
Properties of Simple Random Walks: A Renormalization Group
Approach. By G. Felder and J. Frohlich. . . . . . . 111 ."
Algorithmic and Aesthetic Literacy is a selection of texts aiming
to extend current understandings of algorithmic and aesthetic
literacy. The volume presents a wide array of transdisciplinary
perspectives on computational and aesthetic practices and thinking.
Drawing on computer and educational science, artistic research,
designing and crafting, this collection delves deeply into societal
and educational challenges in the wake of the digital
transformation. The volume brings together diverse approaches and
viewpoints to stimulate dialogue and awareness of the manifold ways
in which algorithmic processes have become part of our lives. By
extending our ability to respond to a data-driven world in creative
and non-habitual ways, we will be better equipped to re-imagine and
shape our collective future as meaningful and fulfilling.
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