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Urban and natural environments are often viewed as entirely
separate entities -- human settlements as the domain of architects
and planners, and natural areas as untouched wilderness. This
dichotomy continues to drive decision-making in subtle ways, but
with the mounting pressures of global climate change and declining
biodiversity, it is no longer viable. New technologies are
promising to provide renewable energy sources and greener designs,
but real change will require a deeper shift in values, attitudes,
and perceptions. A timely and important collection, The Natural
City explores how to integrate the natural environment into healthy
urban centres from philosophical, religious, socio-political, and
planning perspectives. Recognizing the need to better link the
humanities with public policy, The Natural City offers unique
insights for the development of an alternative vision of urban
life.
Highlighting ethical leadership strategies, Conversations on
Ethical Leadership explores what makes for strong, well-informed,
morally sound decision-making at all levels of an organization. In
addressing a range of challenges faced by universities and applying
those lessons to the broader community of the public and private
sectors, Ingrid Leman Stefanovic and her contributors tackle a host
of issues related to advancing ethics, diversity, inclusiveness,
and the art of moral leadership. Each chapter, written by an author
with roots in the academy, includes a subsequent commentary by a
community leader who highlights the broader takeaways that emerge
for society from the university experience. In this way, the book
becomes a conversation between the academic and non-academic worlds
about issues that affect any prominent organization. It offers a
unique range of novel and timely topics, from
responsibility-centred budgeting to post-pandemic planning,
responsiveness to climate change, Indigenous leadership, free
speech, academic integrity, and much more. In doing so,
Conversations on Ethical Leadership ultimately reveals how we can
build and preserve an ethically responsible sense of purpose at our
post-secondary learning institutions and beyond.
Facing droughts, floods, and water security challenges, society is
increasingly forced to develop new policies and practices to cope
with the impacts of climate change. From taken-for-granted values
and perceptions to embodied, existential modes of engaging our
world, human perspectives impact decision-making and behaviour. The
Wonder of Water explores how human experience - including our
cultural paradigms, value systems, and personal biases - impacts
decisions around water. In many ways, the volume expands on the
growing field of water ethics to include questions around
environmental aesthetics, psychology, and ontology. And yet this
book is not simply for philosophers. On the contrary, a specific
aim is to explore how more informed philosophical dialogue will
lead to more insightful public policies and practices. Case studies
describe specific architectural and planning decisions, fisheries
policies, urban ecological restorations, and more. The overarching
phenomenological perspective, however, means that these discussions
emerge within a sensibility that recognizes the foundational
significance of human embodiment, culture, language, worldviews,
and, ultimately, moral attunement to place.
Facing droughts, floods, and water security challenges, society is
increasingly forced to develop new policies and practices to cope
with the impacts of climate change. From taken-for-granted values
and perceptions to embodied, existential modes of engaging our
world, human perspectives impact decision-making and behaviour. The
Wonder of Water explores how human experience - including our
cultural paradigms, value systems, and personal biases - impacts
decisions around water. In many ways, the volume expands on the
growing field of water ethics to include questions around
environmental aesthetics, psychology, and ontology. And yet this
book is not simply for philosophers. On the contrary, a specific
aim is to explore how more informed philosophical dialogue will
lead to more insightful public policies and practices. Case studies
describe specific architectural and planning decisions, fisheries
policies, urban ecological restorations, and more. The overarching
phenomenological perspective, however, means that these discussions
emerge within a sensibility that recognizes the foundational
significance of human embodiment, culture, language, worldviews,
and, ultimately, moral attunement to place.
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