E-Book, Englisch, 472 Seiten, eBook
Social and Environmental Justice
E-Book, Englisch, 472 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Contemporary Systems Thinking
ISBN: 978-3-319-58014-2
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
The chapters included in
Balancing Individualism and Collectivism: Social and Environmental Justice
encourage readers to challenge the sustainability agenda of the anthropocentric life. Proposed solutions to these unsustainable actions include structuralized interventions and volunteerism through encouragement and education, with a focus on protecting current and future generations of life through new governmental etiquette and human cognizance.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Prologue McIntyre-Mills, J. Balancing individualism and collectivism: towards non-anthropocentric stewardship rights and responsibilities.- Preface Treviño-Cisneros, R
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Ethics and the Anthropocene.- 1. Romm, N. Foregrounding critical systemic and indigenous ways of collective knowing towards (re)directing the Anthropocene.- 2. Mendelsohn, J. Sveen, T. Risks, Crisis and the European Law: Implications and Parallels for Addressing Financial, Energy Security and Environmental Catastrophe..- 3. McIntyre-Mills, J with Wirawan, R and dmembers of the Indonesian Research consortium. Low carbon challenge to live virtuously and well: Participatory Design and education on mitigation, adaptation, governance and accountability.- 4. McIntyre-Mills, J. with Wirawan, RGoverning the Anthropocene through balancing individualism and collectivism as a way to manage our ecological footprint.- 5. McKay, V.I. Introducing a parallel curriculum to enhance social and environmental awareness in South African school workbooks..- 6. Outhred, R. Decision making towards a fully realized equity agenda in sustainable development.- 7. Ariyadasa, E. Educating and empowering children for governing the Anthropocene: a case study of children’s homes in Sri Lanka.- 8. Corcoran-Nantes, Y. and Roy, S. Gender, climate change and sustainable development in Bangladesh.- 9. Goff, S. Statistical variation versus National cohesion – contesting truth tests in competing socio-ecological realities.- 10. Miller, K. Balancing individualism and collectivism in an Australian Aboriginal context..- 11. Quan-Baffour Kofi Poku. A
Systemic view of the Value of Environmental Conservation: The Case of Bono Takyiman, Ghana..- 12. Akena Adyanga, F. Customary Land Tenure and Ecological Sustainability in Acholi land, Northern Uganda.- 13. Machuki, S. with McIntyre-Mills, J. The role of participatory and inclusive governance in sustainable urban development of Nairobi, Kenya: a participatory approach.- 14. Coral Guerra,C. Analytical framework for a systemic analysis of drivers and dynamics of historical land-use changes: a shift toward Systems Thinking.- 15.Widianingsih, I, McLaren, H.J. & McIntyre-Mills, J. Decentralization, participatory planning and the Anthropocene in Indonesia, with a case example of the Berugak Dese, Lombok, Indonesia.- 16. Simbolan, J. A case study of water mis-use in Kupang, Indonesia.- 17. Gascon, M and McIntyre-Mills. Empowering Indigenous people : voice, choice and agency in rural development planning in Mindanao.- 18. Foote, J Hepi, M.,
Rogers-Koroheke, M Taimona, HSupporting indigenous environmental health action: a vignette.- 19. Buswell, C & Corcoran- Nantes, Y. Precarious Liaisons: gender, moral authority and marriage in colonial Kenya.- 20. Corcoran-Nantes, Y. & Buswell, C. Rumour and Innuendo: Witchcraft and Women’s Power in the ‘Colonised’ State..- 21. Kakoulaki, M & Christakis, A.N
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Demoscopio: the Meta-Science Co-Laboratory for Democratic [R]evolution.- Epilogue Rayner, A. Natural Inclusion: a new understanding of evolutionary kinship of all.