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Conservation [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 1720 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jun-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041065442
  • ISBN-13: 9781041065449
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 1720 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jun-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041065442
  • ISBN-13: 9781041065449
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The thought-provoking articles in Conservation can assist in catalyzing the transition to a new green economy by shaping the mind-sets of leaders, students, teachers and the public alike.' Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director, UN Environment Programme (UNEP) 'An extremely useful compilation of articles on the complex issues underlying nature conservation.' Ashish Kothari, Co-chair, IUCN Intercommission Strategic Direction on Governance, Equity, and Livelihoods in Relation to Protected Areas (TILCEPA) 'In this intelligently chosen, broadly ranging set of readings on conservation, Professor Adams assembles a set of vital readings for professionals, teachers, students, and the interested public.' Kent Redford, Director, Wildlife Conservation Society Institute This 4-volume set, edited by a leading expert on nature conservation, brings together in one collection a series of papers fundamental to understanding the social, political, cultural and scientific dimensions of conservation. Each volume is introduced by a new review essay, which both sets the scope for the collection and advances analytical understanding of conservation issues. Volume I covers the historical development of conservation ideas and reviews the diverse contemporary philosophical, ethical, cultural and practical arguments for conservation. Volume II addresses the core issue of conservation: the maintenance of living diversity in the face of human demands on the biosphere. The intention here is not to offer a sourcebook of conservation science, but to include the key texts that have changed the way conservation is understood and practised. Volume III explores the overlaps and conflicts between conservation and development, andwin-win solutions to conflicts between the two, including ideas of sustainable development. Volume IV presents work on conservation as an essentially political process, drawing chiefly on social science and, in particular, political ecology and environmental history.
Volume I: The Idea of Conservation Editorial Introduction to Volume I
Part I: Western Ideas of Nature
1. Creating a Second Nature
2. The Origins of
Environmentalism
3. Walking
4. The Hetch Hetchy Valley
5. A Fable for
Tomorrow and the Obligation to Endure Part II: Indigenous Ideas of Nature and
Conservation
6. Animals
7. Traditional Knowledge Systems in Practice Part
III: The Misuse of Nature
8. Destructiveness of Man and Human and Brute
Action Compared
9. Principles of Conservation
10. The Former Abundance of
Wildlife
11. The Round River Part IV: Philosophies of Conservation
12. Ideas
of Nature
13. The Cultural Approach to Conservation Biology
14. The
Conservation Ethic
15. Definitions, Values and Philosophies Part V:
Wilderness and Countryside
16. Thinking Like a Mountain
17. The Trouble with
Wilderness; or Getting Back to the Wrong Nature
18. The Making of an Ideal
Part VI: Protecting Nature
19. Perspectives
20. The Carbon Connection Index
Volume II: The Conservation of Diversity Editorial Introduction to Volume II
Part I: Biodiversity and Biodiversity Loss
1. The Vulnerable Earth: Toward a
Planetary History
2. Biodiversity Threatened
3. Human domination of Earth's
ecosystems Part II: Understanding Change in Nature
4. Anecdotes and the
Shifting Baseline Syndrome of Fisheries
5. What is Natural? The Need for a
Long-term Perspective in Biodiversity Conservation
6. False Forest History,
Complicit Social Analysis: Rethinking Some West African Environmental
Narratives Part III: Ecology and Conservation
7. The Use and Abuse of
Vegetational Concepts and Terms
8. Resilience and Stability of Ecological
Systems
9. Pyromancy: Reading Stories in the Flames Part IV: Conservation
Planning
10. Biodiversity Hotspots for Conservation Priorities
11. The Global
200: A Representation Approach to Conserving the Earth's Most Biologically
Valuable Ecoregions
12. Mapping the Conservation Landscape
13. Systematic
Conservation Planning Part V: Managing Species and Spaces
14. Command and
Control and the Pathology of Natural Resource Management
15. Directions in
Conservation Biology
16. The Island Dilemma: Lessons of Modern Biogeographic
Studies for the Design of Natural Reserves
17. A Regional Landscape Approach
to Maintain Diversity
18. Effectiveness of Parks in Protecting Tropical
Biodiversity Part VI: Conservation Management and Restoration
19. Biological
Invasions: Winning the Science Battles but Losing the Conservation War?
20.
Restoration Ecology: Repairing the Earth's Ecosystems in the New Millennium
Index Volume III: Conservation and Development Editorial Introduction to
Volume III Part I: Conservation and Sustainable Development
1. The Land Ethic
2. Towards Sustainable Development
3. Conservation of Biodiversity in a World
of Use
4. Biodiversity Conservation and the Eradication of Poverty Part II:
Sustainability and Wild Harvests
5. Fishing Down Marine Food Webs
6. Having
Your Wildlife and Eating It Too: An Analysis of Hunting Sustainability Across
Tropical Ecosystems
7. Requiem for the Grand Banks Part III: Institutions and
Environmental Management
8. The Struggle to Govern the Commons
9. Human
Ecology and Resource Sustainability: The Importance of Institutional
Diversity
10. People, Livelihoods and Collective Action in Biodiversity
Management Part IV: Economics and Conservation
11. The Value of Nature and
the Nature of Value
12. Who Should Pay for Tropical Conservation, and How
Could the Costs Be Met?
13. Direct Payments to Conserve Biodiversity Part V:
Community and Conservation
14. If Community Conservation is the Answer, What
is the Question?
15. Enchantment and Disenchantment: The Role of Community in
Natural Resource Conservation
16. The Background to Community-based
Conservation
17. Planning for People and Parks: Design Dilemmas
18. The
Future of Integrated Conservation and Development Projects: Building on What
Works
19. Sustainable Use and Incentive-driven Conservation: Realigning Human
and Conservation Interests Index Volume IV: The Politics of Conservation
Editorial Introduction to Volume IV Part I: The State, Conservation and
Protected Areas
1. Nature and Space
2. Nature-State-Territory: Towards a
Critical Theorization of Conservation Enclosures
3. The Environmental
Challenge to the Nation-State: Superparks and National Parks Policy in
Zimbabwe
4. Coercing Conservation? The Politics of State Resource Control
Part II: Science, Knowledge and the Politics of Conservation
5. Deliberative
Democracy and Participatory Biodiversity
6. Environmentality: Community,
Intimate Government, and the Making of Environmental Subjects in Kumaon,
India
7. Non-governmental Organizations and Governmentality: 'Consuming'
Biodiversity and Indigenous People in the Philippines
8. Green Dots, Pink
Hearts: Displacing Politics from the Malaysian Rainforest
9. The Shifting
Middle Ground: Amazonian Indians and Eco-politics 10.The 'Wild', the Market
and the Native: Indigenous People Face New Forms of Global Colonization
11.
Radical American Environmentalism and Wilderness Preservation: A Third World
Critique Part III: The Social Impacts of Protected Areas
12. Salvaging
Nature: Indigenous Peoples and Protected Areas
13. Farewell Song
14.
Displacement and Relocation from Protected Areas: Towards a Biological and
Historical Synthesis
15. The Winding Road: Incorporating Social Justice and
Human Rights into Protected Areas Policies
16. Political Incentives for
Biodiversity Conservation Part IV: Conservation Futures
17. Love it Or Lose
it: The Coming Biophilia Revolution
18. Nature Matrix: Reconnecting People
and Nature
19. Society With Nature
20. Optimism and Hope in a Hotter Time
Index
William M. (Bill) Adams is the Moran Professor of Conservation and Development at the University of Cambridge, UK, and a Senior Editor of Oryx: The International Journal of Conservation. He has written and edited numerous books on conservation, including Future Nature: A Vision for Conservation (now in its second edition), Decolonizing Nature: Strategies for Conservation in a Post-colonial Era (edited with Martin Mulligan) and Against Extinction: The Story of Conservation. His book Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World was first published in 1990 with its third edition published in 2008.