human interventions
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2022 ◽  
pp. 45-82
Author(s):  
Tim C. Jennerjahn ◽  
Antje Baum ◽  
Ario Damar ◽  
Michael Flitner ◽  
Jill Heyde ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Esa Käyhkö

Resilience ethics means a shared ethical responsibility for our actions and environment. Sustainable governance is interested in the complexity of sustainability and the rise of resilience thinking. There are multiple ways to apply the idea of resilience to shared narratives about public problems and environmental concerns for the future. In particular, resilience ethics are related to human interventions in ecosystems and the resultant responsibility to care for them. The integration of resilience and sustainability leads us to study the distribution of wealth and other root causes of social inequality and injustice. The current paper argues that institutional change and collective action are critical elements in society’s resilience. Therefore, three global problems should be addressed as the focus of resilience and sustainability: (1) divided societies and growing inequalities should be considered in terms of income distribution, employment, and education; (2) wealth and power should be redistributed in terms of common-pool resources and affected communities; and (3) intersectional inequality should be reconsidered in different axes of oppression and social injustice. A renewed perspective for democratic and responsible citizenship is required to enhance direct citizen participation in public policies and social change. In this regard, social and administrative scientific advances create opportunities for the resilient future.


2021 ◽  
pp. 101343
Author(s):  
Cristina I. Pereira ◽  
Celene B. Milanes ◽  
Iván Correa ◽  
Enzo Pranzini ◽  
Benjamin Cuker ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Jaś Elsner

The chapters gathered in this volume are the product of a conversation at the Center for Global Ancient Art in the University of Chicago. They address a theme that has had exceptional trans-cultural traction for well over half a century in art history as a discipline—with long scholarly (“secondary”) and historic (“primary”) literatures as well as deeply established visual genres in both European and Chinese landscape painting. Likewise, landscape is a key issue in all areas of archaeology—from questions about the placement of monuments to the understanding of human interventions in natural topography through such methods as field archaeology....


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-44
Author(s):  
Serena Zanzu

This article draws on interview data and insights from environmental studies and somatic therapy to argue for the significance of thinking ‘with rivers’ in order to reaffirm human and nonhuman entanglements in the current challenges presented by anthropogenic devastation. River microbial communities are unintelligible and complex entities due to their unclear origin and continuous flow downstream. The account of one environmental scientist is presented to consider how the metaphors of movement used in the riverine context assist in exploring the complicated dynamics of fluid communities facing constantly changing environments I call ‘microbial rivers’. A pollution incident affecting a UK river, where microbial communities responded by growing in number and activity, further illustrates the intersection of communities and ecosystems in their adaptation to troubling human interventions. Engaging with somatic understandings of trauma, this article proposes thinking with flow as a possibility to reimagine the capacity for renewal when experiencing debilitating adversities, thus countering apocalyptic responses of immobility in the face of environmental destruction and inviting novel opportunities for growth for human and nonhuman communities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 129 ◽  
pp. 108010
Author(s):  
Qinli Xiong ◽  
Yang Xiao ◽  
Pinghan Liang ◽  
Lingjuan Li ◽  
Lin Zhang ◽  
...  

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