Browsing Research and publications by Title
Now showing items 28-47 of 63
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How will disenfranchised Peoples adapt to Climate Change? Strengthening the Ecojustice Movement
(Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability, 2009) -
International Synergies to Address Climate Change: Participatory Community Organizing in Toronto and the Baixada Fluminense, Brazil
(Common Ground Research Networks, 2012) -
Introduction: Exploring feminist ecological economics
(Feminist Economics, 2005-11)These Explorations argue that more links between the fields of feminist ecology and feminist economics are both needed and promising, and presents new, boundary-crossing research in this area. It brings together contributions ... -
Introduction: Women, ecology, and economics: new models and theories
(Elsevier, 1997) -
Local Economies, Trade, and Global Sustainability
(Woodhead Publishing, 1999)Bioregional and "ecological economics" theory describes the growth of local economic linkages as vital to move post-industrial economies in the direction of sustainability. This involves expanding local stewardship over ... -
Multiple acts of birding: the Education, ethics and ontology of bird watching in Ontario
(2010-12-08)While bird watching has captured the attention of those interested in fostering an experiential connection to the more-than-human, research conducted to date often assumes birding to be a heterogeneous act. As an example ... -
NAFTA and the Future of Environmental Regulation
(Centre for Constitutional Studies, University of Alberta, 1994) -
Ontario's Road Map to Prosperity: Developing Renewable Energy to its Full Potential
(2009)Ontario needs a practical solution that provides strong local economic development and new employment sources to replace the 230,000 manufacturing jobs that have disappeared from the province in the last five years. As ... -
An overview of international institutional mechanisms for environmental management with reference to Arctic pollution
(Elsevier, 1995)Evidence is mounting of the environmental impact in the Far North of economic and industrial activity elsewhere in the world. While the sources of pollutants found in the Arctic are many and widespread, it is up to just a ... -
An overview of international institutional mechanisms for environmental management with refererence to Arctic pollution
(The Science of the Total Environment, 1995)Evidence is mounting of the environmental impact in the Far North of economic and industrial activity elsewhere in the world. While the sources of pollutants found in the Arctic are many and widespread, it is up to just a ... -
Participation and Watershed Management: Experiences from Brazil
(University Press, 2007)Public participation is emphasized in many new institutional approaches to resource management, especially watershed governance. The implementation of participatory management frameworks, and capacity-building for civil ... -
Pedagogies of resistance: community-based education for women’s participation in watershed management in São Paulo, Brazil
(2009)Informal and community-based education and organizing are fundamental to creating the conditions for equitable democratic participation by women and marginalized people. This paper overviews recent Brazilian initiatives ... -
Port City Relations: Global Spaces of Urban Waterfront Development
(2007)Urban waterfronts have become key sites where global restructuring processes and local interests are engaged in complex struggles that are influencing the future of cities. The author discusses three issues related to these ... -
Power of the People: A Review of Citizen Science Programs for Conservation
(Biological Conservation, 2020-09)Citizen science is a rapidly growing field whereby volunteers can collect and/or analyze data to contribute to research and gain an appreciation for the environment. There are countless programs currently underway around ... -
Praxis Mapping: A methodology for evaluating the political impacts of international projects
(2012)This report describes the participatory development of a process we have used to consider the political implications of a climate justice project we worked on together from 2010 to 2013, called Strengthening the role of ... -
Promoting Health and Well-Being by Managing for Social–Ecological Resilience: the Potential of Integrating Ecohealth and Water Resources Management Approaches
(Ecology and Society, 2011)In coupled social–ecological systems, the same driving forces can result in combined social and environmental health inequities, hazards, and impacts. Policies that decrease social inequities and improve social cohesion, ... -
Public Participation and Ecological Valuation: Inclusive=Radical
(2005)This paper discusses the gender and class implications of “public participation” processes, which are increasingly used in Europe, North America, and elsewhere as a basic component of environmental and public policy ... -
Public participation in watershed management:international practices for inclusiveness
(Elsevier, 2011)This paper outlines a number of examples from around the world of participatory processes for watershed decision-making, and discusses how they work, why they are important, their social and ecological potential, and the ... -
Re-establishing Justice as a Pillar of Ecological Economics Through Feminist
(Ecological Economics, 2018)Ecological economics has long claimed distributive justice as a central tenet, yet discussions of equity and justice have received relatively little attention over the history of the field. While ecological economics has ...