Environmental Anthropology Today
Title | Environmental Anthropology Today PDF eBook |
Author | Helen Kopnina |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 311 |
Release | 2011-08-05 |
Genre | Nature |
ISBN | 1136658564 |
This collection offers a wide ranging consideration of the field which illustrates how environmental anthropology can increase our understanding and help find solutions to environmental problems.
Environmental Anthropology Today
Title | Environmental Anthropology Today PDF eBook |
Author | Helen Kopnina |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 364 |
Release | 2011-08-05 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1136658556 |
Today, we face some of the greatest environmental challenges in global history. Understanding the damage being done and the varied ethics and efforts contributing to its repair is of vital importance. This volume poses the question: What can increasing the emphasis on the environment in environmental anthropology, along with the science of its problems and the theoretical and methodological tools of anthropological practice, do to aid conservation efforts, policy initiatives, and our overall understanding of how to survive as citizens of the planet? Environmental Anthropology Today combines a range of new ethnographic work with chapters exploring key theoretical and methodological issues, and draws on disciplines such as sociology and environmental science as well as anthropology to illuminate those issues. The case studies include work on North America, Europe, India, Africa, Asia, and South America, offering the reader a stimulating and thoughtful survey of the work currently being conducted in the field.
Routledge Handbook of Environmental Anthropology
Title | Routledge Handbook of Environmental Anthropology PDF eBook |
Author | Helen Kopnina |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Pages | 509 |
Release | 2016-08-12 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 1317667964 |
Environmental Anthropology studies historic and present human-environment interactions. This volume illustrates the ways in which today's environmental anthropologists are constructing new paradigms for understanding the multiplicity of players, pressures, and ecologies in every environment, and the value of cultural knowledge of landscapes. This Handbook provides a comprehensive survey of contemporary topics in environmental anthropology and thorough discussions on the current state and prospective future of the field in seven key sections. As the contributions to this Handbook demonstrate, the subfield of environmental anthropology is responding to cultural adaptations and responses to environmental changes in multiple and complex ways. As a discipline concerned primarily with human-environment interaction, environmental anthropologists recognize that we are now working within a pressure cooker of rapid environmental damage that is forcing behavioural and often cultural changes around the world. As we see in the breadth of topics presented in this volume, these environmental challenges have inspired renewed foci on traditional topics such as food procurement, ethnobiology, and spiritual ecology; and a broad new range of subjects, such as resilience, nonhuman rights, architectural anthropology, industrialism, and education. This volume enables scholars and students quick access to both established and trending environmental anthropological explorations into theory, methodology and practice.
Environmental Anthropology
Title | Environmental Anthropology PDF eBook |
Author | Patricia K. Townsend |
Publisher | Waveland Press |
Pages | 128 |
Release | 2008-06-25 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1478610468 |
Environmental anthropologists organize the realities of interdependent lands, plants, animals, and human beings; advocate for the neediest among them; and provide understandings that preserve what is needed for the survival of a diverse world. Can the things that anthropologists have learned in their studies of small-scale systems have any relevance for developing policies to address global problems? Townsend explores this dilemma in her captivating, concise exploration of environmental anthropology and its place among the disciplines subfields. Maintaining the structure and clarity of the previous edition, the second edition has been revised throughout to include new research, expanded discussions of climate change, and a chapter devoted to spiritual ecology. In the historical overview of the field, Townsend shows how ideas and approaches developed earlier are relevant to understanding how todays local populations adapt to their physical and biological environments. She next presents a closer look at global environmental issuesrapid expansion of the world economic system, disease and poverty, the loss of biodiversity and its implications for human healthto demonstrate the effects of interactions between local and global communities. As a capstone, she gives thoughtful consideration to how, as professionals and as individuals, we can move toward personal engagement with environmental problems.
Environmental Anthropology
Title | Environmental Anthropology PDF eBook |
Author | Helen Kopnina |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2015-10-14 |
Genre | Human ecology |
ISBN | 9780415708678 |
A new title from Routledge, this is a four-volume collection of cutting-edge and foundational research.
Environmental Anthropology
Title | Environmental Anthropology PDF eBook |
Author | Helen Kopnina |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 329 |
Release | 2013-07-18 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1135044139 |
This volume presents new theoretical approaches, methodologies, subject pools, and topics in the field of environmental anthropology. Environmental anthropologists are increasingly focusing on self-reflection - not just on themselves and their impacts on environmental research, but also on the reflexive qualities of their subjects, and the extent to which these individuals are questioning their own environmental behavior. Here, contributors confront the very notion of "natural resources" in granting non-human species their subjectivity and arguing for deeper understanding of "nature," and "wilderness" beyond the label of "ecosystem services." By engaging in interdisciplinary efforts, these anthropologists present new ways for their colleagues, subjects, peers and communities to understand the causes of, and alternatives to environmental destruction. This book demonstrates that environmental anthropology has moved beyond the construction of rural, small group theory, entering into a mode of solution-based methodologies and interdisciplinary theories for understanding human-environmental interactions. It is focused on post-rural existence, health and environmental risk assessment, on the realm of alternative actions, and emphasizes the necessary steps towards preventing environmental crisis.
The Archaeology of Environmental Change
Title | The Archaeology of Environmental Change PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher T. Fisher |
Publisher | University of Arizona Press |
Pages | 337 |
Release | 2012-02 |
Genre | Nature |
ISBN | 0816514844 |
In this book, a diverse collection of case studies reveal how archaeology can contribute to a better understanding of humans' relation to the environment. The Archaeology of Environmental Change shows that the environmental challenges facing humanity today can be better approached through an attempt to understand how past societies dealt with similar circumstances.