The Elgar Companion to Geography, Transdisciplinarity and Sustainability

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Offering a cutting-edge, transdisciplinary approach to bio-physical and bio-cultural scales of sustainability, this Companion explores diverse understandings of the what, how, why and where questions of sustainability. It examines the key notion of how to optimize human quality of life whilst minimizing environmental suffering.

Integrating a range of disciplines through the social sciences, natural sciences and arts and humanities, this Companion focuses on the human component of sustainability, using a place-based and life-scape approach to environmental questions. Chapters analyze critical topics including: urbanization and city life, environmental conservation and rural landscapes, long-term interactions with natural life, climate change and the importance of mountain regions. Looking beyond an economic analysis of sustainability and well-being, this Companion incorporates cross-cutting social, cultural, judicial and spiritual dimensions of sustainability and regenerative development.

With a combination of international case studies and an interdisciplinary framework for understanding the topic, this will be an interesting read for those studying sustainability from a range of disciplinary bases including ecological economists, human ecologists and geographers. It will also be beneficial to urban planners and ecologists interested in how the profoundly impactful evolutionary trend towards the urban environment is impacting human geographies around the world.

Contributors include: B. Antaki, J. Balsiger, A. Barreau, S. Boillat, B. Boley, A. Borsdorf, F. Boyer, M. Bush, J.B. Campbell, M. Carré, R. Cheddadi, T.J. Christoffel, B. Debarbieux , M.E. Donoso-Correa, N. Dudley, W. Dunbar, F. Ficetola, L. François, L.M. Frolich, E. Guevara, J.A. González, A. Haller, C.P. Harden, D. Harmon, A.-J. Henrot, S.L. Hitchner, G.A. Holdridge, K. Huang, J.T. Ibarra, K. Ichikawa, E.A. Macdonald, C. Mena, C. Merchant, A. Michaels, C. Monterrubio-Solís, E. Müller, M. Navarro, H. Norberg-Hodge, M. Oliva, S. Padgett-Vasquez, S.E. Pilaar Birch, D. Quiroga, J.K. Reap, L.M. Resler, A. Rhoujjati, R. Rozzi, F.O. Sarmiento, J.W. Schelhas, Y. Shao, C. Stadel, P. Taberlet, K. Taylor, S.J. Walsh, K.R. Young, Z. Zheng, F.M. Zimmermann, S. Zimmermann-Janschitz

Author(s): Fausto O. Sarmiento, Larry M. Frolich
Publisher: Edward Elgar Pub
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 448
City: Cheltenham

Front Matter
Copyright
Contents
List of contributors
Introduction: the scale of sustainability—the limiting universe where everything and nothing is sustainable
Part I: Foundational Binaries of Geography and Sustainability
1 Packing transdisciplinary critical geography amidst sustainability of mountainscapes
2 A binary South to North world: the geography of sustainability for a high-energy, urbanizing, digitalized human species
3 Sustainable development and the concept of scale
4 Multidisciplinary approaches for conservation issues
5 The dance of sustainability: a call to engage geographers in local- and global-scale research
6 Sustainability and globalization
7 The climate framework in sustainability research: a geographic critique from the Global South
Part II: Integration of Disciplinary Development for Sustainability
8 Why sustainability matters in geography
9 Urban montology: mountain cities as transdisciplinary research focus
10 The Satoyama Initiative for landscape/seascape sustainability
11 A biocultural ethic for sustainable geographies
12 Values in place: protected areas as a geography of commitment
Part III: Resource Exploitation and Cycling of Accommodation
13 Regenerative development as natural solution for sustainability
14 Sustainable relationships and ecological authenticity
15 Feeding futures framed: rediscovering biocultural diversity in sustainable foodscapes
16 Sustainable urbanism or amenity migration fad: critical analysis of urban planning of Cuenca cityscapes, Ecuador
Part IV: Country Examples: Non-Traditional Actors/Tek
17 Land cover and land use change in an emerging national park gateway region: implications for mountain sustainability
18 Listening to the campesinos: sustaining rural livelihoods in the tropical Andes
19 Decolonizing ecological knowledge: transdisciplinary ecology, place making and cognitive justice in the Andes
20 Cultural sustainability and notions of cultural heritage: a review with some reference to an Asian perspective
21 Threats to sustainability in the Galapagos Islands: a social–ecological perspective
22 Celestial bird’s eye view: tracking forest cover change in the Bellbird Biological Corridor of Costa Rica
23 Andean indigenous foodscapes: food security and food sovereignty in mountains’ sustainability scenarios
Part V: Postcript
24 Montology: an integrative understanding of mountain foodscapes for strengthening food sovereignty in the Andes
25 Sustainability: Cooperation Industry Earth 2300 – “Think local planet, act regionally”
Part VI: Epilogue
26 Sustainability thinking: the road ahead
Index