Reprint

Sustainable Interdisciplinarity

Human-Nature Relations

Edited by
January 2020
188 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03928-116-9 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03928-117-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Sustainable Interdisciplinarity: Human-Nature Relations that was published in

Business & Economics
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

Sustainable interdisciplinarity focuses on human–nature relations and a multitude of contemporary overlapping research between society and the environment. A variety of disciplines have played a large part in better understanding sustainable development since its high-profile emergence approximately a quarter of a century ago. At present, the forefront of sustainability research is an array of methods, techniques, and growing knowledge base that considers past, present, and future pathways. Specific multidisciplinary concentrations within the scope of societal changes, urban landscape transformations, international environmental comparative studies, as well as key theories and dynamics relating to sustainable performance are explored. Specializations in complex sustainability issues address international governance arrangements, rules, and organizations—both public and private—within the scope of four themes: sustainability, human geography, environment, and interdisciplinary societal studies. This book contains eleven thoroughly refereed contributions concerning pressing issues that interlink sustainable interdisciplinarity with the presented themes in terms of the human–nature interface.

Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
food safety; GM food; ideology; politics; economics; culture; Cheonggye Stream; Suseongdong Valley; restoration; concept of landscape; Korean culture; urban climate zones; spatial statistical analysis; air temperature; urban spatial variables; recycling; Czech Republic; sociodemographic determinants; regression; spatial analysis; urban climate; mathematical climate simulation modeling; GIS; urban planning and design; policy making; stakeholder collaboration; sustainable tourism and hospitality; sustainable water management; network analysis; bicycle-sharing systems; bike-share; performance; determinants; ridership; sustainable architectural design; sustainable interior design; interior components; adaptive reuse; environmental contextualization; ecotourism; community livelihood; participation; sustainable tourism; income; Cambodia; healthy public space design; healing gardens; dementia-friendly cities; Alzheimer; elderly people; evidence-based design; age-sensitive landscape design; collective forest; nature reserve; SES framework; community forest; Fujian Province; China; sustainability; human geography; environment; interdisciplinary societal studies