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Ecosystem crises interactions : human health and the changing environment / Merrill Singer, PhD, Department of Anthropology, Emeritus Professor, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA.

Van Pelt Library RA565 .S532 2021
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Singer, Merrill, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Environmental health.
Human beings--Effects of environment on.
Human beings.
Species--Effects of environment on.
Species.
Physical Description:
xi, 382 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
Place of Publication:
Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2021.
Summary:
"Ecocrisis interaction, the synergistic interface of two or more environmental events or pollutants that multiply resulting harmful health effects beyond their additive impact is putting humans as well as other species at catastrophic risk. Perils of Eco-Crises Interaction: Human Health and the Changing Environment is a timely volume designed to increase understanding of the link between health and the environment. The diverse ecological calamities humans face are not presented as standalone threats, which has been the conventional perspective, but rather a novel framework is developed for understanding how negative human impacts on the environment interact and magnify their hazardous effects. This discussion raises essential questions about the extinction of species, populations, and ways of life"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction: public health, EcoHealth, planetary health, and you
1.1. Connections
1.2. Is this a dangerous book?
1.3. Three alternative approaches to health and the environment
1.3.1. EcoHealth
1.3.2. One Health
1.3.3. Planetary health
1.4. Global warming or climate change?
1.5. Depth of the human footprint
1.6. Introducing ecocrises interactions and health
1.7. Thresholds in the environment
1.8. Sustainability of human life on Earth
1.9. How did things get this bad?
1.10. Age of the Anthropocene
1.11. The hottest year on record
1.12. Organization of this book
References
pt. 1 Impact on ecosystems
2. Intricacies of ecosystems
2.1. The nature of nature and the pathway to understanding
2.2. Developing a historic understanding of ecology and ecosystems
2.2.1. Ancient Greece
2.2.2. Indigenous environmental knowledge
2.3. Modern ecology
2.3.1. Ecosystems
2.3.2. Biodiversity and the multitude of species
2.3.3. Regional and planet-wide natural interconnecting structures
2.3.4. Human-dominated ecosystems
2.3.5. Human ecology
3. The social and technological making of environmental crises
3.1. Earth is now a different place
3.2. The longue duree and the rise and development of capitalism
3.2.1. Toward environment crises: critical turning points in human history
3.3. Environmental neoliberalism and the polluting elites
3.4. The Anthropocene or the Capitolocene?
3.5. The future of Eaarth
4. Engaging catastrophe
4.1. Introduction to a dismal theme
4.2. Prepping for doomsday
4.3. The record of past radical environmental change
4.3.1. Planetary change and mass extinction
4.3.2. The sixth mass extinction?
4.3.3. Planetary change in the archeological record
4.4. Popular concern with the environment
4.4.1. History of the environmental movement
4.4.2. Environmental crisis and the media
5. A home in peril: major contemporary environmental crises
5.1. Case studies in contemporary environmental crises
5.2. Deforestation
5.3. Acidification of the oceans
5.4. Eutrophication of estuarine and coastal waters
5.5. Depletion of the oceans
5.6. Pollution of waters
5.7. Oil spills
5.8. Desertification
5.9. Concluding remarks
6. The threat of ecocrises interaction
6.1. Compounded perturbations and ecological surprises
6.2. Climate change and polluted Superfund sites
6.3. Global toxic sites and climate change
6.3.1. Camp Century, Greenland
6.4. The ecocrises of unfettered mining
6.5. Cement, asbestos, and climate change
6.6. The climate change-nuclear ecocrisis nexus
6.6.1. Radiation and health
6.6.2. Climate change and nuclear facilities
6.7. Concluding remarks
pt. 2 Environmental crisis
7. Encountering degrading environments
7.1. Complexities of the environment-health nexus
7.2. Ecosystem distress syndrome
7.3. Case studies of degraded environments
7.3.1. Degrading Arctic permafrost
7.3.2. Drugged aquatic environments
7.4. Case studies of fragmented environments
7.4.1. Fragmenting sky islands
7.4.2. Fragmenting forests
7.4.3. Fragmenting grasslands
7.5. The dilemma of simplified environments
7.6. Fragmented environments, ticks, and human health
7.7. Solastalgia: distress linked to environmental change
8. Climate change, crisis enhancement
8.1. Consensus on climate change
8.2. Driving climate change
8.3. How serious is climate change?
8.4. Drought and heatwaves
8.5. Melting land ice and tundra
8.6. Coastal flooding
8.7. The polar vortex
8.8. Hurricanes, cyclones, typhoons, and tropical storms
8.9. Infectious diseases
8.10. Food loss to heat and insect pests
9. Business as deadly usual: resisting environmental science
9.1. A consistent pattern of climate change denial
9.2. A time of questioning environmental science
9.3. Skirting accountability: polluters, innocence, and the victim slot
9.4. Fighting for the "right" to pollute
9.5. Deadly business: Big Energy and the denial of climate change
9.5.1. Phase I: claiming global warming is a hoax
9.5.2. Phase II: admitting global warming is real, denying its urgency
9.5.3. Phase III: arguing we're all in it together
9.6. The politics of climate change denial
9.7. The institutions of the climate change denial machine
9.8. Taking climate change deniers to court
9.9. Fundamentalist denial
pt. 3 Human health risks with changing environment
10. Crossing boundaries and thresholds
10.1. Are there biophysical boundaries for humanity?
10.2. Key biogeochemical and biophysical Earth system processes
10.3. Exploring planetary boundaries
10.3.1. Global environmental governance and planetary boundaries
10.3.2. Modification of values used to define specific planetary boundary dimensions
10.3.3. Sustainable development goals and planetary boundaries
10.3.4. Downscaling planetary-level to subglobal boundaries
10.4. Environmental tipping points
11. Time for change? Toward sustailiability, toward life
11.1. Why go to school?
11.2. Social movements
11.2.1. The local level
11.2.2. The regional/national level
11.2.3. The global level
11.3. Stepping toward change
11.4. Toward changing the system: addressing ultimate causes
11.5. The solidarity economy
11.6. Stateless democracy
11.7. Ecosocialism
References.
Notes:
Includes index.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Other Format:
Online version: Singer, Merrill, Perils of eco-crises interaction
ISBN:
9781119569541
1119569540
OCLC:
1195818090
Publisher Number:
99988113406

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