Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 5 de 5
Filtrar
Mais filtros

Base de dados
País/Região como assunto
Tipo de documento
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Ambio ; 41(8): 787-94, 2012 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23076974

RESUMO

Cities are rapidly increasing in importance as a major factor shaping the Earth system, and therefore, must take corresponding responsibility. With currently over half the world's population, cities are supported by resources originating from primarily rural regions often located around the world far distant from the urban loci of use. The sustainability of a city can no longer be considered in isolation from the sustainability of human and natural resources it uses from proximal or distant regions, or the combined resource use and impacts of cities globally. The world's multiple and complex environmental and social challenges require interconnected solutions and coordinated governance approaches to planetary stewardship. We suggest that a key component of planetary stewardship is a global system of cities that develop sustainable processes and policies in concert with its non-urban areas. The potential for cities to cooperate as a system and with rural connectivity could increase their capacity to effect change and foster stewardship at the planetary scale and also increase their resource security.


Assuntos
Planetas , Urbanização
2.
Ambio ; 40(7): 739-61, 2011 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22338713

RESUMO

Over the past century, the total material wealth of humanity has been enhanced. However, in the twenty-first century, we face scarcity in critical resources, the degradation of ecosystem services, and the erosion of the planet's capability to absorb our wastes. Equity issues remain stubbornly difficult to solve. This situation is novel in its speed, its global scale and its threat to the resilience of the Earth System. The advent of the Anthropence, the time interval in which human activities now rival global geophysical processes, suggests that we need to fundamentally alter our relationship with the planet we inhabit. Many approaches could be adopted, ranging from geoengineering solutions that purposefully manipulate parts of the Earth System to becoming active stewards of our own life support system. The Anthropocene is a reminder that the Holocene, during which complex human societies have developed, has been a stable, accommodating environment and is the only state of the Earth System that we know for sure can support contemporary society. The need to achieve effective planetary stewardship is urgent. As we go further into the Anthropocene, we risk driving the Earth System onto a trajectory toward more hostile states from which we cannot easily return.


Assuntos
Planeta Terra , Internacionalidade , Humanos , Indústrias
3.
Ambio ; 36(7): 522-7, 2007 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18074887

RESUMO

Understanding the history of how humans have interacted with the rest of nature can help clarify the options for managing our increasingly interconnected global system. Simple, deterministic relationships between environmental stress and social change are inadequate. Extreme drought, for instance, triggered both social collapse and ingenious management of water through irrigation. Human responses to change, in turn, feed into climate and ecological systems, producing a complex web of multidirectional connections in time and space. Integrated records of the co-evolving human-environment system over millennia are needed to provide a basis for a deeper understanding of the present and for forecasting the future. This requires the major task of assembling and integrating regional and global historical, archaeological, and paleoenvironmental records. Humans cannot predict the future. But, if we can adequately understand the past, we can use that understanding to influence our decisions and to create a better, more sustainable and desirable future.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Natureza , Clima , Humanos , Planejamento Social
4.
PLoS One ; 12(2): e0171883, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28235093

RESUMO

This paper presents the results of a consensus-driven process identifying 50 priority research questions for historical ecology obtained through crowdsourcing, literature reviews, and in-person workshopping. A deliberative approach was designed to maximize discussion and debate with defined outcomes. Two in-person workshops (in Sweden and Canada) over the course of two years and online discussions were peer facilitated to define specific key questions for historical ecology from anthropological and archaeological perspectives. The aim of this research is to showcase the variety of questions that reflect the broad scope for historical-ecological research trajectories across scientific disciplines. Historical ecology encompasses research concerned with decadal, centennial, and millennial human-environmental interactions, and the consequences that those relationships have in the formation of contemporary landscapes. Six interrelated themes arose from our consensus-building workshop model: (1) climate and environmental change and variability; (2) multi-scalar, multi-disciplinary; (3) biodiversity and community ecology; (4) resource and environmental management and governance; (5) methods and applications; and (6) communication and policy. The 50 questions represented by these themes highlight meaningful trends in historical ecology that distill the field down to three explicit findings. First, historical ecology is fundamentally an applied research program. Second, this program seeks to understand long-term human-environment interactions with a focus on avoiding, mitigating, and reversing adverse ecological effects. Third, historical ecology is part of convergent trends toward transdisciplinary research science, which erodes scientific boundaries between the cultural and natural.


Assuntos
Antropologia Cultural/tendências , Ecologia/tendências , História Natural/tendências , Antropologia Cultural/história , Biodiversidade , Canadá , Ecologia/história , Ecossistema , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , História Antiga , História Medieval , Humanos , Projetos de Pesquisa , Suécia
5.
Ecol Appl ; 3(3): 377-384, 1993 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27759246

RESUMO

Complex chains of mutual causation in human-environment relations may be analyzed by tracing past human interaction with the environment at the global, regional, and local scales. Historical analogues can be effectively employed to model the range of potential climate anywhere in the world. Their advantages include the use of actual regional airmass, hydrology, pedology, topography, and species distributional data, in addition to archaeology, documents, and ethnography. Of mediating importance are regions and landscapes, which manifest past and present human-environment relations and focus practical contemporary questions. The shifting position of ecotones is a convenient temporal and spatial marker of inclusive ecosystemic change. Ongoing research in Burgundy (France) is offered as an example.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA