Books on the topic 'Water, Copper, Economics, Climate Change'

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1

1972-, Ludwig Fulco, ed. Climate change adaptation in the water sector. Sterling, VA: Earthscan, 2009.

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2

Hasselaar, Jan Jorrit, and Elisabeth IJmker, eds. Water in Times of Climate Change. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463722278.

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This book on water and climate change goes beyond the usual and predictable analyses, by bringing religion and values into a discussion that is often dominated by technocratic solutions. The three case studies of Jakarta, Cape Town, and Amsterdam demonstrate the challenges of water management in urban areas and the role religion can play in addressing them. With representatives from science, politics, economics, and religion, as well as young voices, the book stimulates a values-driven dialogue on issues of water in times of climate change.
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3

Kādera, Mirjā Ema Manirula, and Ahmad Qazi Kholiquzzaman 1943-, eds. Climate change and water resources in South Asia. Leiden: A.A. Balkema, 2005.

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4

Hell and high water: Climate change, hope and the human condition. Edinburgh: Birlinn, 2008.

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5

Heinz, Krummenacher, Mesjasz Czesław, Kameri-Mbote Patricia, Spring Úrsula Oswald, Chourou Béchir, Grin John, Behera Navnita Chadha, and SpringerLink (Online service), eds. Facing Global Environmental Change: Environmental, Human, Energy, Food, Health and Water Security Concepts. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009.

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6

Markandya, Anil. State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics. World Bank, Washington, DC, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/26491.

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7

Kabat, Pavel, Fulco Ludwig, Henk van Schaik, and Michael Van der Valk. Climate Change Adaptation in the Water Sector. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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8

Kabat, Pavel, Fulco Ludwig, Henk van Schaik, and Michael Van der Valk. Climate Change Adaptation in the Water Sector. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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9

Diop, Salif, Peter Scheren, and Awa Niang. Climate Change and Water Resources in Africa: Perspectives and Solutions Towards an Eminent Water Crisis. Springer International Publishing AG, 2021.

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10

Diop, Salif, Peter Scheren, and Awa Niang. Climate Change and Water Resources in Africa: Perspectives and Solutions Towards an Imminent Water Crisis. Springer International Publishing AG, 2022.

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11

Kijak, Robert. Water Asset Management in Times of Climate Change and Digital Transformation. Springer International Publishing AG, 2021.

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12

Climate Change And The Sustainable Use Of Water Resources. Springer, 2011.

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13

Grygoruk, Mateusz, and Stefan Ignar. Wetlands and Water Framework Directive: Protection, Management and Climate Change. Springer, 2016.

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14

Grygoruk, Mateusz, and Stefan Ignar. Wetlands and Water Framework Directive: Protection, Management and Climate Change. Springer, 2015.

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15

Water Policy and Planning in a Variable Changing Climate. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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16

Lopez-Gunn, Elena, and Dominic Stucker. Adaptation to Climate Change Through Water Resources Management: Capacity, Equity and Sustainability. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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17

Lopez-Gunn, Elena, and Dominic Stucker. Adaptation to Climate Change Through Water Resources Management: Capacity, Equity and Sustainability. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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18

Lopez-Gunn, Elena, and Dominic Stucker. Adaptation to Climate Change Through Water Resources Management: Capacity, Equity and Sustainability. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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19

Adaptation to Climate Change Through Water Resources Management: Capacity, Equity and Sustainability. Routledge, 2014.

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20

Lopez-Gunn, Elena, and Dominic Stucker. Adaptation to Climate Change Through Water Resources Management: Capacity, Equity and Sustainability. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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21

Lopez-Gunn, Elena, and Dominic Stucker. Adaptation to Climate Change Through Water Resources Management: Capacity, Equity and Sustainability. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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22

Ortloff, Charles R. Water Engineering in the Ancient World. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199239092.001.0001.

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Charles Ortloff provides a new perspective on archaeological studies of the urban and agricultural water supply and distribution systems of the major ancient civilizations of South America, the Middle East, and South-East Asia, by using modern computer analysis methods to extract the true hydraulic/hydrological knowledge base available to these peoples. His many new revelations about the capabilities and innovations of ancient water engineers force us to re-evaluate what was known and practised in the hydraulic sciences in ancient times. Given our current concerns about global warming and its effect on economic stability, it is fascinating to observe how some ancient civilizations successfully coped with major climate change events by devising defensive agricultural survival strategies, while others, which did not innovate, failed to survive.
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23

Kenney, Douglas S., Kathleen A. Miller, Kelly T. Redmond, and Alan F. Hamlet. Water Policy and Planning in a Variable and Changing Climate. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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24

Kenney, Douglas S., Kathleen A. Miller, Kelly T. Redmond, and Alan F. Hamlet. Water Policy and Planning in a Variable and Changing Climate. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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25

Kenney, Douglas S., Kathleen A. Miller, Kelly T. Redmond, and Alan F. Hamlet. Water Policy and Planning in a Variable and Changing Climate. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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26

Kenney, Douglas S., Kathleen A. Miller, Kelly T. Redmond, and Alan F. Hamlet. Water Policy and Planning in a Variable and Changing Climate. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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27

Kenney, Douglas S., Kathleen A. Miller, Kelly T. Redmond, and Alan F. Hamlet. Water Policy and Planning in a Variable and Changing Climate. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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28

Living with Environmental Change: Waterworlds. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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29

Living with Environmental Change: Waterworlds. Routledge, 2014.

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30

Routledge, Earthscan from, ed. Living with environmental change: Waterworlds. Routledge, 2014.

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31

Hastrup, Kirsten, and Cecilie Rubow. Living with Environmental Change: Waterworlds. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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32

(Editor), Carlo Giupponi, and Mordechai Shechter (Editor), eds. Climate Change in the Mediterranean: Socio-Economic Perspectives of Impacts, Vulnerability and Adaptation (The Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (Feem) on Economics and the Environment). Edward Elgar Publishing, 2003.

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33

Hundloe, Tor, and Christine Crawford, eds. Value of Water in a Drying Climate. CSIRO Publishing, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643106635.

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Are we making the best use of water? How do we judge this? Are there trade-offs between upstream and downstream water use? What are these and how are they resolved? Disputes over water allocations are, second to climate change, the dominant environmental and public policy issues of the present era. We are called upon to resolve such controversies using the principles of sustainable development, which integrates ecology, economics and ethics. This timely book establishes a template for all types of resource allocation disputes, whether in Australia or overseas. An expert team of ecologists, economists and sustainability experts spent three years interviewing people in the Little Swanport catchment, seeking answers to the optimal allocation of water on the Tasmanian East Coast. The hinterland of this area produces some of the most valuable merino wool in the world, the estuary grows mouth-watering oysters, and much of the land is in near-pristine condition, providing very valuable biodiversity resources. The book is written in an easy-to-read style and gradually evolves to become the story of everyday life of one small Australian catchment. It is about people living in rural settings in the upper catchment with soils and rainfall suitable for farming; people residing in coastal settlements in the lower catchment; people working and relaxing in the estuary where fishing and aquaculture occur; and people and their business in adjacent towns.
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34

Shiva, Vandana, Michael Zammit Cutajar, John Grin, Heinz Krummenacher, R. K. Pachauri, Patricia Kameri-Mbote, Hans Günter Brauch, et al. Facing Global Environmental Change: Environmental, Human, Energy, Food, Health and Water Security Concepts. Springer, 2019.

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35

Olsson, Gustaf. Water Interactions – A Systemic View. IWA Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/9781789062908.

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Abstract During the last two decades, the interrelationship between water and energy has become recognized. Likewise, the couplings to food and agriculture are getting increasingly obvious and alarming. In the last year, a record number of extreme weather events have been reported from most parts of the world. This is a visible demonstration how consequences of climate change must be understood and alleviated. The impacts of economics, lifestyle, and alarming inequalities are becoming increasingly recognisable. If the wealthy part of the world is not willing not make radical changes it does not matter what the less wealthy half of the global population will do to meet the climate and resource crisis. The purpose of the book is to demonstrate and describe how climate change, water, energy, food, and lifestyle are closely depending on each other. It is not sufficient to handle one discipline isolated from the others. This is the traditional “component view”. The book defines and describes a systems view. The communications and relationships between the “components” have to be described and recognized. Consequently, the development of one discipline must be approached from a systems perspective. At the same time, the success of the systems perspective depends on the degree of knowledge of the individual parts or disciplines. The catchphrase of systems thinking has been caught in the phrase, “The whole is more than the sum of its parts”. The idea is not new: the origin of this phrase is to be found already in Aristotle's Metaphysics more than 2300 years ago. The text may serve as an academic text (in engineering, economics, and environmental science) to introduce senior undergraduate and graduate students into systems thinking. Too often education encourages a “silo” thinking. Current global challenges can't be solved in isolation; they depend on each other. For example, water professionals should have a basic understanding of energy issues. Energy professionals ought to understand the dependency on water. Economic students should learn more how economy depends on natural resources like energy and water. Economics must include the environmental impact and ecological ceiling of economic activities. ISBN: 9781789062892 (print) ISBN: 9781789062908 (eBook) ISBN: 9781789062915 (ePUB)
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36

Conca, Ken, and Erika Weinthal, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Policy. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199335084.001.0001.

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This handbook gathers a diverse group of leading scholars of water politics and policy. Authors were tasked to present forward-looking chapters in their areas of expertise, flagging key trends in both research and practice. The volume is organized into six sections: poverty, rights, and ethics; food, energy, and water; water and the politics of scale; law, economics, and water management; the politics of transboundary water; and the politics of water knowledge. Cross-cutting themes include governance challenges rooted in the mobility, unpredictability, and public-goods dimensions of water; tensions and synergies among equity, efficiency, and sustainability; the distributive consequences of water governance; the design and performance of water institutions; and the implications of climate change.
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37

Gardiner, Stephen M., and Allen Thompson, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Environmental Ethics. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199941339.001.0001.

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Environmental ethics is an academic subfield of philosophy concerned with normative and evaluative propositions about the world of nature and, perhaps more generally, the moral fabric of relations between human beings and the world we occupy. This Handbook contains forty-five newly commissioned essays written by leading experts and emerging voices. The essays range over a broad variety of issues, concepts, and perspectives that are both central to and characteristic of the field, thus providing an authoritative but accessible account of the history, analysis, and prospect of ideas that are essential to contemporary environmental ethics. The Handbook includes sections on the broad social contexts in which we find ourselves (e.g., chapters on history, science, economics, governance, and the Anthropocene), on what ought to count morally and why (e.g., chapters on humanity, animals, living individuals, ecological collectives, and wild nature), on the nature and meaning of environmental values (e.g., truth and goodness, practical reasons, hermeneutics, phenomenology, and aesthetics), on theoretical understandings of how we should act (e.g., on consequentialism, duty and obligation, character, caring relationships, and the sacred), on key concepts (e.g., responsibility, justice, gender, rights, ecological space, risk and precaution, citizenship, future generations, and sustainability), on specific areas of environmental concern (e.g., pollution, population, energy, food, water, mass extinction, technology and ecosystem management), on climate change considered as the defining environmental problem of our time (e.g., chapters on mitigation, adaptation, diplomacy, and geoengineering), and on social change (e.g., pragmatism, conflict, sacrifice, and action).
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