Linked e-resources
Details
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Society and environment: Social science perspectives
1. 1. The Anthropocene and its implications for people and environment
2. Challenging cultural relativism and deconstructing dichotomies: 'Wilderness or wilderness
3. Ethical approaches to conservation: Debates and ideologies
4. Conservation as practice: Definitions and debates. Part II: Integrating social and ecological domains
5. Traditional Environmental Knowledge (TEK) and industrialization
6. Environmental behaviour: theory and practice
7. Integrating social and ecological justice
8. People in parks, parks for people and people for parks
Part III: Conservation: Biology and ecology perspectives
9. The science of survival and extinction
10. Compassionate conservation
11. Protected areas: Fortress conservation vs. community based conservation debate
12. Rewilding.
Part I: Society and environment: Social science perspectives
1. 1. The Anthropocene and its implications for people and environment
2. Challenging cultural relativism and deconstructing dichotomies: 'Wilderness or wilderness
3. Ethical approaches to conservation: Debates and ideologies
4. Conservation as practice: Definitions and debates. Part II: Integrating social and ecological domains
5. Traditional Environmental Knowledge (TEK) and industrialization
6. Environmental behaviour: theory and practice
7. Integrating social and ecological justice
8. People in parks, parks for people and people for parks
Part III: Conservation: Biology and ecology perspectives
9. The science of survival and extinction
10. Compassionate conservation
11. Protected areas: Fortress conservation vs. community based conservation debate
12. Rewilding.