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  • 1
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Description / Table of Contents: Intro -- Table des matières -- Préface -- Avant-propos de la FAO -- Avant-propos de l'OIE -- Avant-propos de l'OMS -- Partie I -- Chapitre 1 -- Introduction -- Liens avec l'époque pré-contemporaine -- Faites entrer les vétérinaires -- Animaux et humains dans la médecine du xxe siècle -- De « One Medicine » à One Health -- Références -- Chapitre 2 -- One Health : une définition empirique du travail -- Différences culturelles dans les relations homme-animal et leurs implications -- Aspects normatifs relation homme-animal -- One Health et les questions d'éthique et de bien-être animal -- One Health intégrée dans les paysages -- One Health et la transdisciplinarité -- Remerciements -- Références -- Chapitre 3 -- Introduction -- Réglementation nationale -- Droit constitutionnel -- Droit privé -- Législation relative au bien-être animal -- Réglementation et organisations internationales -- Réglementation européenne -- Accord général sur les tarifs douaniers et le commerce -- Organisation mondiale de la santé animale -- Le Règlement sanitaire international de l'OMS -- Convention sur le commerce international des espèces de faune et de flore sauvages menacées d'extinction -- Perspectives -- Références -- Chapitre 4 -- Introduction -- Changement mondial et paradigmes convergents au cours du xxe siècle -- Difficultés philosophiques à définir et à mesurer la « santé de l'écosystème » -- One Health, biodiversité et écosystèmes -- Biodiversité et transmission des maladies infectieuses -- Mondialisation, maladies émergentes, biodiversité et sécurité alimentaire -- Les cycles biogéochimiques, la santé et les frontières planétaires -- One Health et la résilience du système socio-écologique (SSE) -- Conclusion -- Références -- Partie II -- Chapitre 5 -- Introduction -- Réduction du temps de détection de la maladie -- Charge commune de la maladie.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (585 pages)
    ISBN: 9782759230976
    Series Statement: Synthèses Ser.
    Language: French
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 2
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Description / Table of Contents: Intro -- Table des matières -- One Health, une seule santé -- Préface -- Avant-propos de la FAO -- Avant-propos de l'OIE -- Avant-propos de l'OMS -- Partie I - Bases théoriques -- Partie II - Méthodes d'évaluation des relations animaux-humains -- Partie III - Études de cas de la recherche aux politiques et mise en œuvre -- Liste des auteurs.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (678 pages)
    ISBN: 9782759230983
    Series Statement: Synthèses Ser.
    Language: French
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Toronto :Dundurn Press,
    Keywords: Livestock-Ecology. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: The real-life experiences of creatures great and small. The collection looks at everything from sheep farming to herbal remedies and rabies.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (129 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781459727175
    DDC: 333.7414
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Acknowledgements -- Preface: Over the Fence -- PART I: Gaia -- Introduction: One Animal Among Many -- Old Animal: New Thoughts -- The Man in the Cage -- Salmonella: A Brief Introduction to Food Poisoning -- Potbellied Pigs and the Natural Order -- Animal Rights: Gaia Rights -- PART II: Goats -- Rumen at the Top -- Soup and the Art of Goat Selection -- It May Be a Euphemism to You -- Making the Most of Those First Few Moments -- The Scoured Calf -- Thrush: The Case of the Singing Feet -- Ecological Agriculture -- What's a Small Abattoir Good For? -- Little Bo-Peep Meets David Suzuki: A Word of Encouragement to Sheep Farmers -- PART III: Garlic -- The Herbal Bible -- Worm Warfare -- Selenium: A Necessary Poison -- The Smiling Fox Does Not Work for Greenpeace -- The Distemper of Our Times -- Eggsasperation: The Old Soft Shell Problem -- Skinny Legs, Hot Genes -- Sudden Death in Ducks -- Creation and Extinction: A Meditation.
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  • 4
    Keywords: Feces. ; Defecation -- Environmental aspects. ; Waste products as fuel. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: An entertaining and enlightening exploration of why waste matters The Origin of Feces takes an important subject out of locker-rooms, potty-training manuals, and bio-solids management boardrooms into the fresh air of everyoneâÂÂs lives. With insight and wit, David Waltner-Toews explores what has been too often ignored and makes a compelling argument for a deeper understanding of human and animal waste. Approaching the subject from a variety of perspectives àevolutionary, ecological, and cultural àThe Origin of Feces shows us how integral excrement is to biodiversity, agriculture, public health, food production and distribution, and global ecosystems. From the primordial ooze to dung beetles, from bug frass, cat scats, and flush toilets to global trade, pandemics, and energy, this is the awesome, troubled, unexpurgated story of feces.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (225 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781770903968
    DDC: 573.4/9
    Language: English
    Note: Front Cover -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- 1 | WHAT FROM THE TONGUE FALLS -- 2 | THE LIST OF INGREDIENTS AND AN INVENTORY -- 3 | ON THE ORIGIN OFFECES -- 4 | TURDS OF ENDEARMENT: WHAT EXCREMENT MEANS TO ANIMALS -- 5 | MAPQUEST TO DIARRHEA: THE FECAL-ORAL ROUTE -- 6 | HERCULES AND ALL THAT CRAPPER -- 7 | THE OTHER DARK MATTER -- 8 | MAKING SENSE OF EXCREMENT'S WICKED COMPLEXITY -- 9 | KNOW SHIT: A WAY FORWARD -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- A SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY -- Back Cover.
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Oxford :Taylor & Francis Group,
    Keywords: Nature-Effect of human beings on. ; Human ecology-Social aspects. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Independent Thinking in an Uncertain World explores workable, field-tested strategies from the frontiers of creating a viable future for humans on Earth.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (365 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780429760877
    DDC: 304.2
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- List of boxes -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- Prologue: the bat cave -- Part I: Ideas -- 1 Thinking for oneself: outside the square -- 2 Collective learning: joining the dots -- 3 Multiple dimensions of mind: parts and wholes -- 4 Celebrating difference: on not losing one's mind -- 5 Multiple minds: the more we are together -- 6 Multiple voices: so say all of us -- Part II: Practice -- 7 Post-normal reconciliation: reframing the agenda -- 8 Sophia in the Anthropocene: towards an environmental ethic -- 9 The organic, the mechanical and the emergent mind -- 10 Escaping the 'circular conundrum': cropping and learning in Northern Australia -- 11 Epidemiological regeneration in a complex world -- 12 landscape management and landscape regeneration in Australia -- 13 Transcoherence: labels and wicked problems -- 14 Re-imagining person-centred practice in a person-first organization -- 15 Engaging creatively with tension in collaborative research -- 16 Life and change for a regenerative farmer -- Part III: The future -- 17 That's how the light gets in -- 18 Knowing our own minds -- Index.
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York :Columbia University Press,
    Keywords: Ecological integrity. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Is sustainable development a workable solution for today's environmental problems? Is it scientifically defensible? Best known for applying ecological theory to the engineering problems of everyday life, the late scholar James J. Kay was a leader in the study of social and ecological complexity and the thermodynamics of ecosystems. Drawing from his immensely important work, as well as the research of his students and colleagues, The Ecosystem Approach is a guide to the aspects of complex systems theories relevant to social-ecological management. Advancing a methodology that is rooted in good theory and practice, this book features case studies conducted in the Arctic and Africa, in Canada and Kathmandu, and in the Peruvian Amazon, Chesapeake Bay, and Chennai, India. Applying a systems approach to concrete environmental issues, this volume is geared toward scientists, engineers, and sustainable development scholars and practitioners who are attuned to the ideas of the Resilience Alliance-an international group of scientists who take a more holistic view of ecology and environmental problem-solving. Chapters cover the origins and rebirth of the ecosystem approach in ecology; the bridging of science and values; the challenge of governance in complex systems; systemic and participatory approaches to management; and the place for cultural diversity in the quest for global sustainability.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (402 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780231507202
    Series Statement: Complexity in Ecological Systems Series
    DDC: 333.72
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Contents -- A Preface -- Part 1 -- 1 -- 2 -- 3 -- 4 -- 5 -- 7 -- 8 -- Part 2 -- 9 -- 10 -- 11 -- 12 -- 13 -- Part 3 -- 14 -- 15 -- 16 -- Part 4 -- 17 -- 18 -- 19 -- 20 -- A Tribute to James J. Kay -- Appendix -- Contributors -- Index.
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    Keywords: Environmental health. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Improving the health of people and animals while ensuring sustainability of ecosystems are laudable and important objectives. Drawing on fields as diverse as epidemiology, environmental sciences, ecology and systems sciences this book is about searching for solutions to complex problems to produce a new science for sustainability.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (152 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780511211058
    DDC: 577
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Half-title -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Figures -- Tables -- Introduction -- 1 Presenting complaint -- What are the clinical signs? -- 1. Disease treatments don't work -- 2. Health promotion causes disease -- 3. Disease control causes disease -- Same scale -- Cross scale -- 4. Disease control causes ill-health -- 5. Biomedical disciplinarity causes blindness and inhibits effective sustainable health promotion -- What do these clinical signs mean? -- Feedback loops, self-organization, attractors and surprise -- Holonocracy and contradictions -- Multiple perspectives -- Diagnosing disease, negotiating health? -- Who is the patient? Using clinical signs to define the boundaries -- Questions -- 2 The clinical examination: asking questions, getting data -- Streams of inquiry -- Starting with the problems (who, what, when) -- Getting the picture (where) -- Ecological studies -- Participatory methods (who and why) -- Soft Systems Methodology -- Adaptive Environmental Assessment and Management (AEAM) -- Investigating the non-problems -- Beyond management participation -- Questions -- 3 Making a diagnosis: synthesizing information from data -- Making sense in a post-normal world -- Standard statistical approaches and their limitations -- Looking inside the boundaries: the idea of systems -- Assessing external relations -- Understanding feedback loops - from Rich Pictures to in uence diagrams -- Understanding self-reinforcing behaviours -- C. S. Holling's Lazy-8 and Ulanowicz's partial G clef -- Catastrophe models -- More sophisticated tools: their uses and limitations - dynamic systems models, spatial models -- Other ways of seeing -- Triangulation: informing clinical judgement -- Questions -- 4 Setting goals: where do we want to go? -- Setting goals -- Health as a supergoal -- What are the constraints to health?. , What are the positive attributes of health? -- Understanding trade-offs - amoeba diagrams -- Agreeing on the goals -- Questions -- 5 Achieving goals: managing and monitoring -- Agro-ecosystem health management: what can we learn? -- What to monitor? -- Criteria for selecting indicators -- Different indicators for different purposes - long and short term, qualitative and quantitative -- Who will monitor? -- Questions -- 6 Responding to change: AMESH and the never-ending story -- Presenting situation: the entry point -- Presenting issues -- The story so far -- What is the context? -- Who is telling the story? -- What are the issues? -- Policy and governance -- Multiple system stories: freeing the narratives -- Systemic understanding -- Systems analysis -- Synthesizing whole-system descriptions: constraining the narratives -- Action and learning -- Creating a holonocratic narrative -- Making the story happen -- Monitoring adapting, re-telling -- Questions -- References -- Index.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1389-5702
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Everywhere in the world, food and agricultural policy is under scrutiny. Questions are being asked about both past and present public policy and strategy. The motives for reassessment are various, including trade wars, health impact, ecological concerns, population, citizens rights. After decades in which policy was centrally concerned with raising productivity and production, using a fairly simple Input-Output Model, the need for a more complex model for food and farming is becoming clear. The success of the dominant Input-Output Model of farming is that it can claim to have kept up with rising population trends and unleashed astonishing efficiencies. Critics point out, however, that these efficiencies have insufficiently accounted for costs to the environment, health and social well-being. A debate about these considerations grew in intensity during the 1990s, but had earlier roots. As a result, a new model of food and agriculture's contribution to health is emerging.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of agricultural and environmental ethics 4 (1991), S. 49-59 
    ISSN: 1573-322X
    Keywords: food safety ; ecological ; social
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Eating is the most intimate relationship people can have with their environment. As people have migrated, in very large numbers, from various parts of the globe, as well as from the countryside to the city, they have brought to their new homes not only their intimate familial relationships, but also their intimate environmental relationships. Intraand international trade in human foods and animal feeds amounting to billions of dollars annually support these transplanted eating habits. Infectious disease agents, toxins and environmental contaminants of all sorts are globally distributed along with these foods. Furthermore, the internationalization of a substantial portion of the food industry, along with urbanization, has resulted in unrealistic consumer perceptions of food, and fostered ecologically and socially unsound food production and food safety practices, which themselves are creating new food safety problems. Effective food safety strategies, which by necessity must account for the contamination of the environment in which the food is grown, as well as the environments through which it passes on the way to the consumer, need to be global in both breadth (socially and geographically) and depth (ecologically). As well, the desire for democratic social control now evident throughout the world, along with this diversity of culinary tastes, suggest that a successful global food safety strategy would do well to reflect the kinds of diversity and complex interactions seen in natural ecosystems.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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