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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Oxford :Taylor & Francis Group,
    Keywords: Human ecology--Religious aspects. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Now in its second edition, Grounding Religion explores relationships between the environment and religious beliefs and practices. Established scholars introduce students to the ways in which religion shapes human-earth relations. Case studies, discussion questions, and further reading enrich students' experience. This edition features updated content, including revisions of every chapter and new material on natural disasters, gender and sexuality, race and ethnicity, climate change, food, technology, and hope and despair. "I can only conclude that this book will trigger your mind. The assignments for students are appealing and all the books mentioned will make your book-loving heart sing." Susanne Van Doorn, MindFunda.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (295 pages)
    Edition: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 9781351795838
    DDC: 201.77
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of illustrations -- Notes on contributors -- Preface to the second edition -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Connecting religion and ecology in a context of environmental degradation -- The academic field of religion and ecology -- The methodologies of religion and ecology -- Format of the book -- PART I: Religion and ecology: defining the terms -- 1. Religion: what is it, who gets to decide, and why does it matter? -- Five definitions of "religion" -- Why defining religion matters -- Studying religion inside and out -- Conclusion -- References -- Further reading -- 2. Case study: religion and the twenty-first century North American anti-extraction movement -- Discussion questions -- Note -- References -- Further reading -- 3. Ecology: what is it, who gets to decide, and why does it matter? -- Five questions about ecology -- How should religion respond to ecology? -- Religion and ecology -- Conclusion -- References -- Further reading -- 4. Case study: religion and disaster: the Merapi volcano eruption -- Discussion questions -- References -- Further reading -- PART II: Mapping your location -- 5. Gender and queer studies -- Patriarchy: a brief history -- Feminist, ecofeminist, and queer challenges to patriarchy -- Religion, gender, and sexuality -- Nature is queer -- Challenging anthropocentrism with queer eyes -- Case study - the Radical Faeries: challenging human-human, human-earth relations -- Discussion questions -- Notes -- References -- Further reading -- 6. Race and ethnicity -- Introduction -- The nature-culture binary logic and its extension to race/ethnicity -- Rethinking race and racism -- Religious naturalism: conjoining ecology, race, and religion -- Religious naturalism and the racialization of nature. , Promises of religious naturalism: ethical considerations -- Case study - "Environmental justice: a grassroots movement anticipating religious naturalism" -- Discussion questions -- Notes -- References -- Further reading -- 7. The power of place -- Place matters -- Phenomenology: perceiving and experiencing place -- Bioregionalism: re-inhabiting place -- Cultural geography: power, difference, and global connections -- Religion, place, and the environment -- Case study - Stone Mountain: a sacred site, commodified and contested -- Discussion questions -- Notes -- References -- Further reading -- PART III: Key issues -- 8. Globalization -- The claims of globalization -- Globalization and nature -- Globalization and religion -- The globalization/religion/environment nexus in Latin America -- Case study: what's yours is mined -- Discussion questions -- Note -- References -- Further reading -- 9. Climate change -- What exactly is anthropocentric global warming? -- The role of ideas -- Framing climate change -- The gap between belief and action -- Case study -- Discussion questions -- Notes -- References -- Further reading -- 10. Food -- What are GMOs and what's the fuss all about? -- Narrative realms and rhetorical analysis -- Frankenfoods and runaway genes -- Religious and theological perspectives -- Playing God: risk, ethics, and theology -- Perceptions of risk and the precautionary principle -- Livelihood, social justice, and culture: criteria in practice - evaluating GMOs -- Biopiracy, neo-colonialism, and culture -- Food democracy, justice, and science -- Conclusion -- Case study: the religious roots of GMO movements -- Discussion questions -- References -- Further reading -- 11. Animals -- Introduction -- Tradition-based approaches -- Recovery -- Reinterpretation, evolution, innovation -- Thinking animals, rethinking religion. , New directions in animals and religion: Jacques Derrida and Aaron Gross -- Case study: creation stories and views of animals -- Discussion questions -- Notes -- References -- Further reading -- 12. Technology -- What is technology? -- The insufficiency of the instrumental view -- Controlling nature -- Escaping nature -- The end of nature? -- The limits of technology -- Case study -- Discussion questions -- References -- Further reading -- 13. Justice -- The reality of environmental injustice: two examples -- The environmental justice movement: mitigating the human cost of environmental problems -- The ideal of eco-justice: imagining a global ethic -- Distinguishing environmental justice and eco-justice -- Synthesizing eco-justice and environmental justice -- Case study -- Discussion questions -- Notes -- References -- Further reading -- 14. Sustainability -- History of sustainability ideas -- The idea of sustainability -- Three models of sustainability -- Economic models of sustainability -- Ecological models of sustainability -- Political models of sustainability -- Conclusion -- Case study: the Misali Ethics Project5 -- Discussion questions -- Notes -- References -- Further reading -- 15. Economics -- Economics: what is it, who gets to decide, and why does it matter? -- Religion and economics -- Ecology and economics -- Religion, ecology, and economics -- Case study: Food Not Bombs -- Discussion questions -- Notes -- References -- Further reading -- 16. Conclusion: despair, hope, and action -- Working with despair -- Hope in place -- The boldness to hope for the earth -- Balancing hope and despair -- References -- Index.
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Washington :Georgetown University Press,
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Climate change is viewed as a primarily scientific, economic, or political issue. While acknowledging the legitimacy of these perspectives, Kevin J. O'Brien argues that we should respond to climate change first and foremost as a case of systematic and structural violence.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (238 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781626164369
    DDC: 363.738/74
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Toward a Witness of Resistance -- PART I. Climate Change and Nonviolence -- 1. The Wicked Problem of Climate Change -- 2. Nonviolent Resistance -- PART II. Five Witnesses of Nonviolent Resistance -- 3. John Woolman's Moral Purity and Its Limits -- 4. Jane Addams and the Scales of Democracy -- 5. Dorothy Day and the Faith to Love -- 6. Martin Luther King Jr.'s Hope for an Uncertain World -- 7. Cesar Chavez and the Liberating Power of Sacrifice -- Conclusion: What Can We Do? -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y -- About the Author.
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Oxford :Taylor & Francis Group,
    Keywords: Globalization-Economic aspects. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: This book offers a multidisciplinary (theology, philosophy, and sociology) environmental approach to ethics in response to the contemporary challenge of climate change caused by globalized economics and consumption.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (161 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781000487565
    DDC: 179.1
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of maps -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The problem with knowing the answer -- Background and assumptions -- Four uncertainties in environmental ethics -- Justice -- Interconnectedness -- Urgency -- Wonder -- Climate mitigation, climate adaptation, and climate engineering -- Uncertainty in tough political times -- Notes -- 1. Ethical action in an ambiguous world -- The planetary abject: undoing identities -- Technologies of unknowing in religious traditions -- The pace of ambiguity -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 2. The depths of ambiguity: Ethical pluralism and wonder in Marjory Stoneman Douglas and Rachel Carson -- Wicked problems and the blindspots of certainty -- Marjory Stoneman Douglas: multiperspectivalism in environmental ethics -- Rachel Carson: wonder, humility, and sea ethics -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 3. Good and evil without progress -- Naming the problem: climate change as a network of environmental challenges -- Charging towards the solution: climate change without certainty -- Toward a participatory environmental ethics -- An ethics of ambiguity: process over progress -- Conclusion: ethics at the end of the world -- Notes -- 4. Complexity in action: The challenging uncertainties of Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X -- Called to action: responding to real injustices -- Dreams and nightmares: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the precariousness of progress -- Learning from King: contemporary environmentalism at the pace of ambiguity -- The challenge of the truth: Malcolm X and the rhetoric of critical opposition -- Learning from X: toward a critically oppositional environmentalism -- Divergent paths and uncertain legacies -- Notes -- 5. Loving the world without certainty -- What are we loving when we love the world? -- Love, knowledge, and unknowing. , An irreverent lover in a diverse world -- Love of the unknown -- Notes -- 6. The dangers of building without ambiguity: Spirituality and utopianism in Frank Lloyd Wright -- The philosophy and religion of Frank Lloyd Wright -- Organic architecture -- Nature and the city: the emergence of the suburban -- Loving garbage -- Notes -- 7. Concluding ideas on ambiguous time -- The anxiety of chronological time and the bubbling present -- Becoming uneasy -- Learning from the undercommons -- Thinking un-apocalyptically -- The universality of imperfection -- Environmental ethics in uncommon times -- Notes -- 8. Concluding practices for an uncertain stand: Fracking, protesting, and engineering the climate -- The uncertainties of fracking -- Why fracking is a bad idea -- Why not fracking might be a bad idea, too -- Climate protests -- Why not protesting would be a bad idea -- Why protesting might be a bad idea -- Climate engineering -- Why engineering the climate is a bad idea -- Why not engineering the climate might be a bad idea -- Ambiguous decisions -- Notes -- References -- Index.
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Armonk :Taylor & Francis Group,
    Keywords: Environmentalism. ; Nature -- Effect of human beings on. ; Philosophy of nature. ; Social ecology. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Underlying current controversies about environmental regulation are shared concerns, divided interests and different ways of thinking about the earth and our proper relationship to it. This book brings together writings on nature and environment that illuminate thought and action in this realm.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (312 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781317453710
    DDC: 333.7
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Thinking About the Environment: What's Theory Got to Do With It? -- Part I: The Physical World -- 2 On the Physical World: An Introduction -- 3 The Creation of the World -- 4 The Purpose of Nature -- 5 The City of God -- 6 Creation in Light of Luiseño Religion -- 7 The Hopi Myth of Creation -- Part II: Law and Property -- 8 Law, Property, and the Environment: An Introduction -- 9 The Nature of Private Property -- 10 Of Property -- 11 The Commodity -- 12 The Categorical Imperative -- 13 The Problem of Justice Between Generations -- 14 The New Forms of Control -- 15 Liberalism and Environmental Quality -- Part III: The Green Critique -- 16 The Green Critique: An Introduction -- 17 Higher Laws -- 18 Nature -- 19 Silent Spring -- 20 The Population Bomb -- 21 The Closing Circle: Nature, Man, and Technology -- 22 Ecology: The Shallow and the Deep -- 23 The Tragedy of the Commons -- 24 Feminism and the Revolt of Nature -- 25 The Concept of Social Ecology -- 26 The Diversity of Life -- 27 Environmental Racism and the Environmental Justice Movement -- Part IV: Accommodating the Future -- 28 Accommodating the Future: Strategies for Resolving the Environmental Quagmire -- 29 Environmental Justice -- 30 Should Trees Have Standing? -- 31 Ecological Literacy -- 32 Envisioning a Sustainable Society: Learning Our Way Out -- 33 Free Market Environmentalism -- 34 Steady-State Economics -- 35 Environmentalism and the Future of Progressive Politics -- 36 Normative Theory and Public Policy -- 37 Democratic Dilemmas in the Age of Ecology -- 38 Rights and the Further Future -- 39 Thinking About Sustainable Development: What's Theory Got to Do With It? -- Index -- About the Editors.
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Eugene :Wipf and Stock Publishers,
    Keywords: Human ecology-Religious aspects-Congresses. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (278 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781630876241
    DDC: 291.178362
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Title Page -- Acknowledgments -- Contributors -- Chapter 1: The Tensions and Promises of Religion and Ecology's Past, Present, and Future -- Chapter 2: Nature Religion and the Problem of Authenticity -- Chapter 3: The Importance and Limits of Taking Science Seriously -- Chapter 4: What Traditions Are Represented in Religion and Ecology? -- Chapter 5: Opening the Language of Religion and Ecology -- Chapter 6: Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies in Religion and Ecology -- Chapter 7: Practically Natural -- Chapter 8: How Does It Feel to be an Environmental Problem? -- Chapter 9: Saving the World (and the People in It, Too) -- Chapter 10: Religion and Ecology on the Ground -- Chapter 11: Religion and the Urban Environment -- Chapter 12: The Buzzing, Breathing, Clicking, Clacking, Biting, Stinging, Chirping, Howling Landscape of Religious Studies1 -- Conclusion.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-07-01
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , peerRev
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © The Oceanography Society, 2015. This article is posted here by permission of The Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 28, no. 2 (2015): 226-228, doi:10.5670/oceanog.2015.45.
    Description: Ocean acidification (OA) refers to the general decrease in pH of the global ocean as a result of absorbing anthropogenic CO2 emitted in the atmosphere since preindustrial times (Sabine et al., 2004). There is, however, considerable variability in ocean acidification, and many careful measurements need to be made and compared in order to obtain scientifically valid information for the assessment of patterns, trends, and impacts over a range of spatial and temporal scales, and to understand the processes involved. A single country or institution cannot undertake measurements of worldwide coastal and open ocean OA changes; therefore, international cooperation is needed to achieve that goal. The OA data that have been, and are being, collected represent a significant public investment. To this end, it is critically important that researchers (and others) around the world are easily able to find and use reliable OA information that range from observing data (from time-series moorings, process studies, and research cruises), to biological response experiments (e.g., mesocosm), data products, and model output.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2022-10-21
    Description: © The Author(s), 2019. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Tanhua, T., Pouliquen, S., Hausman, J., O'Brien, K., Bricher, P., de Bruin, T., Buck, J. J. H., Burger, E. F., Carval, T., Casey, K. S., Diggs, S., Giorgetti, A., Glaves, H., Harscoat, V., Kinkade, D., Muelbert, J. H., Novellino, A., Pfeil, B., Pulsifer, P. L., Van de Putte, A., Robinson, E., Schaap, D., Smirnov, A., Smith, N., Snowden, D., Spears, T., Stall, S., Tacoma, M., Thijsse, P., Tronstad, S., Vandenberghe, T., Wengren, M., Wyborn, L., & Zhao, Z. Ocean FAIR data services. Frontiers in Marine Science, 6, (2019): 440, doi:10.3389/fmars.2019.00440.
    Description: Well-founded data management systems are of vital importance for ocean observing systems as they ensure that essential data are not only collected but also retained and made accessible for analysis and application by current and future users. Effective data management requires collaboration across activities including observations, metadata and data assembly, quality assurance and control (QA/QC), and data publication that enables local and interoperable discovery and access and secures archiving that guarantees long-term preservation. To achieve this, data should be findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR). Here, we outline how these principles apply to ocean data and illustrate them with a few examples. In recent decades, ocean data managers, in close collaboration with international organizations, have played an active role in the improvement of environmental data standardization, accessibility, and interoperability through different projects, enhancing access to observation data at all stages of the data life cycle and fostering the development of integrated services targeted to research, regulatory, and operational users. As ocean observing systems evolve and an increasing number of autonomous platforms and sensors are deployed, the volume and variety of data increase dramatically. For instance, there are more than 70 data catalogs that contain metadata records for the polar oceans, a situation that makes comprehensive data discovery beyond the capacity of most researchers. To better serve research, operational, and commercial users, more efficient turnaround of quality data in known formats and made available through Web services is necessary. In particular, automation of data workflows will be critical to reduce friction throughout the data value chain. Adhering to the FAIR principles with free, timely, and unrestricted access to ocean observation data is beneficial for the originators, has obvious benefits for users, and is an essential foundation for the development of new services made possible with big data technologies.
    Description: We thank the funding agencies and the data management projects that have made this work possible through dedicated funding for the data management activities and improvements. TT and JB acknowledge support from the EU Horizon 2020 project AtlantOS (grant agreement 633211). JM acknowledges support from the Integrated Oceanography and Multiple Uses of the Continental Shelf and the Adjacent Ocean Integrated Center of Oceanography (INCT-Mar COI, CNPq, Proc. 565062/2010-7). DS acknowledges support from the H2020 project SeaDataCloud (grant agreement 730960). SP acknowledges support from the EU Horizon 2020 project ENVRIplus (grant agreement 654182). AN acknowledges support from the EMODnet Physics (grant number EASME/EMFF/2016/1.3.1.2-Lot3/SI2.749411). HG acknowledges funding from the EU H2020 Ocean Data Interoperability Platform (ODIP) project (Grant No: 654310). JH acknowledges that funding came from the National Aeronautics and Space Agency as managed by the California Institute of Technology under task number 80NM0018F0848. AVdP acknowledges support from Belspo in the framework the EU Lifewatch ERIC (grant agreement FR/36/AN3). KO’B acknowledges that his publication is partially funded by the Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean (JISAO) under NOAA Cooperative Agreement NA15OAR4320063, Contribution No. 2018-0175.
    Keywords: FAIR ; Ocean ; Data management ; Data services ; Ocean observing ; Standardization ; Interoperability
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Biochemistry 26 (1987), S. 7297-7303 
    ISSN: 1520-4995
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Langmuir 1 (1985), S. 301-305 
    ISSN: 1520-5827
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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