Smart Growth Online
A SERVICE OF THE SMART GROWTH NETWORK
 Provide a variety of transportation choices Preserve open space and farmland Encourage community collaboration Create a range of housing opportunities Foster distinctive, attractive places Create walkable neighborhoods

 



HOME

ABOUT SMART GROWTH

SMART GROWTH NETWORK

SG SPEAKER SERIES

NEWS

RESOURCES
Browse by Issue
Browse by Principle
Browse by Type
Browse by State
Land Development Regulations
Suggest a Resource

CALENDAR

CONTACT US

SITE MAP

EMAIL TO A FRIEND

New Demographic Realities: The Northeast-Midwest Region
Public Transit: Bleeding to Death from a Thousand Cuts?
Virginia's Green Community Challenge
The True Cost of a Gallon of Gas
Planet Earth magazine
 

DATEBOOK

Speakers Audio Archive

Global Environmental Change and Human Security

by: MIT Press   

In recent years, scholars in international relations and other fields have begun to conceive of security more broadly, moving away from a state-centered concept of national security toward the idea of human security, which emphasizes the individual and human well-being. Viewing global environmental change through the lens of human security connects such problems as melting ice caps and carbon emissions to poverty, vulnerability, equity, and conflict. This book examines the complex social, health, and economic consequences of environmental change across the globe.

In chapters that are both academically rigorous and policy relevant, the book discusses the connections of global environmental change to urban poverty, natural disasters (with a case study of Hurricane Katrina), violent conflict (with a study of the decade-long Nepalese civil war), population, gender, and development. The book makes clear the inadequacy of traditional understandings of security and shows how global environmental change is raising new, unavoidable questions of human insecurity, conflict, cooperation, and sustainable development.   

Resource(s): http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=11922

 


NCAT ~ The National Center for Appropriate Technology This web site is developed and maintained by the
National Center for Appropriate Technology (NCAT),
and supported with funding from the US EPA.
Disclaimer
Copyright © 1996-2010. All Rights Reserved.

 

Subscribe Now for
free biweekly e-news

 Subscribe in a reader

2010 New Partners for Smart Growth Conference Presentations Available
more

Developer Claims Sierra Club Support for Opposed Project
more

Consumers Declare McMansion Era Over
more

If Cities Focus on Walkable Communities, Economic Development Will Follow
more

Opinion: New York State Needs Complete Streets Policy to Improve Traffic Safety
more

New York City Plans Major Street Improvements Next Year to Reduce Pedestrian Fatalities
more

DOT Awards $13 Million for Community Transportation Projects
more

"A city that creates density and walkability is a city that creates economic development and healthy life styles."
-- Mathew McElroy, Deputy Director for Planning, El Paso, Texas