Description
AN ACCESSIBLE INTRODUCTION TO BIODIVERSITY, CONSERVATION AND THE ECO-CULTURAL NATURE OF LANDSCAPES
Key issues are addressed in short, focused chapters, supported by a detailed thousand-year timeline based on the British Isles.
Rotherham is convinced that to conserve wildlife or ecology, and to heal the wounds of human impacts, we must understand our own history and how, over countless centuries, we have forged today’s ecologies from our impacts on, and utilisation of, nature. He argues that the interlinked concepts of biodiversity, nature conservation and of sustainability are too often mixed with notions of ‘wilderness’ and ‘nature’ and ‘naturalness’. Much of the biodiversity that we hope to conserve is the result of long-term interactions between people and nature. It is a ‘cultural ecology’, the product of the environment, history and tradition. Recognising that the landscapes around us are ‘eco-cultural’ not ‘natural’ is, Rotherham suggests, the key to understanding contemporary biodiversity and major challenges for ideas of future conservation and sustainability.
The book introduces the background to humanity’s interactions with Nature and the forces at work in shaping today’s world. It is essential reading for anyone wishing to understand the nature of the global environmental crisis and how we got here. In particular, it will be a stimulating guide to students and teachers or lecturers from sixth form and college to university. It will also appeal to the ordinary wildlife enthusiast wishing understand the past, and to gain insight into what might be in store for the future.
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Reviews
'essential to understanding the history of conservation and sustainability, humanity’s devastating impact on biodiversity, and the survival of civilization’. JoAnn Valenti in Applied Environmental Education and Communication.
Author Biography
Ian Rotherham is Professor of Environmental Geography and Reader in Tourism and Environmental Change at Sheffield Hallam University, and a Distinguished International Visiting Scholar at the National Sun-yat Sen University in Taiwan. He has written over 400 papers and articles and a number of books. His research includes landscape history, the economics of landscape change, issues of invasive alien species, urban ecology and aspects of tourism and economic development. Ian works extensively with the popular media and with grassroots conservation groups. He chairs a number of national and international committees and working groups and his work informs the development of relevant policies and strategies. He has acted as an advisor to a number of governments internationally.
Bibliographic Information
- Publisher The White Horse Press
- Publication Date June 2014
- ISBN/Identifier 9781874267812
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatPaperback
- Primary Price 25 GBP
- Pages220
- ReadershipCollege/Tertiary Education
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions9x6 inches
- Illustrationb/w illustrations
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