PRZEDMIOTEM OFERTY JEST KOD DOSTĘPOWY DO KSIĄŻKI ELEKTRONICZNEJ (EBOOK)
KSIĄŻKA JEST DOSTĘPNA NA ZEWNĘTRZNEJ PLATFORMIE. KSIĄŻKA NIE JEST W POSTACI PLIKU.
The 11 volumes in this set, originally published between 1982 and 1995, draw together research by leading academics in the area of environmental policy and provides a rigorous examination of related key issues. The volumes examine international policy, impact assessment, and future environmental planning. This set will be of particular interest to students of Environmental Studies.
- Autorzy: Various
- Wydawnictwo: Taylor & Francis
- Data wydania: 2021
- Wydanie: 1
- Liczba stron:
- Forma publikacji: PDF (online)
- Język publikacji: angielski
- ISBN: 9781000398069
BRAK MOŻLIWOŚCI POBRANIA PLIKU. Drukowanie: OGRANICZENIE DO 2 stron. Kopiowanie: OGRANICZENIE DO 2 stron.
- Volume 01
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Environmental Policy and Peripheral Regions of the European Union: An Introduction
- Policy Co-ordination in Brussels: Environmental and Regional Policy
- Policy Networks on the Periphery: EU Environmental Policy and Scotland
- Administrative Capacity and the Implementation of EU Environmental Policy in Ireland
- National Environmental Policy-making in the European Framework: Spain, Greece and Italy in Compariso
- Spanish Pollution Control Policy and the Challenge of the European Union
- Environment and the State in the EU Periphery: The Case of Greece
- The European Union and Visegrád Countries: The Case of Energy and Environmental Policies in Hungary
- Ups and Downs of Czech Environmental Awareness and Policy: Identifying Trends and Influences
- Volume 02
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Part one: Environmental policy
- Chapter 2: Interest groups
- Introduction
- Interest groups
- Examples of interest-group interactions
- Conclusions
- Chapter 3: Environmental problems
- Introduction
- Rapid economic growth (1955–63)
- Recognition of pollution problems (1964–9)
- Pollution control efforts and the oil shocks (1970–9)
- Economic recession and the current state of the environment (1980–90)
- Japan's high-tech future vision
- Conclusions
- Chapter 4: Environmental management
- Introduction
- Land use and planning problems
- Planning framework
- Environmental management plans
- Conclusions
- Chapter 5: Environmental policy
- Introduction
- Policy-makers and implementation
- National and local environmental laws
- Mechanisms for policy implementation
- Expenditure
- Direction of Japan's environmental policy
- Part two: Environmental impact assessment
- Chapter 6: Development of environmental impact assessment
- Introduction
- National EIA system
- Local authority EIA systems
- Conclusions
- Chapter 7: Procedures for environmental impact assessment
- Introduction
- National EIA procedures
- Local authority EIA procedures
- Procedures of other EIA-related laws
- Conclusions
- Chapter 8: Critical discussion of environmental impact assessment in Japan
- Part three: Case studies
- Chapter 9: Overview of the case studies
- Introduction
- Major development projects in Japan
- Case study selection and format
- Chapter 10: Honshu-Shikoku Road/Rail Bridges
- Introduction
- History and siting of the bridges
- EIA of the Kojima–Sakaide route
- Conclusions
- Chapter 11: Kansai International Airport
- Introduction
- Economic arguments for a new Kansai airport
- Environmental arguments against the KIA
- Siting of the KIA
- Local authority negotiations
- EIA of the KIA
- Effectiveness of the EIA procedures
- Conclusions
- Chapter 12: New lshigaki Airport
- Introduction
- Economic arguments for the NIA
- Environmental arguments against the NIA
- Siting of the NIA
- EIA of the NIA
- Effectiveness of the EIA procedures
- Conclusions
- Chapter 13: Trans-Tokyo Bay Highway
- Introduction
- Economic arguments for the TBH
- Local authority negotiations
- EIA of the TBH
- Effectiveness of the EIA
- Conclusions
- Chapter 14: Kyoto Second Outer Circular Route by Toshio Hase
- Introduction
- Decision on the highway project
- Reactions of local people
- EIA and public participation
- Conclusions
- Chapter 15: Recommendations
- Appendices
- Appendix A: Environmental standards
- Air pollution
- Water pollution
- Noise
- Appendix B: Environment-related laws
- Chronology of enactment
- Laws by topic
- Appendix C: Reports related to the implementation of Japan's national EIA system
- EA CCEPC (1974)
- EA CCEPC (1975)
- EA CCEPC (1979)
- Cabinet decision (1984)
- Implementation scheme for environmental impact assessment
- EA (Nov. 1984)
- References
- Index
- Volume 03
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Introduction The dilemmas of environmental management
- Chapter 2: A Shaggy Fish Story The snail darter and the Tellico Dam
- Chapter 3: Rhine Brine How to dispose of seven million tonnes of salt
- Chapter 4: Acid Drops The European Community's acid emissions control policy
- Chapter 5: Endangered Culture vs Endangered Species The Inuit and the bowhead whale
- Chapter 6: A Certain Accident The tragedy of Bhopal
- Chapter 7: A Bridge Too Low The gateway to the Magra valley
- Further reading
- Index
- Volume 04
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Tables
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Summary and Conclusions
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- 1.1: The new agenda
- 1.2: The environmental debate
- 1.3: Aim and structure of this essay
- 1.4: The role of the state
- 1.5: Levels of response
- 1.6: From Stockholm to Rio
- Chapter 2: The Birth of Environmentalism
- 2.1: Prehistory
- 2.2: Lift-off
- 2.3: Causes
- 2.4: The new environmentalism
- 2.5: Disagreements
- 2.6: Government responses
- Chapter 3: The Stockholm Conference
- 3.1: The divergence
- 3.2: Other issues
- 3.3: The form of the conference
- 3.4: The agreed texts
- 3.5: The institutional outcome: UNEP
- 3.6: Assessment
- Chapter 4: From Stockholm to Rio: Domestic Developments
- 4.1: Global trends
- 4.2: Developments in the OECD
- 4.3: The developing world
- The nature of the problems
- Population
- lndustrial pollution
- 4.4: The Soviet Union and Eastern Europe
- 4.5: Agriculture
- 4.6: Freedom and the environment
- Chapter 5: From Stockholm to Rio: International Developments
- 5.1: Overview
- 5.2: Marine pollution
- 5.3: Regional seas: the Mediterranean
- 5.4: The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES)
- 5.5: Atmospheric pollution: acid rain
- 5.6: Environment in the European Community
- 5.7: Nuclear issues
- 5.8: Development of the North-South agenda
- 5.9: Conclusions
- Chapter 6: The Road to Rio
- 6.1: The second boom
- 6.2: Chernobyl
- 6.3: Toxic waste
- 6.4: Antarctica
- 6.5: The ozone layer
- Background: before the 'hole'
- The Vienna Convention
- A change of momentum
- The Montreal Protocol and London Amendments
- Conclusions
- 6.6: The role of business and industry
- 6.7: Tropical forests
- 6.8: Moving up the international agenda
- Chapter 7: Climate Change
- 7.1: The early work
- 7.2: Climate change goes public
- 7.3: Governmental responses
- 7.4: Pressure on the US
- 7.5: Target-setting
- 7.6: The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
- 7.7: The developing countries join the debate
- 7.8: The Second World Climate Conference
- 7.9: The Convention negotiations: initial immobility
- 7.10: New ideas, but no movement
- 7.11: The ice breaks: the convention achieved
- 7.12: Conclusions
- Chapter 8: Biodiversity
- 8.1: The issue
- 8.2: The negotiation
- 8.3: The aftermath
- Chapter 9: UNCED: The Preparations
- 9.1: The Global Environment Facility (GEF)
- 9.2: UNCED structures and national objectives
- 9.3: Agenda 21 and the Earth Charter
- 9.4: Desertification and deforestation
- 9.5: Institutions
- 9.6: Finance and technology
- Chapter 10: UNCED: The Conference
- 10.1: Atmospherics
- 10.2: The five big issues
- 10.3: The lessons
- Chapter 11: The Future
- 11.1: The challenge
- 11.2: The benefits of prosperity and democracy
- 11.3: Developing countries
- 11.4: The global problems
- Biodiversity and forests
- Climate change
- 11.5: Forces for international integration
- Negotiating processes
- Environmental science
- The NGOs
- Environmental altruism
- 11.6: The environment and the international system
- The UN system
- International funding
- Trade
- A political centrepiece?
- 11.7: Envoi: back to the roots
- Index
- Volume 05
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Glossary
- Acknowledgements
- Part 1: Managing Environmental Conflicts
- Chapter 1: Opportunity and risk
- Chapter 2: The challenge of changing environmental management
- Chapter 3: What to manage? The five stages of environmental management
- Chapter 4: How to manage? The role of conflict management in environmental management
- Chapter 5: Who manages? On becoming an environmental manager
- Part 2: Managing Environmental Change
- Chapter 6: A heroic effort: A case study of the salmon fishing industry in British Columbia
- Chapter 7: Saving a shire: Reclaiming a salt-affected irrigation district in Victoria
- Chapter 8: Trouble with traffic: The effects of rapid urbanisation in Bangkok, Thailand
- Chapter 9: The future of Calico Creek: Local management of a small subtropical water catchment
- Part 3: Managing Conflict and Change: A Learning Programme
- Chapter 10: Introduction. Setting the agenda
- Chapter 11: Stage 1: Exploration and forecasting
- Chapter 12: Stage 2: Analysis and coordination
- Chapter 13: Stage 3: Goalsetting and negotiation
- Chapter 14: Stage 4: Action and cooperation
- Chapter 15: Stage 5: Evaluation and illumination
- Chapter 16: Individual learning and personal change
- Chapter 17: Organisational learning and social change
- Appendix: Course coordinator's guide
- Index
- Volume 06
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I: The Golden Age of Common Law Property Rights
- Chapter 1: Thou Shalt Not Trespass
- Chapter 2: So As Not to Harm Another
- Chapter 3: Without Obstruction, Diversion or Corruption
- Part II: The Erosion of Common Law Property Rights
- Chapter 4: In the Name of the Public Good
- Chapter 5: Growth at All Costs
- Chapter 6: The Defence of Statutory Authority
- Chapter 7: Blinded Justice
- Part III: Common Law Failings
- Chapter 8: The Courts v. The Common Man
- Chapter 9: Governments Gutting Their Holdings
- Chapter 10: The Taxman's Axe
- Part IV: Nature's Case for Restoring Strong Property Rights
- Chapter 11: Alienable Rights
- Chapter 12: No Expropriation Without Full Compensation
- Chapter 13: The Gospel According to St. John
- Appendices: Wisdom of the Ages
- A: Trespass Case Summaries
- B: Private Nuisance Case Summaries
- C: Riparian Rights Case Summaries
- Works Cited
- Index of Cases
- Index
- Volume 07
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Chapter 1: On the significance of valued environments
- Concepts and contents
- Notes
- Chapter 2: Values in place: interpretations and implications from Bedford
- Bedford experiences
- Bedford by trail
- Place experiences
- Provoking place experiences
- Implications
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Chapter 3: Filming the Fens: a visual interpretation of regional character
- Finding the story
- A man-made landscape
- Flatness
- A fenland fixation
- Water
- The Fen Tiger?
- Isolation
- The sense of place
- Notes
- Chapter 4: The lure of the moors
- Primary conditions for wilderness
- Secondary conditions
- Why preserve wilderness?
- The shaping of public policy
- Notes
- Chapter 5: Revisiting valued landscapes
- The virtues of bygone scenes
- Revisiting past landscapes through science fiction
- Rediscoveries and reconstructions
- Defects and drawbacks
- Notes
- Chapter 6: Landscape aesthetics: a synthesis and critique
- Landscape aesthetics: a broader field of enquiry
- Research paradigms in landscape aesthetics
- Areas of common effort and consensus
- Philosophy of aesthetics: altenative positions
- A materialist perspective: first steps in re-orientation
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 7: Humphry Repton and the morality of landscape
- Introduction
- Landscape and morality
- Humphry Repton
- Sheringham
- Hare Street
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Chapter 8: Places, conservation and the care of streets in Hartlepool
- The street survey: the motifs of conservation
- The process and agents of change
- The ambiguity in streets
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Chapter 9: The value of the local area
- Introduction
- The role and value of the local area to the individual
- The role and value of the local area in social life
- The role and value of the local area in political life
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 10: Valued environments and the planning process: community consciousness and urban structur
- The subjective reality of valued environments
- Representation of valued environments in the planning process
- Neighbourhood councils and valued environments
- Notes
- Chapter 11: Environmental pluralism and participation: a co-orientational perspective
- Co-orientation and a social construction of reality
- The co-orientation model
- Friary Ward: an introduction
- Environmental and political knowledge
- A case study: a residents' parking scheme for Friary Ward
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Index
- Volume 08
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Prologue
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Part I: The roots
- Chapter 1: UNCHE and UNEP
- The 1972 Stockholm Conference
- Institutional and substantive responses in the wake of UNCHE
- The UNEP era: model and reality
- Chapter 2: The origin and nature of GEMS
- Environmental monitoring at the Stockholm Conference
- Setting up the Global Environmental Monitoring System
- What is GEMS?
- Part II: GEMS in action
- Chapter 3: Health-related environmental monitoring in GEMS
- Nature and constituents of GEMS HEALTH
- Indicators of progress
- Factors at work
- Assessment and prospects of GEMS HEALTH
- Chapter 4: Climate-related environmental monitoring in GEMS
- GEMS and human-induced climate change: the first steps
- Early indicators of progress
- Factors at play
- Towards an integrated approach to global atmosphere monitoring
- Chapter 5: Marine pollution monitoring in GEMS
- The first steps and controversies
- Pollution monitoring in regional seas: the Mediterranean model
- Marine pollution monitoring in GEMS: factors at play
- Towards comprehensive global marine pollution monitoring
- Chapter 6: Natural resources and integrated monitoring in GEMS
- Natural resources monitoring
- Integrated monitoring
- The prospects for the monitoring of natural resources and integrated monitoring
- Chapter 7: Monitoring long-range transboundary air pollution in GEMS
- Monitoring long-range transboundary air pollution in Europe
- The signifiance of EMEP for GEMS
- Chapter 8: GRID: Global Resource Information Database
- The origins of GRID
- The GRID pilot phase
- The implementation phase of GRID
- GRID and GEMS
- Chapter 9: GEMS: inching towards a global system?
- Assessing GEMS
- Whither GEMS?
- GEMS: the need for a fresh start
- Part III: What international organization for the twenty-first century?
- Chapter 10: Building blocks for a stronger UN
- International civil service
- Financing international organizations
- Institutional betterment as a permanent objective
- The challenge of interrelatedness
- Chapter 11: UN system at a crossroads
- Non-reform and change through unilateral action
- The need for a comprehensive reform of the UN system
- By way of a conclusion
- Name index
- Subject index
- Volume 09
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- About the authors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Summary and Conclusions
- Part I: Overview
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: The Road to Rio
- 2.1: Introduction
- 2.2: The Stockholm Conference
- 2.3: From Stockholm to the Brundtland Commission
- 2.4: The UNCED negotiations
- 2.5: The broader process
- Chapter 3: The UNCED Outcome
- 3.1: Introduction
- 3.2: The Conventions
- 3.3: Non-treaty agreements
- 3.4: The UN aftermath
- Chapter 4: Themes and Lessons
- 4.1: A process towards a process ....
- 4.2: The North-South divide: economics and finance
- 4.3: The North-South divide: population and consumption
- 4.4: National interests and the diversity of nations
- 4.5: Sovereignty and governance
- 4.6: Regulatory policy, business, and the environment
- 4.7: International institutions
- 4.8: The role of non-governmental groups
- 4.9: The politics of publicity and pressure
- Chapter 5: The Road from Rio
- 5.1: Introduction
- 5.2: Convention processes
- 5.3: The broader agenda
- 5.4: Tensions and prospects
- Part II: The UNCED Agreements
- Chapter 6: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
- 6.1: Origins and objectives
- 6.2: The Convention
- 6.3: Discussion and prospects
- Chapter 7: The United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity
- 7.1: Historical beginnings
- 7.2: The Convention
- 7.3: Limitations, controversies, and prospects
- Chapter 8: The Rio Declaration on Environment and Development
- 8.1 The negotiating background
- 8.2: A commentary on the final Rio Declaration
- 8.3: Discussion
- Chapter 9: Agenda 21
- 9.1: The nature of Agenda 21
- 9.2: Section I: Social and economic dimensions
- 9.3: Section II: Conservation and management of resources for development
- 9.4: Section III: Strengthening the role of major groups
- 9.5: Section IV: Means of implementation
- 9.6: Agenda 21: Central themes and implementation
- Chapter 10: Forest Principles
- 10.1: Origins of the Forest Principles
- 10.2: Analysis of the text
- 10.3: Implications and prospects
- 10.4: Conclusions
- Appendix 1: Financial estimates, pledges and likely resources
- Appendix 2: Sources of further information
- Volume 10
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Table of Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Chapter 1: Outcome and Value Uncertainty in Environmental Policy
- Outcome Uncertainty
- Value Uncertainty
- Outline
- Part I: Outcome Uncertainty: Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
- Chapter 2: The Policy Problem
- Current POD Production and Applications
- Outline
- A: Characterizing Uncertainty About Outcomes
- Chapter 3: Probability- Based Scenarios
- Scenarios Based on a Proxy for Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
- Chapter 4: The Distribution of the Score Function
- Aggregating Chemical Use
- Deriving Scenarios for Individual Chemicals
- Chapter 5: Subjective Marginal Probability Distributions for Potential Ozone Depleters
- Subjective Probability Distribution for the Period Before 2000
- Subjective Probability Distribution for the Period Beyond 2000
- Marginal Distributions for Individual Chemical Production
- Chapter 6: Production and Emission Scenarios
- Choosing Quantiles for Scenarios
- Chemical Use and Emission Scenarios
- Model-Calculated Ozone Depletion
- Chapter 7: Conclusions
- B: Decision Making Under Diminishing Uncertainty
- Chapter 8: Timing Responses to Potential Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
- Chapter 9: The Decision Framework
- The General Problem
- A Simplified Model and a Partial Solution
- The Critical Probability
- Parameters of the Model
- Calculation of Resource Costs and Critical Probabilities
- Chapter 10: Results and Sensitivity Analysis
- The Critical Probability
- The Effects of Alternative Proposed Current Regulations
- Sensitivity of the Results to the Choice of Parameters
- Chapter 11: Conclusions
- Part II: Value Uncertainty: Food-Borne Risk
- Chapter 12: Valuing Health Risks
- Methods for Valuing Health Risks
- Outline
- Chapter 13: Choosing Among Potentially Hazardous Foods
- Pesticides and Other Food-Borne Health Risks
- Organically Grown Produce
- A Theoretical Model of Choice
- Consumer Focus Groups
- Consumer Perceptions of Food-Borne Risks
- Chapter 14: Willingness to Pay for Organically Grown Foods
- Price Data
- Revealed Willingness To Pay
- Reported Willingness to Pay
- Chapter 15: Avoided Risk
- Adverse Effects of Pesticides
- Estimating the Magnitude of Health Risks
- Frequency and Concentration of Pesticide Residues
- Risk Indices
- Estimated Lifetime Cancer Risk
- Perceived Risks
- Chapter 16: Willingness to Pay for Risk Reductions
- Relative Costs of Avoiding Pesticide Risks Across Foods
- Revealed Willingness to Pay to Reduce Pesticide Risks
- Revealed-Preference Estimates of the Value of Life
- Contingent-Valuation Estimates of the Value of Life
- Consistency with Management of Other Health Risks
- Chapter 17: Conclusions
- Part III: Extensions: Global Climate Change
- Chapter 18: Applying the Tools to Potential Climate Change
- Global Climate Change
- Characterizing Uncertainty About Outcomes
- Timing Responses
- Valuing Consequences
- Conclusions
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Volume 11
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations and Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: What's the Problem Here?
- Chapter 1: Up In Arms Against the Environment: The Military
- Powers of Destruction
- In War
- Vietnam
- The Persian Gulf
- Central America
- Southern Africa
- The Drug Wars
- In Peace
- Gentlemen's Agreements
- The Nuclear Club
- Nuclear Fallout
- Fernald
- Hanford
- Chelyabinsk
- Club Culture
- Out of Sight, Out of Mind
- Goose Bay
- The Pacific
- Chapter 2: Business as Usual
- The Train of Progress: A Fable
- Designer Tragedies
- Feminist Parables
- Profit at Work
- Men at Work
- Stalking the Corporate Culture
- Moral Bracketing
- Emotional Bracketing
- Distancing
- Hierarchies
- Enemies Everywhere
- "Managing" Problems
- Short-Term Planning
- A Buffered Elite
- Militarized Models
- Faith in Science
- Culture Cops
- Normal Accidents
- The Exxon Valdez
- Bhopal
- Paying the Price for Accidents
- Women as "Other"
- Culture Clash
- Secretaries
- Wives
- Workers
- Chapter 3: On the Coattails of Men in Government
- Governments in Khaki
- USSR/Eastern Europe
- Burma (Myanmar)
- Looking Out for Number One
- Environmentalists as Enemies of the State
- Rainforest Politics
- Central America
- Indonesia
- Controlling Nature, Owning Resources
- Winning over Nature
- Private Assets in a Free Market
- Exporting the Model: International Development
- Exporting the Model: Free Trade
- The Evil Twins: Sovereignty and Nationalism
- Sovereign Rights
- Brazil
- China
- Eco-Nationalism
- Whose Idea Is the Nation-State?
- Pious Globalism
- Dumping on the Poor
- Finger-Pointing
- Trashing the Poor
- Setting Our Sites on the Poor
- The Double Standard Starts at Home
- South Africa
- The USA: Without Reservations
- Dumping in Dixie
- The Inside Track: Setting the Environmental Agenda
- Friends in High Places
- Science
- Nations of Men
- Chapter 4: The Ecology Establishment
- The Greening of Men's Politics
- The Friendly Eco-Establishment: An Endangered Species?
- Sexism in the Movement
- Racism in the Movement
- Professionalization
- Low Voices, No Tears
- Changing the Expert Structure
- Going to lunch with the boys
- The Business of Ecobusiness
- Free-Enterprise Environmentalism
- The Science Imperative
- Hierarchies
- Glimpses of an Alternative
- Taking Issue
- Fur, Meat, and Misogyny
- Animal Rights
- Population
- This Earth Is Not Your Mother
- Chapter 5: The Eco-Fringe: Deep Ecology and Ecofeminism
- Fringe Elements
- Deep Ecology
- Deep Machismo
- Disregarding Difference
- The "Population Problem"
- On Deep Being and Nothingness
- Lost Promises
- The Ecology Question in Feminism
- Peace on Earth
- The Nature-Woman Continuum
- Ecofeminism
- Chapter 6: Hysterical Housewives, Treehuggers, and Other Mad Women
- The Green Consumer
- Healthy Homes, Then and Now
- Green Consuming: A Double-Edged Sword
- Woman-Blaming
- Consume
W tej ofercie kupujesz kod dostępowy umożliwiający dostęp do wskazanej treści. Kod umożliwia dostęp do treści za pomocą przeglądarki WWW, dedykowanej aplikacji iOS (Apple) ze sklepu App Store lub dedykowanej aplikacji Android ze sklepu Play. Kod oraz instrukcje otrzymasz pocztą elektroniczną niezwłocznie po zaksięgowaniu płatności. Brak możliwości pobrania pliku.
Na podstawie art. 38 pkt 13 Ustawy z dnia 30 maja 2014 roku o prawach konsumenta realizując kod dostępowy rezygnujesz z prawa do odstąpienia od umowy zawartej na odległość.
Typ licencji: licencja wieczysta.
BRAK MOŻLIWOŚCI POBRANIA PLIKU.
NIE PRZESYŁAMY PLIKÓW E-MAILEM.