Content
March 2016, Volume 6, Issue 1
- 25-38 Nutrients in the nexus
by Eric A. Davidson & Rachel L. Nifong & Richard B. Ferguson & Cheryl Palm & Deanna L. Osmond & Jill S. Baron - 50-61 Promoting resilience for food, energy, and water interdependencies
by Rae Zimmerman & Quanyan Zhu & Carolyn Dimitri - 62-76 Spatial computing perspective on food energy and water nexus
by Emre Eftelioglu & Zhe Jiang & Reem Ali & Shashi Shekhar - 77-89 Hybrid green infrastructure for reducing demands on urban water and energy systems: a New York City hypothetical case study
by J. Cherrier & Y. Klein & H. Link & J. Pillich & N. Yonzan - 90-103 A workshop on transitioning cities at the food-energy-water nexus
by Lara J. Treemore-Spears & J. Morgan Grove & Craig K. Harris & Lawrence D. Lemke & Carol J. Miller & Kami Pothukuchi & Yifan Zhang & Yongli L. Zhang - 104-122 Human conflicts and the food, energy, and water nexus: building collaboration using facilitation and mediation to manage environmental disputes
by Lara B. Fowler & Xiaoxin Shi - 123-126 A research agenda for the energy, water, land, and climate nexus
by Paul Faeth & Lars Hanson - 140-148 Assessing the effects of thermal and hydro energy production on water systems
by Hector R. Bravo - 149-160 Irrigation aquifer depletion: the nexus linchpin
by Richard M. Cruse & Daniel L. Devlin & Doug Parker & Reagan M. Waskom - 161-171 Global linkages among energy, food and water: an economic assessment
by Claudia Ringler & Dirk Willenbockel & Nicostrato Perez & Mark Rosegrant & Tingju Zhu & Nathanial Matthews - 172-182 Engineering solutions for food-energy-water systems: it is more than engineering
by M. L. Wolfe & K. C. Ting & N. Scott & A. Sharpley & J. W. Jones & L. Verma - 183-191 Opportunities for improved promotion of ecosystem services in agriculture under the Water-Energy-Food Nexus
by Andrew Bell & Nathanial Matthews & Wei Zhang - 200-207 Autonomous real-time water quality sensing as an alternative to conventional monitoring to improve the detection of food, energy, and water indicators
by Ziqian Dong & Fang Li & Babak Beheshti & Alan Mickelson & Marta Panero & Nada Anid - 208-213 The answer is 42 … What is THE question?
by Ron McCormick & Lawrence A. Kapustka - 214-224 Nexus between food, energy, water, and forest ecosystems in the USA
by Thomas L. Tidwell - 225-230 The need for universal metrics in the energy-water-food nexus
by A. D. Tevar & H. M. Aelion & M. A. Stang & J. Mendlovic - 231-238 A positive vision of sustainability
by Steven A. Cohen & Kelsie L. DeFrancia & Hayley J. Martinez
December 2015, Volume 5, Issue 4
- 497-507 Mapping public ambivalence in public engagement with science: implications for democratizing the governance of fracking technologies in the USA
by Edwina Barvosa - 508-516 From knowledge to action—a field report, moving from traditional to transformational teaching and learning. A pilot model for education for sustainable development at Freie Universität Berlin
by Karola Braun-Wanke & Katrin Risch & Anna-Maria Goldberg - 517-525 Mercury concentrations and awareness in Campos dos Goytacazes, Brazil: baseline measures for examining the efficacy of the Minamata Convention
by Alexandra Erhardt & Carlos Rezende & Brian Walker & Dina Franceschi & David Downie - 526-536 Institutionalizing renewable electricity: the long-term potential for policy learning
by James Buthman - 537-542 Introduction to the Symposium on American Food Resilience (Part 2)
by Gerald Marten & Nurcan Atalan-Helicke - 543-559 The role of knowledge in building food security resilience across food system domains
by Molly Anderson - 560-572 From industrial production to biosensitivity: the need for a food system paradigm shift
by Robert Dyball - 573-592 Metropolitan foodsheds: a resilient response to the climate change challenge?
by Laura Lengnick & Michelle Miller & Gerald Marten - 593-607 Promoting resilience in a regional seafood system: New England and the Fish Locally Collaborative
by Brett Tolley & Regina Gregory & Gerald Marten - 608-622 Toward resilient food systems through increased agricultural diversity and local sourcing in the Carolinas
by Janet MacFall & Joanna Lelekacs & Todd LeVasseur & Steve Moore & Jennifer Walker - 623-635 Agroecosystem health, agroecosystem resilience, and food security
by Casey Hoy - 636-649 Seed exchange networks and food system resilience in the United States
by Nurcan Helicke - 650-660 Regionalism: a New England recipe for a resilient food system
by Kathryn Ruhf - 661-670 The local food movement, public-private partnerships, and food system resiliency
by Rebecca Dunning & J. Bloom & Nancy Creamer - 671-684 The power of story for motivating adaptive response–marshaling individual and collective initiative to create more resilient and sustainable food systems
by Michelle Miller & Jeremy Solin - 685-698 Do global food systems have an Achilles heel? The potential for regional food systems to support resilience in regional disasters
by Rebekah Paci-Green & Gigi Berardi - 699-711 Can urban agriculture usefully improve food resilience? Insights from a linear programming approach
by James Ward - 712-731 Modelling food system resilience: a scenario-based simulation modelling approach to explore future shocks and adaptations in the Australian food system
by Seona Candy & Che Biggs & Kirsten Larsen & Graham Turner - 732-734 Engineered multifunctionality and environmental sustainability
by Akhlesh Lakhtakia & Wricha Johari - 735-744 So you think you want to run an environmental conservation meeting? Advice on the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune that accompany academic conference planning
by E. Parsons - 745-749 What is an everyday urban ecology?
by Ezra Ho - 750-754 Deliberative engagement: the forum in the system
by John Dryzek - 755-756 Tee L. Guidotti’s: “Health and Sustainability”
by Gary Silverman - 757-758 Nina Munk: The idealist : Jeffrey Sachs and the quest to end poverty
by Courtney Franklin
September 2015, Volume 5, Issue 3
- 241-250 Defining and defending risk: conceptual risk formulas in environmental controversies
by Alissa Cordner - 251-261 Corporate takeover? Ideological heterogeneity, individualization, and materiality in the corporatization of three environment-related movements
by Julianne Busa & Leslie King - 262-271 Wilderness 2.0: what does wilderness mean to the Millennials?
by Kim Smith & Matt Kirby - 272-276 Corporate water stewardship
by Peter Jones & David Hillier & Daphne Comfort - 277-282 Inequality and the carbon intensity of human well-being
by Andrew Jorgenson - 283-287 Arctic biodiversity: from science to policy
by Tom Barry & Courtney Price - 288-301 It is not just about the ice: a geochemical perspective on the changing Arctic Ocean
by R. Macdonald & Z. Kuzyk & S. Johannessen - 302-307 Left out in the cold: energy justice and Arctic energy research
by Roman Sidortsov & Benjamin Sovacool - 308-320 Introduction to the Symposium on American Food Resilience
by Gerald Marten & Nurcan Atalan-Helicke - 321-336 A system dynamics approach for examining mechanisms and pathways of food supply vulnerability
by Krystyna Stave & Birgit Kopainsky - 337-347 How resilient is the United States’ food system to pandemics?
by Andrew G. Huff & Walter E. Beyeler & Nicholas S. Kelley & Joseph A. McNitt - 337-347 How resilient is the United States’ food system to pandemics?
by Andrew Huff & Walter Beyeler & Nicholas Kelley & Joseph McNitt - 348-361 The vulnerability of the US food system to climate change
by Laura Lengnick - 362-377 The 2014 drought and water management policy impacts on California’s Central Valley food production
by Dan Keppen & Tricia Dutcher - 378-391 Connecting resilience, food security and climate change: lessons from flooding in Queensland, Australia
by Amy MacMahon & Kiah Smith & Geoffrey Lawrence - 392-403 “Plant a victory garden: our food is fighting:” Lessons of food resilience from World War
by Alesia Maltz - 404-417 From Chernobyl to Fukushima: an interdisciplinary framework for managing and communicating food security risks after nuclear plant accidents
by Alexander Belyakov - 418-431 Resilience in a concentrated and consolidated food system
by Mary Hendrickson - 432-444 Civil society, corporate power, and food security: counter-revolutionary efforts that limit social change
by Peter Jacques - 445-458 Food stocks and grain reserves: evaluating whether storing food creates resilient food systems
by Evan Fraser & Alexander Legwegoh & Krishna KC - 459-473 Resilience and the industrial food system: analyzing the impacts of agricultural industrialization on food system vulnerability
by Sarah Rotz & Evan Fraser - 474-484 Adapting a social-ecological resilience framework for food systems
by Jennifer Hodbod & Hallie Eakin - 485-486 Sarah L Burch and Sara E. Harris (eds): Understanding climate change: science policy and practice
by Richard Smardon - 487-490 Naomi Klein: This changes everything: Capitalism vs climate. (Does this change everything?)
by John Perkins - 491-492 Richard M. Mizelle Jr.: A review of Backwater Blues: The Mississippi Flood of 1927 in the African American Imagination
by April Baptiste - 493-495 Richard C. Powell and Klaus Dodds (eds): Polar Geopolitics? Knowledges, resources, and legal regimes. (Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc.)
by Peter Meserve
June 2015, Volume 5, Issue 2
- 87-98 Examining differences in public opinion on climate change between college students in China and the USA
by Eric Jamelske & James Boulter & Won Jang & James Barrett & Laurie Miller & Wen Han - 99-110 Paving the way or crowding out? The impact of the rise of climate change on environmental issue agendas
by Jessica Boscarino - 111-121 Introduction to the special issue on ozone layer protection and climate change: the extraordinary experience of building the Montreal Protocol, lessons learned, and hopes for future climate change efforts
by Penelope Canan & Stephen Andersen & Nancy Reichman & Brian Gareau - 122-129 The Montreal Protocol: how today’s successes offer a pathway to the future
by Marco Gonzalez & Kristen Taddonio & Nancy Sherman - 130-137 Managing short-lived climate forcers in curbing climate change: an atmospheric chemistry synopsis
by Song Gao - 138-142 Networking to save the world: UNEP’s regional networks—conflict resolution in action
by Rajendra Shende - 143-162 Lessons from the stratospheric ozone layer protection for climate
by Stephen Andersen - 163-168 Lessons from the Montreal Protocol delay in phasing out methyl bromide
by Brian Gareau - 169-175 The importance of phasing down hydrofluorocarbons and other short-lived climate pollutants
by Durwood Zaelke & Nathan Borgford-Parnell - 176-186 The importance of finding the path forward to climate-safe refrigeration and air conditioning: thinking outside the box and without limits
by Stephen Andersen & Nancy Sherman - 187-194 Still no time for complacency: evaluating the ongoing success and continued challenge of global ozone policy
by David Downie - 195-199 Introduction: unsettling the ESS curriculum
by James Proctor & Jennifer Bernstein & Richard Wallace - 200-206 Discursive diversity in introductory environmental studies
by Eric Kennedy & Jacqueline Ho - 207-212 Heterodox environments: pre-undergraduate ESS experiences beyond the AP ®
by Jonathan Lepofsky - 213-217 Fifteen claims: social change and power in environmental studies
by Michael Maniates & Thomas Princen - 218-223 Theory in, theory out: NCSE and the ESS curriculum
by James Proctor - 224-230 Between the local and the global in the Age of the Anthropocene: the case for the “regional” in Environmental Studies and Sciences
by Abigail Jahiel - 231-236 Teaching through objects: grounding environmental studies in things
by Paul Robbins & Sarah Moore - 237-239 The uses and limitations of film in environmental education
by Monty Hempel - 240-240 Film notes
by Monty Hempel
March 2015, Volume 5, Issue 1
- 1-10 Environmental legacy: the impact of the manufactured gas industry in the United States
by Joel Tarr & Francis McMichael - 11-20 Understanding urban sustainability through newspaper discourse: a look at Germany
by Carolin Schwegler - 21-28 Defining “Ecolinguistics?”: Challenging emic issues in an evolving environmental discipline
by Todd LeVasseur - 29-41 Residential energy conservation: the effects of education and perceived behavioral control
by Heili Pals & Lindsey Singer - 42-49 Teaching socio-environmental synthesis with the case studies approach
by Cynthia Wei & William Burnside & Judy Che-Castaldo - 50-53 Introduction to the Forum on Arctic Change
by Magdalena Muir - 54-57 What people know
by Lawrence Hamilton - 58-60 Acting locally to mitigate globally: climate action in the Anthropocene
by Marcus Carson - 61-62 International perspectives on earth systems policy
by Ania Grobicki - 63-65 The Arctic is unravelling
by Glenn McGillivray - 66-69 Defending the Ivory Tower against the end of the world
by Andrew Wright - 70-78 Environmental studies and environmental science today: inevitable mission creep and integration in action-oriented transdisciplinary areas of inquiry, training and practice
by Steven Cooke & Jesse Vermaire - 79-80 Christian Downie: the politics of climate change negotiations: strategies and variables in prolonged international negotiations
by Nichlas Emmons - 81-84 Edward L. McCord: Review of The Value of Species
by Michael Nelson & Chelsea Batavia - 85-86 Debra Rowe (Ed.): Achieving Sustainability: Visions, Principles, and Practices, 2 volumes (Gale/Cengage Learing)
by James Eflin
December 2014, Volume 4, Issue 4
- 273-287 Development of risk assessment for nuclear power: insights from history
by John Perkins - 288-293 Environmental justice: insights from an interdisciplinary instructional workshop
by Kate Darby & Christopher Atchison - 294-300 Learning and promoting urban sustainability: environmental service learning in an undergraduate environmental studies curriculum
by Nurcan Helicke - 301-309 Converging on sustainable placemaking through transdisciplinary process
by Rob Alexander & Lori Britt & Elise Barrella - 310-314 Water security in the Middle East and North African region
by Sezin Gürsoy & Peter Jacques - 315-328 Water management in Iran: what is causing the looming crisis?
by Kaveh Madani - 329-346 Water security in the GCC countries: challenges and opportunities
by Omar Saif & Toufic Mezher & Hassan Arafat - 347-353 An analysis of the causes of water crisis in the Euphrates-Tigris river basin
by Aysegül Kibaroglu & Tugba Maden - 354-359 Energy education and the dilemma of mitigating climate change
by John Perkins & Catherine Middlecamp & David Blockstein & Jennifer Cole & Robert Knapp & Kathleen Saul & Shirley Vincent - 360-363 Metro sapiens: an urban species
by Jason Vargo - 364-367 Review of Abby Kinchy’s “Seeds, science and struggle: the global politics of transgenic crops”
by Amy Teller
September 2014, Volume 4, Issue 3
- 191-199 Shaping ecological risk research for synthetic biology
by T. Kuiken & G. Dana & K. Oye & D. Rejeski - 200-207 Science and structured decision making: fulfilling the promise of adaptive management for imperiled species
by Dennis Murphy & Paul Weiland - 208-217 The role of politics and proximity in sea level rise policy salience: a study of Virginia legislators’ perceptions
by Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf & Burton St. John & Ivan Ash - 218-229 The sustainability of preference power allocations: an exploration of the Niagara Preference Power Program through the lens of the three E’s
by Curt Gervich & Damian Pitt - 230-239 Managing transboundary wetlands: the Ramsar Convention as a means of ecological diplomacy
by Pamela Griffin & Saleem Ali - 240-249 Maintenance of public amenity to improve access to nature area: does distance and expected economic benefits matter?
by Eugene Ezebilo - 250-262 Urban environmental stewardship and changes in vegetative cover and building footprint in New York City neighborhoods (2000–2010)
by Dexter Locke & Kristen King & Erika Svendsen & Lindsay Campbell & Christopher Small & Nancy Sonti & Dana Fisher & Jacqueline Lu - 263-264 George J. Busenberg: Oil and Wilderness in Alaska: Natural Resources, Environmental Protection, and National Policy Dynamics
by John Perkins - 265-266 Robert Costanza and Ida Kubiszewski (eds): Creating a sustainable and desirable future: Insights from 45 global thought leaders
by Glenn Strachan - 267-270 Kai N. Lee, William R. Freudenburg, Richard B. Howarth: Humans in the landscape: an introduction to environmental studies
by Garry Brewer - 271-272 Ben Falk: The resilient farm and homestead: an innovative permaculture and whole systems design approach
by Catherine Janiczak
June 2014, Volume 4, Issue 2
- 123-131 The effect of economic affluence and ecological degradation on Chinese environmental concern: a multilevel analysis
by Feng Hao - 132-141 The role of chemical policy in improving supply chain knowledge and product safety
by Caroline Scruggs & Leonard Ortolano & Megan Schwarzman & Michael Wilson - 142-155 The Hanford Advisory Board: participatory democracy, technology, and representation
by Alex Sager & Alex Zakaras - 156-162 The use of surrogates in implementation of the federal Endangered Species Act—proposed fixes to a proposed rule
by Dennis Murphy & Paul Weiland - 163-171 A rooftop revolution? A multidisciplinary analysis of state-level residential solar programs in New Jersey and Massachusetts
by Alden Griffith & Monica Higgins & James Turner - 172-175 “The Physics of Love ©”: using humor and storytelling to open minds and hearts to green values
by Jennifer Pawlitschek - 176-179 Fish Story Memphis: Memphis is the center of the world
by Aviva Rahmani - 180-182 Environmental performance as social action: Navarrete x Kajiyama Dance Theater
by Debby Kajiyama & Jose Navarrete - 183-185 Work samples from the field of art and science collaboration
by Elizabeth Demaray - 186-187 Oliver Payne (ed): Inspiring sustainable behavior by Oliver Payne
by Adam Mayer - 188-189 Erratum to: Exploring the assessment of twenty-first century professional competencies of undergraduate students in environmental studies through a business—academic partnership
by Dave Gosselin & Sara Cooper & Ronald Bonnstetter & Bill Bonnstetter
March 2014, Volume 4, Issue 1
- 1-6 Making critical connections through interdisciplinary analysis: exploring the impacts of Marcellus shale development
by Beth Kinne & Michael Finewood & David Yoxtheimer - 7-16 Scale, shale, and the state: political ecologies and legal geographies of shale gas development in Pennsylvania
by Eleanor Andrews & James McCarthy - 17-27 There’s no real choice but to sign: neoliberalization and normalization of hydraulic fracturing on Pennsylvania farmland
by Stephanie Malin - 28-36 Municipal officials’ decisions to lease watershed lands for Marcellus shale gas exploration
by Charles Abdalla & Renata Rimsaite & Bryan Swistock - 37-46 “I care more about this place, because I fought for it”: exploring the political ecology of fracking in an ethnographic field school
by Amanda Poole & Anastasia Hudgins - 47-55 Introduction by the Onondaga Nation and activist neighbors of an indigenous perspective on issues surrounding hydrofracking in the Marcellus Shale
by Jack Manno & Paul Hirsch & Andrea Feldpausch-Parker - 56-64 The contested landscape of unconventional energy development: a report from Ohio's shale gas country
by Anna Willow & Rebecca Zak & Danielle Vilaplana & David Sheeley - 65-77 A New York or Pennsylvania state of mind: social representations in newspaper coverage of gas development in the Marcellus Shale
by Darrick Evensen & Christopher Clarke & Richard Stedman - 78-86 Civil society research and Marcellus Shale natural gas development: results of a survey of volunteer water monitoring organizations
by Kirk Jalbert & Abby Kinchy & Simona Perry - 87-96 Drilling into controversy: the educational complexity of shale gas development
by Joseph Henderson & Don Duggan-Haas - 97-98 Introducing The Forum
by Walter Rosenbaum - 99-109 Climate and economic storms of our grandchildren
by John Laitner - 110-120 Two world views on carbon revenues
by Dallas Burtraw & Samantha Sekar - 121-121 Erratum to: Civil society research and Marcellus Shale natural gas development: results of a survey of volunteer water monitoring organizations
by Kirk Jalbert & Abby Kinchy & Simona Perry
December 2013, Volume 3, Issue 4
- 369-375 The social cost of carbon: implications for modernizing our electricity system
by Laurie Johnson & Starla Yeh & Chris Hope - 376-380 Targeting electricity’s extreme polluters to reduce energy-related CO 2 emissions
by Don Grant & Andrew Jorgenson & Wesley Longhofer - 381-390 Artisanal small-scale mining and mercury pollution in Ghana: a critical examination of a messy minerals and gold mining policy
by Frederick Armah & Isaac Luginaah & Justice Odoi - 391-403 Context matters: the significance of non-economic conditions for income–pollution relationships in Chile and Peru
by José Orihuela - 404-415 Building local environmental knowledge in undergraduates with experiential wilderness skills and awareness training: the case of environmental sentinels
by Jacob Brenner & Jason Hamilton & Tim Drake & Jed Jordan - 416-420 Ten practical advantages of a human rights approach to environmental advocacy
by Tom Kerns
September 2013, Volume 3, Issue 3
- 247-258 Planning for power: frame production in an environmental conflict over the siting of a high-voltage transmission line
by Richard Watts & Stephanie Kaza - 259-268 Climate change and extreme weather in the USA: discourse analysis and strategies for an emerging ‘public’
by Adam Smith & Katie Jenkins - 269-278 Comparing climate change awareness, perceptions, and beliefs of college students in the United States and China
by Eric Jamelske & James Barrett & James Boulter - 279-289 A revised look: EPA rulemaking processes
by Jeffrey Cook & Sara Rinfret - 290-296 The meaning of health among mid-Appalachian women within the context of the environment
by Lenore Resick & Joyce Knestrick & Mona Counts & Lindsay Pizzuto - 297-305 The globalization of ecologically intensive aquaculture (1984–2008)
by Stefano Longo & Brett Clark & Richard York - 306-315 Framing for sustainability: the impact of language choice on educational outcomes
by Adrienne Cachelin & Edward Ruddell - 316-330 Integration of sustainability in higher education: three case studies of curricular implementation
by David Gosselin & Rod Parnell & Nicholas Smith-Sebasto & Shirley Vincent - 331-337 A manifesto for theory in environmental studies and sciences
by James Proctor & Susan Clark & Kimberly Smith & Richard Wallace - 338-339 Is the human species special? It is… in its quest for specialness
by Zina Skandrani - 340-342 Editorial: So you want to be a Jedi? Advice for conservation researchers wanting to advocate for their findings
by E. Parsons - 343-356 Diverse Perceptions of Stakeholder Engagement within an Environmental Modeling Research Team
by Elizabeth Allen & Chad Kruger & Fok-Yan Leung & Jennie Stephens - 357-358 S. Foote & E. Mazzolini (eds): Histories of the dustheap: waste, material cultures, social justice
by Joel Krupa - 359-368 Exploring the assessment of twenty-first century professional competencies of undergraduate students in environmental studies through a business—academic partnership
by Dave Gosselin & Sara Cooper & Ronald Bonnstetter & Bill Bonnstetter
June 2013, Volume 3, Issue 2
- 101-108 The wicked problem of chemicals policy: opportunities for innovation
by Jennifer Allen - 109-119 Troubling waters: the Jordan River between religious imagination and environmental degradation
by Christiana Peppard - 120-138 Using contingent choice surveys to inform national park management
by Robert Turner - 139-152 The contribution of systems analysis to training students in cognitive interdisciplinary skills in environmental science education
by K. P. J. Fortuin & C. S. A. Koppen & C. Kroeze - 153-166 For the birds: challenging wilderness in the Everglades
by Chris Wilhelm - 167-168 JESS International Fisheries: Introduction
by D. Webster & Wil Burns - 169-183 International fisheries: assessing the potential for ecosystem management
by D. Webster - 184-193 Global fisheries governance beyond the State: unraveling the effectiveness of the Marine Stewardship Council
by Agni Kalfagianni & Philipp Pattberg - 194-208 The roles of activist NGOs in the development and transformation of IWC regime: the interaction of norms and power
by Isao Sakaguchi - 209-216 The South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organization (SPRFMO): an improved model of decision-making for fisheries conservation?
by Howard Schiffman - 217-231 International regime analyses in the northeast Atlantic
by Rachel Tiller & Susanne Hansen - 232-242 Do we need a global fisheries management organization?
by J. Barkin & Elizabeth DeSombre - 243-243 JESS international fisheries: conclusion
by D. Webster - 244-246 Lee Hannah (ed): Saving a million species: extinction risk from climate change
by Jodi Hilty
March 2013, Volume 3, Issue 1
- 1-14 Planning for climate change across the US Great Plains: concerns and insights from government decision-makers
by Rebecca Romsdahl & Lorilie Atkinson & Jeannie Schultz - 15-20 A case study on regional impacts of climate change: peak loads on the power grid in Rochester, New York
by Scott Constable & Jason Hamilton & Thomas Pfaff - 21-29 Interviewing for an interdisciplinary job: principled goals, pragmatic outcomes, and finding the right fit in academia
by Susan Clark & Toddi Steelman - 30-41 Environmental connections and concept mapping: implementing a new learning technology at Lewis & Clark College
by James Proctor & Jennifer Bernstein - 42-48 Mapping research activities and technologies for sustainability and environmental studies—a case study at university level
by Keishiro Hara & Michinori Uwasu & Shuji Kurimoto & Shinsuke Yamanaka & Yasushi Umeda & Yoshiyuki Shimoda - 49-55 Commitment to the environment and student support for “green” campus initiatives
by Anthony Coy & Allison Farrell & Katharine Gilson & Jody Davis & Benjamin Le - 56-64 The development and implementation of an inquiry-based poster project on sustainability in a large non-majors environmental science course
by Mikaela Schmitt-Harsh & Joseph Harsh - 65-73 Science, policy, and the public discourse of shark “attack”: a proposal for reclassifying human–shark interactions
by Christopher Neff & Robert Hueter - 74-82 Sustainability at The Ohio State University: beyond the physical campus
by Joseph Fiksel & Rick Livingston & Jay Martin & Steven Rissing - 83-92 Saving nature in the Anthropocene
by James Proctor - 93-97 The state of The State of the World: a critical review
by Kimberly Smith - 98-100 Book Review
by Christiana Peppard
November 2012, Volume 2, Issue 4
- 291-295 Resurrecting the conservation movement
by Michelle Marvier & Hazel Wong - 296-307 Historical evolution and development of waste management and recycling systems—analysis of Japan's experiences
by Keishiro Hara & Helmut Yabar - 308-316 Introduction: why link Indigenous ways of knowing with the teaching of environmental studies and sciences?
by Nancy Rich