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Provides state-of-the-art insights into selected aspects of the ecologyeconomysociety interface
Discusses policy issues as well as practice and addresses both macro and micro aspects
Includes contributions from leading international ecological economists and ecologists
Auteur
Vikram Dayal is a Professor at the Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi, India. He is the author of a few books and co-editor of the Oxford Handbook of Environmental Economics in India with Kanchan Chopra. His research on a range of environmental and developmental issues from outdoor and indoor air pollution in the Indian state of Goa to tigers and Prosopis juliflora in Ranthambhore National Park (Rajasthan, India) has been published in a variety of journals. He visited the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis in Bloomington, Indiana as a SANDEE (South Asian Network for Development and Environmental Economics) Partha Dasgupta Fellow in 2011. He studied economics in India and the USA and received his doctoral degree from the University of Delhi.
Anantha Duraiappah is the Director of Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development, New Delhi. He is an experienced environment-development economist with more than three decades of international experience. From 2010 to 2014, he was the Executive Director of International Human Dimensions Programme (IHDP) hosted by the United Nations University (UNU), Bonn, Germany. While at UNU he was the founding director of the highly acclaimed Inclusive Wealth Report (IWR) launched at the Rio+20 summit in Rio in 2012. From 2006 to 2010 he was the Chief of the Ecosystem Services and Economics Unit of the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) in Nairobi, Kenya and was responsible for initiating the establishment of the intergovernmental science-policy platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem services (IPBES). Prior to joining the UN, he worked as an academic in universities in Singapore, Italy, and the Netherlands. He received his PhD in Economics from the University of Texas in Austin, USA. He is currently working to enable UNESCO to achieve the transformative shift in education envisioned for the post-2015 agenda.
Nandan Nawn is an Associate Professor at and Head of Department of Policy Studies, TERI University, New Delhi, where he teaches various courses in the interface of environment, development and economics. He is an economist by disciplinary training with a doctoral degree from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. His research interests lie in ecological economics, agrarian studies and environment and development. His works has been published in various journals including Journal of Agrarian Change , Economic and Political Weekly and Journal of Human development and Capabilities . He has recently co-edited Economic Challenges for the Contemporary World: Essays in Honour of Prabhat Patnaik (Sage Publications) and Global Change, Ecosystems, Sustainability: Theory, Methods, Practice (forthcoming, Sage Publications). He is a co-editor of "Review of Environment and Development" in EPW and Secretary of the Indian Society for Ecological Economics.
Contenu
Introduction. - The Sustainability of the Sustainable Development Goals.- The role of Trans-disciplinary approach in Post.- Mainstreaming Climate Sustainability in India: How will Jack and Jill climb the hill?.- Ecological Distribution Conflicts and the Vocabulary of Environmental Justice.- Industrialization and River Water Quality in India: Gains from Informal Regulation of Water Pollution.- Collective Action: Penultimate Solution for Efficient Environmental Management.- Transaction Costs and Agricultural Productivity in Kathmandu Valley, Nepal.- Institutions and Community Participation in the Management of Forest Ecosystems.- Population Ethics and Earth's Carrying Capacity.- Infectious diseases among households in India: occurrence, associations and implications.- Spatial Analysis of Quality of Life in an Urban Context.- The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: Testing the Limits of Interdisciplinary and Multi-scale Science.- Conservation beyond protected areas.- Ecosystem services, state institutions and market integration in reducing poverty: Evidence from a remote Himalayan region.- Shaping the ISEE and INSEE.