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River Restoration. Группа авторовЧитать онлайн книгу.

River Restoration - Группа авторов


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H. (2017a). A new way of valuing nature: articulating biomimicry and ecosystem services. Environmental Ethics 39(3): 281–299.

      16 Dicks, H. (2017b). Environmental ethics and biomimetic ethics: nature as object of ethics and nature as source of ethics. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 30(2): 255–274.

      17 Dobson, A.P., Bradshaw, A.D., and Baker, A.J.M. (1997). Hopes for the future: restoration ecology and conservation biology. Science 277: 515–522.

      18 Eden, S. (2006). Ecological versus social restoration? How urban river restoration challenges but also fails to challenge the science–policy nexus in the United Kingdom. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 24: 661–680.

      19 Eden, S., Tunstall, S.M., and Tapsell, S.M. (2000). Translating nature: river restoration as nature – culture. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 18: 257–273.

      20 Egan, D. (2006). Authentic ecological restoration. Ecological Restoration 24(4): 223–224.

      21 Elliott, R. (1982). Faking nature. Inquiry 25(1): 85–93.

      22 Elliott, R. (1997). Faking Nature: The Ethics of Environmental Restoration. London: Routledge.

      23 Evette, A., Labonne, S., Rey, F., et al. (2009). History of bioengineering techniques for erosion control in rivers in Western Europe. Environmental Management 43(6): 972–984.

      24 Ewel, J.J. (1987). Restoration is the ultimate test of ecological theory. In: Restoration Ecology: A Synthetic Approach to Ecological Research (eds W.R. Jordan III, M.E. Gilpin, and J.D. Aber), 31–33. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

      25 Giller, P.S. (2005). River restoration: seeking ecological standards. Journal of Applied Ecology 42: 201–207.

      26 Hettinger, N. (2012). Nature restoration as a paradigm for the human relationship with nature. In: Ethical Adaptation to Climate Change (eds A. Thompson and J. Bendik‐Keymer), 27–46. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

      27 Higgs, E. (1994). Expanding the scope of ecological restoration. Restoration Ecology 2(3): 137–145.

      28 Higgs, E. (1997). What is good ecological restoration? Conservation Biology 11(2): 338–348.

      29 Hobbs, R.J. and Harris, J.A. (2001). Restoration ecology: repairing the earth’s ecosystems in the new millennium. Restoration Ecology 9(2): 239–246.

      30 Hobbs, R.J. and Norton, D.A. (1996). Towards a conceptual framework for restoration ecology. Restoration Ecology 4: 93–110.

      31 Hourdequin, M. and Havlick, D.G. (2013). Restoration and authenticity revisited. Environmental Ethics 35: 75–93.

      32 Jackson, W. (2011). Nature as Measure: The Selected Essays of Wes Jackson. Berkeley, CA: Counterpoint.

      33 Jordan, W.R., III (1985). On the imitation of nature. Restoration and Management Notes 3: 2–3.

      34 Jordan, W.R., III (1994). Sunflower forest: ecological restoration as the basis for a new environmental paradigm. In: Beyond Preservation: Restoring and Inventing Landscapes (eds D.A. Baldwin, J. de Luce, and C. Pletsch), 17–34. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

      35 Jordan, W.R., III, Gilpin, M.E., and Aber, J.D. (1987). Restoration ecology: ecological restoration as a technique for basic research. In: Restoration Ecology: A Synthetic Approach to Ecological Research (eds W.R. Jordan III, M.E. Gilpin, and J.D. Aber), 3–22. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

      36 Jordan, W.R., III, Peters, R.L., and Allen, E.B. (1988). Ecological restoration as a strategy for conserving biological diversity. Environmental Management 12(1): 55–72.

      37 Katz, E. (1996). The problem of ecological restoration. Environmental Ethics 18(2): 222–224.

      38 Katz, E. (1997). The big lie: human restoration of nature. In: Nature as Subject: Human Obligation and Natural Community (ed. E. Katz), 93–107. London: Rowman and Littlefield.

      39 Katz, E. (2012). Further adventures in the case against restoration. Environmental Ethics 34(1): 67–97.

      40 Light, A. (2000). Restoration or domination? A reply to Katz. In: Environmental Restoration: Ethics, Theory, and Practice (ed. W. Throop), 95–111. New York: Humanity Books.

      41 Light, A. (2001). The urban blind spot in environmental ethics. Environmental Politics 10(1): 7–35.

      42 Light, A. and Higgs, E. (1996). The politics of ecological restoration. Environmental Ethics 18(3): 227–247.

      43 Loucks, O.L. (1994). Art and insight in remnant native ecosystems. In: Beyond Preservation: Restoring and Inventing Landscapes (eds D.A. Baldwin, J. de Luce, and C. Pletsch), 127–135. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

      44 Marshall, A. and Loveza, S. (2009). Questioning the theory and practice of biomimetics. International Journal of Design & Nature and Ecodynamics 1(4): 1–10.

      45 Mathews, F. (2011). Towards a deeper philosophy of biomimicry. Organization & Environment 24(4): 364–387.

      46 Mathews, F. (2016). Do the deepest roots of a future ecological civilization lie in Chinese soil? In: Learning from the Other: Australian and Chinese Perspectives on Philosophy (ed. J. Makeham), 15–27. Canberra: Australian Academy of the Humanities.

      47 Mathews, F. (2019). Biomimicry and the problem of praxis. Environmental Values 28(5): 573–599.

      48 Merchant, C. (1986). Restoration and reunion with nature. Restoration and Management Notes 4(2): 68–70.

      49 Mitsch, W.J. (2012). What is ecological engineering? Ecological Engineering 45: 5–12.

      50 Naveh, Z., (1994). From biodiversity to ecodiversity: a landscape ecology approach to conservation and restoration. Restoration Ecology 2(3): 180–189.

      51 Palmer, M.A., Ambrose, R.F., and Poff, N.L. (1997). Ecological theory and community restoration ecology. Restoration Ecology 5(4): 291–300.

      52 Palmer, M.A., Bernhardt, E.S., Allan, J.D., et al. (2005). Standards for ecologically successful river restoration. Journal of Applied Ecology 42: 208–217.

      53 Palmer, C., McShane K., and Sandler, R. (2014). Environmental ethics. Annual Review of Environmental Resources 39: 419–42.

      54 Pedersen Zari, M. (2017). Biomimetic urban design: ecosystem service provision of water and energy. Buildings 7(1): https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings7010021.

      55 Prager, R. and McPhillips, M. (2012). Ethics in river and stream restoration: biomimicry or charade? In: World Environmental and Water Resources Congress (ed. R. Graham), 1–7. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers. https://doi.org/10.1061/40856(200)342.

      56 Rheinhardt, R.D., Rheinhardt, M.C., Brinson, M.M., et al. (1999). Application of reference data for assessing and restoring headwater ecosystems. Restoration Ecology 7(3): 241–251.

      57 Rolston, H., III (2000). Restoration. In: Environmental Restoration: Ethics, Theory, and Practice (ed. W. Throop), 127–132. New York: Humanity Books.

      58 Taylor, P.W. (1986). Respect for Nature: A Theory of Environmental Ethics. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

      59 Turner, F. (1987). The self‐effacing art: restoration as imitation of nature. In: Restoration Ecology: A Synthetic Approach to Ecological Research (eds W.R. Jordan III, M.E. Gilpin, and J.D. Aber), 47–50. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

      60 Turner, F. (1994). The invented landscape. In: Beyond Preservation: Restoring and Inventing Landscapes (eds D.A. Baldwin, J. de Luce, and C. Pletsch), 35–66. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

      61 Wilke, G.E. (1994). Landscape restoration: more than ritual and gardening. In: Beyond Preservation: Restoring and Inventing Landscapes (eds D.A. Baldwin, J. de Luce, and C. Pletsch), 90–96. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

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