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Expanding Peace Ecology: Peace, Security, Sustainability, Equity and Gender

Perspectives of IPRA’s Ecology and Peace Commission

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  • © 2014

Overview

  • Addresses linkages between sustainability, transition and sustainable peace
  • Focuses on peace, environmental education, community-based ecological restoration and ability expectation
  • Underlines the need to combat trafficking of women and children by transnational crime rings in Nigeria, a national security threat

Part of the book series: SpringerBriefs in Environment, Security, Development and Peace (BRIEFSSECUR, volume 12)

Part of the book sub series: Peace and Security Studies (PESECST)

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

  1. Ability Expectations and Satoyama Sustainability and Peace

Keywords

About this book

This book has peer-reviewed chapters by scholars from Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan, Mexico and the USA that were presented to the Ecology and Peace Commission (EPC) of the International Peace Research Association (IPRA) in November 2012 in Japan. The chapters address these themes: Expanding Peace Ecology – Peace, Security, Sustainability, Equity and Gender; Two Discourses on Global Climate Change Impacts: From Climate Change and Security to Sustainability Transition; Peace Research and Greening in the Red Zone: Community-based Ecological Restoration to Enhance Resilience and Transitions Toward Peace; Social and Environmental Vulnerability in a River Basin of Mexico; Mobile Learning, Rebuilding Community Through Building Communities, Supporting Community Capacities: Post Natural Disaster Experience; Transforming Consciousness through Peace Environmental Education; Building Peace by Rebuilding Community; Ability Expectations and Peace and on Satoyama Sustainability and Peace.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Center for Multidisciplinary Studies (CRIM), National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), Cuernavaca, Mexico

    Úrsula Oswald Spring

  • AFES-PRESS, AG Friedensforschung und Europäische Sicherheitspolitik, Mosbach, Germany

    Hans Günter Brauch

  • Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, Ithaca, USA

    Keith G. Tidball

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