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Integrating Agriculture, Conservation and Ecotourism: Examples from the Field

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  • © 2011

Overview

  • Provides concise reviews of current important and complex issues in agroecology
  • Assesses the present status of knowledge of the issue with regard to effectively moving toward improving sustainability
  • Identifies inadequacies, errors, and gaps in knowledge that may hinder or oppose effective progress toward improving sustainability
  • Discusses what, if possible, is needed to bring the issue onto a better track toward sustainability objectives

Part of the book series: Issues in Agroecology – Present Status and Future Prospectus (AGRO, volume 1)

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Table of contents (6 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

Issues In Agroecology – Present Status and Future Prospectus not only reviews aspects of ecology, but the ecology of sustainable food production systems, and related societal and cultural values. To provide effective communication regarding status and advances in this field, this series connects with many disciplines such as sociology, anthropology, environmental sciences, ethics, agriculture, economics, ecology, rural development, sustainability, policy and education, and integrations of these general themes so as to provide integrated points of view that will help lead to a more sustainable construction of values than conventional economics alone. Such designs are inherently complex and dynamic, and go beyond the individual farm to include landscapes, communities, and biogeographic regions by emphasizing their unique agricultural and ecological values, and their biological, societal, and cultural components and processes.

Reviews

From the reviews:

“This book explores the new frontier of agroecology, the fluid intersection of environment and agriculture. It is the first of an interdisciplinary multivolume series that covers the future of agriculture, the related fields of ecotourism and conservation, sustainability and environmental issues, and more. … Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals/practitioners.” (M. J. Stone, Choice, Vol. 49 (8), April, 2012)

Editors and Affiliations

  • , Suite 200, Cardno ENTRIX, Sacramento, USA

    W. Bruce Campbell

  • , Campus Veracruz, Colegio de Postgraduados, Veracruz, Mexico

    Silvia Lopez Ortiz

About the editors

Issues In Agroecology integrates agriculture, ecology, sociology, anthropology, environmental sciences, ethics, economics, rural development, sustainability, policy and education. The series approaches this complex panorama of topics by presenting authoritative, comprehensive, and analytical reviews from leading scientists in all areas of agroecology worldwide. Authors are invited and represent a collaborative mix to provide strong summaries and scholarly advances that serve as foundations for discussion leading to novel routes of research activity, application of management methodologies, and education and outreach programs. Each review is a concise and up-to-date synthesis of the rapidly growing quantity of scientific information within this highly interdisciplinary field. The authors for each review assess the present status of the knowledge as to whether or not it is effectively contributing to increased sustainability. As a part of this assessment, the authors identify inadequacies, errors, and gaps in knowledge that may be hindering or opposing sustainability objectives. For each review, the authors ultimately discuss what might be needed to bring work and programs onto a better track towards achieving sustainability. Such informed assessments of the routes to realize future potential go beyond the individual farm to include landscapes, communities, and biogeographic regions by emphasizing their unique agricultural and ecological values, and their biological, societal, and cultural components and processes. As a result of these efforts, this series is an essential part of the scientific method and a necessity for researchers, teachers, students, and field professionals when dealing with increasing global environmental and socioeconomic change. Issues In Agroecology is a highly citable series that is guaranteed to enlighten research teams, technology users, educators, students, and a general academic audience on the status and advances of agroecology worldwide.ody>

Bibliographic Information

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