Journal title
ISSN: 2071-1050    frecuency : 1   format : Electrónica

Issues

      see all issue


Skip Navigation Links.

Volume 5 Part 6 Year 2013

27 articles in this issue 

Aaron Gillich

Any attempts to limit the impacts of climate change must maximize the potential for energy efficiency in existing dwellings. Retrofitting the existing stock of aging and inefficient dwellings is a challenge on many fronts. A number of programs have been p... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Joshua Farley, Matthew Burke, Gary Flomenhoft, Brian Kelly, D. Forrest Murray, Stephen Posner, Matthew Putnam, Adam Scanlan and Aaron Witham

Current macroeconomic policy promotes continuous economic growth. Unemployment, poverty and debt are associated with insufficient growth. Economic activity depends upon the transformation of natural materials, ultimately returning to the environment as wa... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Joseph R. Heckman

Published just over a century ago, Farmers of Forty Centuries or Permanent Agriculture in China, Korea, and Japan, served to document the viability and productivity of traditional agricultural systems that relied on composting, and complete recycling of a... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Richard Osbaldiston

Within the field of environmental psychology, there are two distinct bodies of literature. First, there are experimental studies that have evaluated techniques for getting people to perform conservation behaviors. Second, there are theoretical studies tha... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Louise Staffas, Mathias Gustavsson and Kes McCormick

The onset of formulating strategies and policies regarding the bioeconomy can be, at least partly, attributed to the publication of the policy agenda on the bioeconomy by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development in 2009. The aim of this s... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Dorothée Boccanfuso, Luc Savard and Antonio Estache

In this paper, we present a distributional impact analysis of climate change policies envisaged or implemented to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Senegal. We consider policies implemented in developed countries and their impact on a developing country.... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Claire H. Luby, Alexandra H. Lyon and Adrienne C. Shelton

Plant breeding for organic systems is a growing field that is attracting a new cohort of graduate students in land-grant plant breeding programs. In 2012, the first Student Organic Seed Symposium (SOSS) was organized by and for graduate students and held ... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Cody Jones

An extensive economics literature has examined business environmental management to identify characteristics and external institutional stakeholder pressures that influence management decisions. Frequently, it is assumed that profit pursuit is the goal, a... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Madhu Khanna and Cameron Speir

This paper examines the extent to which there are differential incentives that motivate the adoption of environmental management practices (EMPs) and pollution prevention (P2) methods. We analyze the role of internal drivers such as managerial attitudes t... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Maggi W.H. Leung

In the name of sustainable development, skilled persons including scholars, researchers and students have become incorporated in the “sustainable development” visions and strategies of institutions, city centers and nation-states near and far from where t... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Heidi Norrström

Today, conservation work in our built cultural heritage has to be reformulated due to the new energy efficiency requirements put forward. On both a national and an international level, energy efficiency measures are considered key actions within sustainab... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Matthias Barth and Simon Burandt

Education for sustainability (EfS) poses new challenges to higher education as it necessitates various shifts: from teacher- to learner-centered pedagogies, from input- to output-orientation and from a focus on content to problem-solving and process orien... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Kes McCormick and Niina Kautto

A bioeconomy can be defined as an economy where the basic building blocks for materials, chemicals and energy are derived from renewable biological resources. This paper provides an overview of the bioeconomy in Europe, examining it from a policy framewor... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Dietrich Earnhart

This paper analyzes the effect of systems to manage environmental aspects on environmental performance at individual polluting facilities. Regulated polluting facilities are increasingly embracing pollution minimization strategies that involve the adoptio... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Peter Newton and Peter Newman

This paper examines the early phases of a 21st century energy transition that involves distributed generation technologies employing low or zero carbon emission power sources and their take-up within Australia, with particular reference to the major citie... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Seama Koohi-Fayegh and Marc A. Rosen

Much attention is now focused on utilizing ground heat pumps for heating and cooling buildings, as well as water heating, refrigeration and other thermal tasks. Modeling such systems is important for understanding, designing and optimizing their performan... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Lauren Baker, Michael Dove, Dana Graef, Alder Keleman, David Kneas, Sarah Osterhoudt and Jeffrey Stoike

Is “diversity” a modern concept, like indigeneity or biodiversity, which is conceived precisely at the time that it seems to be threatened and on the verge of disappearing? In the face of perceived threats to diversity, projects and policies have been cra... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Frank Fogarty, Amy Villamagna, Allen Whitley and Kelly Pippins

Many businesses today are striving to improve their environmental sustainability for a variety of reasons, ranging from consumer demand for “greener” products to potential cost-savings. For many business decision-makers who lack formal environmental train... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Mark Brown

In moving society towards more sustainable forms of consumption and production, social learning must play an important role. Making the assumption that it occurs as a consequence of changes in understanding, this article presents a methodology for mapping... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Adrienne C. Shelton and William F. Tracy

Planting sweet corn at higher densities may increase the canopy cover, reducing light transmission to the understory and suppressing weed growth. High planting densities can also negatively impact the crop, however, by decreasing ear size and overall yiel... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Stephen Morse

The Human Development Index (HDI) is often employed to capture some of the more social concerns in sustainable development at the scale of the nation-state. The HDI is founded on three components; life expectancy, education and income per capita. To avoid... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Lorena Muñoz and Vera Helene Hausner

Protected area (PA) coverage is used as an indicator of biodiversity protection worldwide. The effectiveness of using PAs as indicators has been questioned due to the diversity of categories encompassed by such designations, especially in PAs established ... see more

Pags. 0 - 0  

Tobias Bölscher, Erik Van Slobbe, Michelle T.H. Van Vliet and Saskia E. Werners

Bringing a sustainable population of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) back into the Rhine, after the species became extinct in the 1950s, is an important environmental ambition with efforts made both by governments and civil society. Our analysis finds a sig... see more

Pags. 0 - 0