How can the Earth's finite water resources be managed sustainably to meet the growing needs of humans and of nature in ways that avert the looming crisis? The pressing water problems must clearly be tackled from an integrated perspective taking into account environmental, human and technological factors and especially their interdependence. The key papers in this volume from the Bonn conference focus on the challenges of integrated assessment of water resources in the context of global change. The growing gap between North and South is also addressed, in terms not only of access to water…mehr
How can the Earth's finite water resources be managed sustainably to meet the growing needs of humans and of nature in ways that avert the looming crisis?
The pressing water problems must clearly be tackled from an integrated perspective taking into account environmental, human and technological factors and especially their interdependence. The key papers in this volume from the Bonn conference focus on the challenges of integrated assessment of water resources in the context of global change. The growing gap between North and South is also addressed, in terms not only of access to water and its quality, but also of the capacity to do research and implement solutions.
The coverage of the papers is up-to-date and comprehensive. Highlights include emerging concepts such as blue and green water, virtual water, the water footprints of nations, multi-agent modelling, linkages between water and biodiversity, and social learning and adaptive management. Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Artikelnr. des Verlages: 11888475, 978-1-4020-5590-4
2007
Seitenzahl: 380
Erscheinungstermin: 26. Januar 2007
Englisch
Abmessung: 241mm x 160mm x 28mm
Gewicht: 804g
ISBN-13: 9781402055904
ISBN-10: 1402055900
Artikelnr.: 23235771
Herstellerkennzeichnung
Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Autorenporträt
Eric Craswell, Centre for Development Research, Bonn, Germany / Mike Bonell, UNESCO Division of Water Sciences, Paris, France / Deborah Bossio, International Water Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka / Siegfried Demuth, Federal Institute of Hydrology, Koblenz and University of Freiburg, Germany / Nick van de Giesen, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
Inhaltsangabe
Shift in thinking to address the 21st century hunger gap.- A grid-based assessment of global water scarcity including virtual water trading.- Water footprints of nations: Water use by people as a function of their consumption pattern.- Transitions towards adaptive management of water facing climate and global change.- Stakeholder-driven, enquiry-driven, or stakeholder-relevant, enquiry-driven science?.- Learning Alliances for the broad implementation of an integrated approach to multiple sources, multiple uses and multiple users of water.- Possibilities and problems with the use of models as a communication tool in water resource management.- Integration of the biophysical and social sciences using an indicator approach: Addressing water problems at different scales.- Capturing the complexity of water uses and water users within a multi-agent framework.- Upscaling field scale hydrology and water quality modelling to catchment scale.- Linking databases of different sources and scales for groundwater research in the Urema River Basin/Central Mozambique.- Integrated water and food analysis at the global and basin level. An application of WATERSIM.- The adaptive integrated data information system (AIDIS) for global water research.- Policy implications of a pan-tropic assessment of the simultaneous hydrological and biodiversity impacts of deforestation.- Towards better water security in North China.- Towards transition management of European water resources.- Some foci of integrated water resources management in the "South" which are oft-forgotten by the "North": A perspective from southern Africa.- The GLOWA Volta Project: A framework for water resources decision-making and scientific capacity building in a transnational West African basin.- Integrating a climatechange assessment tool into stakeholder-driven water management decision-making processes in California.- Involving stakeholders in integrated river basin planning in England and Wales.- Integrated assessment of water resources: Australian experiences.
Shift in thinking to address the 21st century hunger gap.- A grid-based assessment of global water scarcity including virtual water trading.- Water footprints of nations: Water use by people as a function of their consumption pattern.- Transitions towards adaptive management of water facing climate and global change.- Stakeholder-driven, enquiry-driven, or stakeholder-relevant, enquiry-driven science?.- Learning Alliances for the broad implementation of an integrated approach to multiple sources, multiple uses and multiple users of water.- Possibilities and problems with the use of models as a communication tool in water resource management.- Integration of the biophysical and social sciences using an indicator approach: Addressing water problems at different scales.- Capturing the complexity of water uses and water users within a multi-agent framework.- Upscaling field scale hydrology and water quality modelling to catchment scale.- Linking databases of different sources and scales for groundwater research in the Urema River Basin/Central Mozambique.- Integrated water and food analysis at the global and basin level. An application of WATERSIM.- The adaptive integrated data information system (AIDIS) for global water research.- Policy implications of a pan-tropic assessment of the simultaneous hydrological and biodiversity impacts of deforestation.- Towards better water security in North China.- Towards transition management of European water resources.- Some foci of integrated water resources management in the "South" which are oft-forgotten by the "North": A perspective from southern Africa.- The GLOWA Volta Project: A framework for water resources decision-making and scientific capacity building in a transnational West African basin.- Integrating a climatechange assessment tool into stakeholder-driven water management decision-making processes in California.- Involving stakeholders in integrated river basin planning in England and Wales.- Integrated assessment of water resources: Australian experiences.
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