Conservation Choices


Book Description




Local Voices, Local Choices


Book Description

Local Voices, Local Choices: The Tacare Approach to Community-Led Conservation chronicles the stories behind Jane Goodall's holistic approach to conservation in Africa.




Choices for Conservation


Book Description




Making Good Choices About Conservation


Book Description

Conservation is an important part of being "green." It means taking care of natural resources, and making careful decisions to avoid wasting or polluting them. Today all natural resources (air, freshwater, soil, forests, wildlife, oceans, and biodiversity) are endangered. Through this insightful book, readers learn about the steps they and their families can take to help reduce air and water pollution and protect the soil, forests, oceans, and biodiversity. They discover practical ways to reduce their carbon footprint.




Conservation


Book Description

Charles Perrings and Ann Kinzig address the broad problem of conservation, the principles that inform conservation choices, and the application of those principles to the management of the natural world. Conservation examines how conservation choices are made and demonstrates how decisions of one person or one community at one time or place affect people or communities at other times or places.







Conservation Planning


Book Description

The authors draw on their extensive “hands-on” experience to provide an essential textbook for practitioners, students, or researchers of conservation, natural resource management, or landscape planning and architecture. This title provides the methods, tools, approaches, and case studies to plan a nature conservation project from inception to implementation and monitoring and evaluation. It draws on a wide range of disciplines and literature from conservation biology, landscape architecture, and land-use planning to decision science, natural resource economics, and sustainability. The book's primary audience is conservation scientists, planners, and practitioners in nongovernmental organizations; natural resource agency biologists and scientists; and professional landscape architects and land-use planners in both developed and developing nations throughout the world. With decades of experience as conservation planners, the authors have combined the fields of spatial planning (establishing priority places for conservation) and strategic planning into one overall planning approach. The book's underlying philosophy is that effective planning is really about making tough choices of where to allocate resources to achieve the conservation outcomes of a project, program, or conservation initiative.