Cover image for North by 2020 : Perspectives on Alaska's Changing Social-Ecological Systems.
North by 2020 : Perspectives on Alaska's Changing Social-Ecological Systems.
Title:
North by 2020 : Perspectives on Alaska's Changing Social-Ecological Systems.
Author:
Lovecraft, Amy Lauren.
ISBN:
9781602231436
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (754 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- 1. A Holistic Approach for a Changing North -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Transdisciplinary Collaboration in the Fourth International Polar Year: Connecting Studies of Arctic Change across the Sciences and the Arts -- 1.3 Scenarios as a Tool to Understand and Respond to Change -- 1.4 Contextualizing Alaska's Climate Change from Global to Local Scales: The Boreal Forest, People, and Wildfire -- 2. Indigenous Knowledge, Climate Change, and Sustainability -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The Anchorage Declaration -- 2.3 My Place, My Identity -- 2.4 A Changing Sense of Place: Climate and Native Well-Being -- 2.5 Values of Nushagak Bay: Past, Present, and Future -- 2.6 Food Systems, Environmental Change, and CommunityNeeds in Rural Alaska -- 2.7 Indigenous Knowledge and Global Environmental Politics: Biodiversity, POPs, and Climate -- 2.8 Indigenous Contributions to Sustainability -- 2.9 Climate Change and Creative Expression -- 3. Alaska's Freshwater Resources -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Alaska Freshwater Policy Development since Statehood -- 3.3 The State of Water Science -- 3.4 The Role of Fresh Water in Alaska's Communities -- 3.5 Planning for Change -- 4. The Arctic Coastal Margin -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Physical Environment of Alaska's Coasts -- 4.3 Humans in the Coastal Zone of the Circumpolar North -- 4.4 Case 1: Newtok, the First Village in Alaska to Relocate Due to Climate Change -- 4.5 Case 2: Flood Waters, Politics, and Relocating Home: One Story of Shishmaref, Alaska -- 4.6 Case 3: Finding Ways to Move: The Challenges of Relocation in Kivalina, Northwest Alaska -- 4.7 Case 4: Current Situations and Future Possibilities: Issues of Coastal Erosion in Kaktovik, Alaska -- 4.8 Case Studies: Summary, Conclusions, and Prospects.

4.9 The Arctic Coastal System: An Interplay of Components Human, Industrial, and Natural -- 5. Management of Living Marine Resources -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Marine Fisheries off Alaska -- 5.3 Climate Change Brings Uncertain Future for Subarctic Marine Ecosystems and Fisheries -- 5.4 Conservation of Marine Mammals in Alaska: The Value of Policy Histories for Understanding Contemporary Change -- 5.5 Addressing Rural Livelihood and Community Well-Being in Alaska's Fisheries -- 5.6 Tracking Changes in Coastal-Community Subsistence to Improve Understanding of Arctic Climate Change -- 6. Marine Infrastructure and Transportation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 A Historical Perspective on the United States Coast Guard Presence in the Arctic -- 6.3 The Arctic: A Growing Search-and-Rescue Challenge -- 6.4 Traffic Management in the Bering Strait -- 6.5 The Effect of Unregulated Ship Emissions on Aerosol and Sulfur Dioxide Concentrations in Southwestern Alaska -- 6.6 Strengthening Institutions for Stakeholder Involvement and Ecosystem-Based Management in the US Arctic Offshore -- 6.7 Futures of Arctic Marine Transport 2030: An Explorative Scenario Approach -- 7. Coastal and Offshore Oil and Gas Development:Balancing Interests and Reducing Risks Through Collaboration and Information Exchange -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Analysis of the Arctic Council Oil and Gas Assessment, Oil and Gas Guidelines, and the Prospective Role of the Arctic Council -- 7.3 The Need for International Cooperation in Offshore Oiland Gas -- 7.4 Technological Frontiers for Offshore Oil and Gas -- 7.5 The Role of Local and Indigenous Knowledge in Arctic Offshore Oil and Gas Development, Environmental Hazard Mitigation, and Emergency Response -- 7.6 Local Perspectives on the Future of Offshore Oil and Gas in Northern Alaska -- 8. Expressions of Climate Change in the Arts -- 8.1 Introduction.

8.2 Global Warming and Art -- 8.3 Dry Ice: Artists and the Landscape -- 8.4 Social Climate Change of Alutiiq Dance Forms -- 8.5 Seeing Change: A Filmmaker's Approach to Climate Change -- 8.6 The Syntax of Snow: Musical Ecoacoustics of a Changing Arctic -- 8.7 Climate Change as Telematic Art -- 8.8 A Long-View Perspective on Collaborative Filmmaking -- 9. Planning for Northern Futures -- Acknowledgments -- Index of Authors and Coauthors -- Index.
Abstract:
Originating from a series of workshops held at the Alaska Forum of the Fourth International Polar Year, this interdisciplinary volume addresses a host of current concerns regarding the ecology and rapid transformation of the arctic. Concentrating on the most important linked social-ecological systems, including fresh water, marine resources, and oil and gas development, this volume explores opportunities for sustainable development from a variety of perspectives, among them social sciences, natural and applied sciences, and the arts. Individual chapters highlight expressions of climate change in dance, music, and film, as well as from an indigenous knowledge-based perspective.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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