Environmental inequality can be measured and described in terms of distribution of environmental bads and vulnerability to their impacts (pollution, flooding etc.), distribution of and ability to access environmental goods (green space, healthy food etc.), creation of environmental bads (e. g. resource consumption, pollution and waste generation) access, influence on and participation in decision-making processes. Many socio-economics studies show the important unbalanced development of coast..
Coastal watersheds and nearshore marine areas are the most valuable and dynamic places on Earth. Hum...
Regional economic disparity and environmental sustainability are two prioritized areas of societal c...
Vast differences in environmental exposures exist between socioeconomic groups at the global, region...
In modern western democratic society the processes of governance are largely dir...
International audienceOver 60% of the world population lives within a 150 km belt from the coastline...
Social and economic inequalities can influence both the distribution of the costs and benefits from ...
Sorenson and McCreary defined coastal zone as the interface or transition zone where part of the la...
Les thématiques du développement durable sont omniprésentes dans les politiques d’aménagement. La ré...
Abstract: By respecting nature’s limits and investing in nature’s wealth, we can protect and enhance...
The aim of the paper is to explore methodologies for exhibiting ecological inequalities on a given a...
peer reviewedThe environmental dimension and sustainability- related issues have increasingly gaine...
peer reviewedaudience: researcher, professional, studentEnvironmental inequality scholarship has sou...
Formally evaluating how specific policy measures influence environmental justice is challenging, esp...
The coastal zone is a complex and finely balanced ecosystem contained within a relatively narrow ban...
Competing interests in land-use change trigger conflicts between institutional bodies, local residen...
Coastal watersheds and nearshore marine areas are the most valuable and dynamic places on Earth. Hum...
Regional economic disparity and environmental sustainability are two prioritized areas of societal c...
Vast differences in environmental exposures exist between socioeconomic groups at the global, region...
In modern western democratic society the processes of governance are largely dir...
International audienceOver 60% of the world population lives within a 150 km belt from the coastline...
Social and economic inequalities can influence both the distribution of the costs and benefits from ...
Sorenson and McCreary defined coastal zone as the interface or transition zone where part of the la...
Les thématiques du développement durable sont omniprésentes dans les politiques d’aménagement. La ré...
Abstract: By respecting nature’s limits and investing in nature’s wealth, we can protect and enhance...
The aim of the paper is to explore methodologies for exhibiting ecological inequalities on a given a...
peer reviewedThe environmental dimension and sustainability- related issues have increasingly gaine...
peer reviewedaudience: researcher, professional, studentEnvironmental inequality scholarship has sou...
Formally evaluating how specific policy measures influence environmental justice is challenging, esp...
The coastal zone is a complex and finely balanced ecosystem contained within a relatively narrow ban...
Competing interests in land-use change trigger conflicts between institutional bodies, local residen...
Coastal watersheds and nearshore marine areas are the most valuable and dynamic places on Earth. Hum...
Regional economic disparity and environmental sustainability are two prioritized areas of societal c...
Vast differences in environmental exposures exist between socioeconomic groups at the global, region...