Troubled Waters is a collection of essays edited by Patrick Troy, Emeritus Professor and Visiting Fellow at the Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University. The papers are contributed by a multidisciplinary group of authors, from the fields of economics, history, geography, environmental and social policy and law. As a result, the book does not present a single theoretical or methodological approach and in this regard it is refreshing. The book is published by the ANU E Press; a publisher that makes academic output from the ANU freely available from its website, as well as for purchase through print on demand. Such initiatives in publishing and research dissemination can only be celebrated
Rod Giblett is the author of 30 books of fiction and faction (‘non-fiction’), including recently a b...
Review of the book: Writing on Water (David Rothenberg & Marta Ulvaeus, eds., MIT Press 2001). Intro...
At last we have a review of Texas water issues worthy of the name! Andrew Sansom’s Water in Texas: A...
[Extract] A successful international symposium of the same title was held at the University of Weste...
Australian cities have traditionally relied for their water on a ‘predict-and-provide’ philosophy th...
Australian cities have traditionally relied for their water on a ‘predict-and-provide’ philosophy th...
In the edited collection Water and Development: Good Governance After Neoliberalism, editors Ronaldo...
There are fundamental differences between the various ontologies of Australian First Nations peoples...
Bringing together an interdisciplinary team of scholars, this book seeks to illustrate how and why c...
Book review of Environmental Hydraulics of Open Channel Flows. By Hubert Chanson. Elsevier, 2004. 43...
A book review of Australian wetland culture: swamps and the environmental crisis. John Charles Ryan ...
Nearly half of the seven billion people on earth live within 60 miles of an ocean. Land-based cities...
This book is organized into eleven chapters and consists of three parts with different characteristi...
Crisis, what environmental crisis? Eric Neumayer examines the facts. Author reviews: Bjorn Lomborg's...
Water Wasteland, reviews federal water pollution control programs of the last fifteen years and prov...
Rod Giblett is the author of 30 books of fiction and faction (‘non-fiction’), including recently a b...
Review of the book: Writing on Water (David Rothenberg & Marta Ulvaeus, eds., MIT Press 2001). Intro...
At last we have a review of Texas water issues worthy of the name! Andrew Sansom’s Water in Texas: A...
[Extract] A successful international symposium of the same title was held at the University of Weste...
Australian cities have traditionally relied for their water on a ‘predict-and-provide’ philosophy th...
Australian cities have traditionally relied for their water on a ‘predict-and-provide’ philosophy th...
In the edited collection Water and Development: Good Governance After Neoliberalism, editors Ronaldo...
There are fundamental differences between the various ontologies of Australian First Nations peoples...
Bringing together an interdisciplinary team of scholars, this book seeks to illustrate how and why c...
Book review of Environmental Hydraulics of Open Channel Flows. By Hubert Chanson. Elsevier, 2004. 43...
A book review of Australian wetland culture: swamps and the environmental crisis. John Charles Ryan ...
Nearly half of the seven billion people on earth live within 60 miles of an ocean. Land-based cities...
This book is organized into eleven chapters and consists of three parts with different characteristi...
Crisis, what environmental crisis? Eric Neumayer examines the facts. Author reviews: Bjorn Lomborg's...
Water Wasteland, reviews federal water pollution control programs of the last fifteen years and prov...
Rod Giblett is the author of 30 books of fiction and faction (‘non-fiction’), including recently a b...
Review of the book: Writing on Water (David Rothenberg & Marta Ulvaeus, eds., MIT Press 2001). Intro...
At last we have a review of Texas water issues worthy of the name! Andrew Sansom’s Water in Texas: A...