Environmental Problem Solving: Psychosocial Barriers to Adaptive Change
Human influences create both environmental problems and barriers to effective policy aimed at addressing those problems. In effect, environmental managers manage people as much as they manage the environment. Therefore, they must gain an understanding of the psychological and sociopolitical dimensions of environmental problems that they are attempting to resolve. In Environmental Problem Solving, Alan Miller reappraises conventional analyses of environmental problems using lessons from the psychosocial disciplines. He combines the disciplines of ecology, political sociology and psychology to produce a more adaptive approach to problem-solving that is specifically geared toward the environmetal field. Numerous case studies demonstrate the practical application of theory in a way that is useful to technical and scientific professionals as well as to policy makers and planners. Alan Miller is Professor of Psychology at the University of New Brunswick.
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Environmental Problem Solving: Psychosocial Barriers to Adaptive Change
Human influences create both environmental problems and barriers to effective policy aimed at addressing those problems. In effect, environmental managers manage people as much as they manage the environment. Therefore, they must gain an understanding of the psychological and sociopolitical dimensions of environmental problems that they are attempting to resolve. In Environmental Problem Solving, Alan Miller reappraises conventional analyses of environmental problems using lessons from the psychosocial disciplines. He combines the disciplines of ecology, political sociology and psychology to produce a more adaptive approach to problem-solving that is specifically geared toward the environmetal field. Numerous case studies demonstrate the practical application of theory in a way that is useful to technical and scientific professionals as well as to policy makers and planners. Alan Miller is Professor of Psychology at the University of New Brunswick.
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Environmental Problem Solving: Psychosocial Barriers to Adaptive Change

Environmental Problem Solving: Psychosocial Barriers to Adaptive Change

by Alan Miller
Environmental Problem Solving: Psychosocial Barriers to Adaptive Change

Environmental Problem Solving: Psychosocial Barriers to Adaptive Change

by Alan Miller

eBook1999 (1999)

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Overview

Human influences create both environmental problems and barriers to effective policy aimed at addressing those problems. In effect, environmental managers manage people as much as they manage the environment. Therefore, they must gain an understanding of the psychological and sociopolitical dimensions of environmental problems that they are attempting to resolve. In Environmental Problem Solving, Alan Miller reappraises conventional analyses of environmental problems using lessons from the psychosocial disciplines. He combines the disciplines of ecology, political sociology and psychology to produce a more adaptive approach to problem-solving that is specifically geared toward the environmetal field. Numerous case studies demonstrate the practical application of theory in a way that is useful to technical and scientific professionals as well as to policy makers and planners. Alan Miller is Professor of Psychology at the University of New Brunswick.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781461214403
Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York, LLC
Publication date: 12/01/2013
Series: Springer Series on Environmental Management
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

Table of Contents

1. Introduction.- 2. Psychological Processes.- 3. Sociopolitical Dynamics.- 4. Conventional Problem Solving.- 5. Pluralistic Competition.- 6. Single Visions.- 7. Toward Adaptive Problem Solving.- 8. Prognosis.
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