Water Resilience for Human Prosperity

Hardback

Main Details

Title Water Resilience for Human Prosperity
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Johan Rockstroem
By (author) Malin Falkenmark
By (author) Carl Folke
By (author) Mats Lannerstad
By (author) Jennie Barron
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:311
Dimensions(mm): Height 253,Width 213
ISBN/Barcode 9781107024199
ClassificationsDewey:333.91
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Illustrations 12 Tables, color; 116 Halftones, color

Publishing Details

Publisher Cambridge University Press
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publication Date 27 March 2014
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

The world's human population now constitutes the largest driving force of changes to the biosphere. Emerging water challenges require new ideas for governance and management of water resources in the context of rapid global change. This book presents a new approach to water resources, addressing global sustainability and focusing on socio-ecological resilience to changes. Topics covered include the risks of unexpected change, human impacts and dependence on global water, the prospects for feeding the world's population by 2050, and a pathway for the future. The book's innovative and integrated approach links green and blue freshwater with terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem functions and use. It also links changes arising from land-use alteration with the impacts of those changes on social-ecological systems and ecosystem services. This is an important, state-of-the-art resource for academic researchers and water resource professionals, and a key reference for graduate students studying water resource governance and management.

Author Biography

Johan Rockstroem is the Executive Director of the Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC) and a leading scientist on global water resources and sustainable development. He has more than 15 years' experience of research on agriculture, water resources and ecosystem services, and over 100 research publications with more than 50 peer-reviewed scientific articles and several books in the fields of global environmental change, resilience and sustainability, agricultural water management, global water resources and food production. He has served as advisor to several international organizations and governments. Professor Rockstroem currently serves on many international committees and boards, including leading the ICSU task team on the future vision for global change research. Malin Falkenmark is currently with the Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC) and the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI). She is a future-oriented scientist and a pioneer of interdisciplinary environmental and water research. Her deepest interests lie in the linkages between land/water/ecosystems, particularly as they relate to water scarcity, regional similarities and differences, and their policy implications. She has introduced three broadly used concepts: the water scarcity indicator, the concepts of green and blue water, and hydrosolidarity. Professor Falkenmark has held several high level posts on international boards and committees, and has received several international awards, including the Rachel Carson Prize and the Volvo Environmental Prize. Carl Folke is based at the Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC). He is a systems thinker and a pioneer in interdisciplinary and integrative science for sustainability, having contributed to the development of new concepts in science, policy and practice such as resilience and social-ecological systems. Dr Folke's work has focused on the essential role of life-support ecosystems as a prerequisite for societal development in over 240 scientific publications and 12 books, including contributions on freshwater management, biodiversity and ecosystem services. He is actively engaged with international research programmes and scientific advisory roles to leading research institutes, organizations, and other actors in science, policy and practice. Mats Lannerstad is a Research Fellow at the Stockholm Environmental Institute (SEI) and a Scientist at the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI). His research is focused on freshwater in relation to the global food system, including freshwater requirements for food security on multiple scales. A key focus is the dietary change towards more animal source foods following rising affluence and urbanization, and the linkages between livestock production and the use of different water sources. Dr Lannerstad has authored 11 peer-reviewed publications, 3 books/book chapters and several research reports. Jennie Barron is a Senior Research Associate at the Stockholm Environmental Institute (SEI) and a researcher at the Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC). Her research is applying systems approach on farm and landscape production for livelihood improvements, food security and ecosystems services to advice on opportunities in development and investments. Dr Barron has authored or co-authored more than 25 peer-reviewed publications, and developed various outreach communications of research for development and policy at local, national and international levels. Elin Enfors is a researcher at the Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC). Her main interest concerns pathways to transformation in agro-ecosystems, with a special focus on how ecosystem services generated in these systems can contribute to poverty alleviation. She has a background in systems ecology, and as part of her postdoctoral work has investigated whether increased agro-ecological productivity in the West Africa Sahel would help smallholders there escape persistent poverty. She has extensive experience of field research from Africa, and a keen interest in participatory research. Line Gordon is an Associate Professor and Deputy Science Director at the Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC) and leads the Landscape research theme. Her research centres on interactions among freshwater resources, ecosystem services and food production, with a focus on how resilience thinking can enable better management of these resources. Dr Gordon has published over 20 peer-reviewed papers and book chapters in a wide range of journals. She has extensive international experience and is conducting transdisciplinary research with strong interest in the interface of science and society. Jens Heinke is a Research Fellow and doctoral candidate at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). He primarily works with the Lund-Potsdam-Jena dynamic global vegetation model (LPJ), both as a developer and analyst. His research is focussed on global change impacts on the water cycle with an emphasis on water resources, food production and livestock production. He also works on mapping and understanding the flows and linkages in the global food system, and has written 20 scientific papers and several research reports. Holger Hoff is a Senior Research Fellow at the Stockholm Environmental Institute (SEI) and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). His research focus is on climate impacts and adaptation in water, agriculture and natural ecosystems, and integrated water and natural resource management, globally and in the MENA and sub-Saharan Africa regions. He coordinates the Nexus Initiative at SEI, applying WEAP and other Nexus tools. Mr Hoff is the author of more than 20 peer-reviewed publications, about 10 book chapters and numerous research reports and policy papers. Claudia Pahl-Wostl is Professor for Resources Management and Director of the Institute for Environmental Systems Research at the University of Osnabruck, Germany. Her major research interests are adaptive governance and management of water resources, social and societal learning and their role in transformation processes towards sustainability, global water governance and multi-level governance systems and conceptual and methodological frameworks to analyse social-ecological systems. She is the co-author of numerous papers in peer-reviewed journals, chapters in edited books, policy briefs and popular reports, and has also edited three books and twelve special issues in peer-reviewed journals.

Reviews

'Valuable for academic researchers, professionals in water resources management, and graduate students ... Highly recommended.' E. S. Norman, Choice