The wonder of water : lived experience, policy, and practice
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Bibliographic Information
The wonder of water : lived experience, policy, and practice
University of Toronto Press, c2020
- : paper
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
Facing droughts, floods, and water security challenges, society is increasingly forced to develop new policies and practices to cope with the impacts of climate change. From taken-for-granted values and perceptions to embodied, existential modes of engaging our world, human perspectives impact decision-making and behaviour.
The Wonder of Water explores how human experience - including our cultural paradigms, value systems, and personal biases - impacts decisions around water. In many ways, the volume expands on the growing field of water ethics to include questions around environmental aesthetics, psychology, and ontology. And yet this book is not simply for philosophers. On the contrary, a specific aim is to explore how more informed philosophical dialogue will lead to more insightful public policies and practices.
Case studies describe specific architectural and planning decisions, fisheries policies, urban ecological restorations, and more. The overarching phenomenological perspective, however, means that these discussions emerge within a sensibility that recognizes the foundational significance of human embodiment, culture, language, worldviews, and, ultimately, moral attunement to place.
Table of Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Ingrid Leman Stefanovic
Part One: The Lived Experience of Water
Rain Queen
Kirby Mania, Simon Fraser University
1. Water Gaia: Toward a Scientific Phenomenology of Water
Stephan Harding, Schumacher College
2. Flow Motions and Kinethic Responsiveness
Stephen J. Smith, Simon Fraser University
3. Creaturely Migrations on a Breathing Planet
David Abram, Author and Cultural Ecologist
4. When Salmon Are Deemed Superfluous: Reflecting on a Struggle of Stories
Martin Lee Mueller, Rudolf Steiner University College, Oslo
Part Two: Water and Place
5. The Place of Water
Janet Donohoe, University of West Georgia
6. Engaging the Water Monster of Amsterdam: Meandering Toward a Fair Urban Riversphere
Irene Klaver, University of North Texas
7. Water and the City: Towards an Ethos of Fluid Urbanism
Ingrid Leman Stefanovic, Simon Fraser University
8. What We're Talking about When We're Talking about Water: Race, Imperial Politics, and Ruination in Flint, Michigan
Sarah King, Grand Rapids University
Part Three: Rethinking Water Policy, Practice, and Ethics
9. The Bonding Properties of Water: Community, Urban River Restoration, and Non-human Agency
Bryan Bannon, Merrimack College
10. Standing Rock: Water Protectors in a Time of Failed Policy
Trish Glazebrook, Washington State University and Jeff Gessas, University of North Texas
11. Phenomenology, Water Policy, and the Conception of the Polis
Henry Dicks, Universite Jean Moulin, France
12. Towards a Complexity Ethics: Understanding and Action on Behalf of Life-World Well-Being
Robert Mugerauer, University of Washington
Part Four: Closing Reflections
Conclusion: Looking Forward: From Poetics to Praxis
Ingrid Leman Stefanovic, Simon Fraser University
The Lure of Water: Four Poems
Dilys Leman, Toronto
List of Contributors
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"