Reprint

Appropriate Wisdom, Technology, and Management toward Environmental Sustainability for Development

Edited by
November 2022
368 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5189-0 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5190-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Appropriate Wisdom, Technology, and Management toward Environmental Sustainability for Development that was published in

Business & Economics
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

The protection and maintenance of environmental resources for future generations require responsible interaction between humans and the environment in order to avoid wasting natural resources. According to an ancient Native American proverb, “We do not inherit the Earth from our ancestors; we borrow it from our children.” This indigenous wisdom has the potential to play a significant role in defining environmental sustainability.

Recent technological advances could sustain humankind and allow for comfortable living. However, not all of these advancements have the potential to protect the environment for future generations. Developing societies and maintaining the sustainability of the ecosystem require appropriate wisdom, technology, and management collaboration.

This book is a collection of 19 important articles (15 research articles, 3 review papers, and 1 editorial) that were published in the Special Issue of the journal Sustainability entitled “Appropriate Wisdom, Technology, and Management toward Environmental Sustainability for Development” during 2021-2022.addresses the policymakers and decision-makers who are willing to develop societies that practice environmental sustainability, by collecting the most recent contributions on the appropriate wisdom, technology, and management regarding the different aspects of a community that can retain environmental sustainability.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
metals; arsenic; pollution; Mexico; developing countries; landfill; urban solid waste; disposal; waste management; sustainable development goals; ethnobotany; human health; poverty; traditional knowledge; sustainable agriculture; wheat; seed rate; yield effect; dose–response; seed recycling; cost–benefit analysis; blockchain; SDGs; innovation; COVID-19; green recovery; scorecard; construction sector; economy; intersectoral linkages; VECM; forecasting; sustainable development; eco-friendly sound-absorbing material; corrugated cardboard; perforated corrugated cardboard; sound-absorption coefficient; sound transmission loss; transfer function method; transfer matrix method; multi-frequency resonator; self-compacting concrete; crumb rubber; strength; silica fume; response surface methodology; biodiesel; engine performance; emissions; natural feedstocks; production method; ethical marketing; extended marketing mix; consumer brand relationships; brand loyalty; sustainability; rice husk; power plants; CO2; emission reductions; Clean Development Mechanism; rural clean heating project; rural Gansu; sustainability; potential solutions; benchmarking; fisheries; aquaculture; food security; COVID-19; SDGs; Bangladesh; humanitarian logistics; pandemic; economic reactivation; spatial modelling; sustainable construction; waste management; construction waste reduction; modelling of waste (reduce, reuse and recycle); PLS-SEM; industry 4.0; circular economy; environmental regulations; manufacturing supply chains; COVID-19; Internet of Things (IoT); groundwater level; groundwater resource; groundwater management models; groundwater monitoring system; wireless sensor network; MENA Islamic cities; urban management; sustainable built environment; supplier selection; product life cycle cost; geometric mean weighting; penalty weighting; multiobjective linear programming; revised multichoice goal programming; n/a