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Dealing with the risks of climate change and disaster is a political process. It produces winners and losers, mobility and permanence, radical change and continuity, relief and suffering. For some, it ultimately leads to life or death. Yet consultants, academics, humanitarian agents, and politicians often simply propose well-intentioned ideas—resilience, sustainability, community participation, emergency shelter, green development—while failing to perceive the blind spots and unintended consequences of such approaches.Debating Disaster Risk brings together leading global experts to explore the controversies that emerge—and the tough decisions that must be made—when cities, people, and the environment are at risk. Scholars and practitioners discuss the challenges of reducing vulnerability and rebuilding after destruction in an accessible and lively debate format, with commentary by researchers, students, and development workers from across the world. They emphasize the ethical consequences of decisions about how cities and communities should prepare for and react to disasters, considering issues such as housing, environmental protection, urban development, and infrastructure recovery.A valuable resource for scholars, students, and practitioners in a variety of fields, this book provides an in-depth analysis of the difficult choices we face in dealing with disasters. As climate change accelerates, Debating Disaster Risk invites readers to grapple with the most pressing controversies.
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La quatrième de couverture indique : "L'hydrologie est la science qui étudie les eaux terrestres, leur origine, leur mouvement et leur répartition sur notre planète, leurs propriétés physiques et chimiques, leurs interactions avec l'environnement physique et biologique, et leur influence sur les activités humaines. Au sens plus strict, c'est la science qui étudie le cycle de l'eau dans la nature. Elle examine la distribution géographique et temporelle de l'eau dans l'atmosphère, en surface et dans le sol et le-sous-sol. Hydrologie - Cheminements de l'eau, deuxième édition, permet à l'hydrologue moderne d'explorer les volets scientifique et technique de l'hydrologie. Une description scientifique des phénomènes hydrologiques est offerte afin de proposer une motivation à leur étude, d'identifier les observations requises et d'assurer une compréhension de chaque étape du cycle de l'eau. Les éléments de chacune des situations d'apprentissage sont intégrés dans des modèles théoriques et d'application, et de nombreuses méthodes et techniques pour la résolution de problèmes hydrologiques sont présentées. En plus de fournir une description universelle de l'hydrologie, il couvre de multiples sujets dont l'estimation statistique des débits, l'exploitation des eaux, les systèmes d'information géographique et la télédétection. Il comporte, en outre, de nombreuses figures qui permettent d'en illustrer le propos, une bibliographie substantielle et quelque cent cinquante exercices. Ce livre s'adresse particulièrement aux étudiants de premier cycle universitaire en génie civil, forestier ou agricole, ainsi qu'à ceux de géographie physique, de géologie ou des sciences de l'environnement, mais aussi aux ingénieurs-conseils, au personnel des agences gouvernementales confronté à différents aspects de l'hydrologie et aux professeurs."
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Les récentes découvertes d’épaves de barges fluviales gallo-romaines à Lyon au Parc Saint-Georges, en 2003, et à Arles à partir de 2002, ont non seulement attiré l’attention sur la batellerie fluviale gallo-romaine mais aussi porté au premier plan des recherches le bassin rhodanien et le midi de la Gaule jusque-là peu présent ou même totalement absent du débat. Ce volume est issu d'une rencontre sur le thème de la batellerie gallo-romaine à la lumière de ces découvertes récentes organisée à Aix-en-Provence dans le cadre des Séminaires de recherche en archéologie maritime méditerranéenne du Centre Camille Jullian.
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Rivers are sensitive to natural climate change as well as to human impacts such as flow modification and land-use change. Climate change could cause changes to precipitation amounts, the intensity of cyclonic storms, the proportion of precipitation falling as rain, glacier mass balance, and the extent of permafrost; all of which affect the hydrology and morphology of river systems. Changes to the frequency and magnitude of flood flows present the greatest threat. Historically, wetter periods are associated with significantly higher flood frequency and magnitude. These effects are reduced in drainage basins with large lakes or glacier storage. Alluvial rivers with fine-grained sediments are most sensitive, but all rivers will respond, except those flowing through resistant bedrock. The consequences of changes in flow include changes in channel dimensions, gradient, channel pattern, sedimentation, bank erosion rates, and channel migration rates. The most sensitive and vulnerable regions are in southern Canada, particularly those regions at risk of substantial increases in rainfall intensity and duration. In northern rivers, thawing of permafrost and changes to river-ice conditions are important concerns. The type and magnitude of effects will be different between regions, as well as between small and large river basins. Time scales of change will range from years to centuries. These changes will affect the use that we make of rivers and their floodplains, and may require mitigative measures. Radical change is also possible. Climatic impacts will be ubiquitous and will be in addition to existing and future direct human impact on streamflow and rivers.
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"This book offers the first critical, multi-disciplinary study of how the concepts of resilience and the Anthropocene have combined to shape contemporary thought and governmental practice. Faced with the climate catastrophe of the Anthropocene, theorists and policymakers are increasingly turning to 'sustainable', 'creative' and 'bottom-up' imaginaries of governance. The book brings together cutting-edge insights from leading geographers, international relations scholars and philosophers to explore how the concepts of resilience and the Anthropocene challenge and transform prevailing understandings of Earth, space, time and knowledge, and how these transformations reshape governance, ethics and critique today. This book examines how the Anthropocene calls into question established categories through which modern societies have tended to make sense of the world and engage in critical reflection and analysis. It also considers how resilience approaches attempt to re-stabilize these categories - and the ethical and political effects that result from these resilience-based efforts. Offering innovative insights into the problem of how environmental change is known and governed in the Anthropocene, this book will be of interest to students in fields such as geography, international relations, anthropology, science and technology studies, sociology, and the environmental humanities"--