Testimonials

“Gilbertz and Hall offer an engagingly written tour de force. The book is well-researched and rich in local voices. I have worked in the Yellowstone area, and studied sustainability, and came away with fresh insights about the dizzying array of issues, actors, and land uses in the watershed. They get ‘place’ right and avoid being parochial, by connecting local/regional phenomena to larger principles and extra-local forces.”—Richard C. Stedman, PhD, Professor and Chair, Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, Cornell University, Associate Director of the Cornell Center for Conservation Social Sciences, and Faculty Fellow at the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability

“This excellent book is an accessible and compelling way for students to understand the interconnected social, economic, and environmental dimensions of sustainability that communities are facing around the world. With descriptions of the complex practical challenges and opportunities of the Yellowstone River Valley based on hundreds of interviews with local people, Gilbertz and Hall demonstrate the legacy of environmental injustice and inequities while inspiring change through sustainability science and collective action.”—Jennie C. Stephens, PhD, Professor of Sustainability Science & Policy, Northeastern University, and author of Diversifying Power: Why We Need Antiracist, Feminist Leadership on Climate and Energy (2020).

“Finally, a comprehensive and in-depth case study that illustrates all of the threads of sustainability in a compelling context. Students will be able to grasp the interconnected complexities and challenges of sustainability because the authors weave a relevant and wellresearched narrative. This case study is an ideal teaching tool because it provides a seamless entry point to explore important concepts further and make applications to other, similar and maybe even more familiar situations.”—Jes Thompson, PhD, Professor, College of Business and Co-Director, SISU: The Innovation Institute at Northern Michigan University.

“Sustainability of place is the most relevant and resilient approach to creating sustainable systems. Gilbertz and Hall have created a masterpiece of regional sustainable planning, beginning with the people in a place. The complexity of the Yellowstone River Valley may seem exotic, but encompasses many of the same challenges of sustainability of Southern California or the Maharashtra state of India. Competing cultural, economic, social, and environmental demands drive complex decisions that can either erode or restore ecosystems upon which all other interests depend. How we understand and navigate these differences determines the outcome.

The very personal level of engagement of the people of the Yellowstone River Valley provides the texture and tone that define the potential for common purpose. Gilbertz and Hall demonstrate that the voices of the residents in a place contain collective wisdom. Their description of water conflict very effectively framed water as the common blood of communities that defines future resiliency, and the source of blood feuds that divide communities for generations.

The challenges of conflicting cultural values emerges as the primary theme of this remarkable work by Gilbertz and Hall. Sustainability is, as they clearly define it, about how we live together now and into the future. By exploring the challenges the people of the Yellowstone River Valley face living in a place together, and identifying pathways to reconciliation, they offer real lessons for sustainability that apply to our communities as well. This book is a model for how regional sustainability planning should be approached.”—Marty D. Matlock, PhD, PE, BCEE, Professor of Ecological Engineering in the Biological and Agricultural Engineering Department at the University of Arkansas and Executive Director, University of Arkansas Resiliency Center

..................Content has been hidden....................

You can't read the all page of ebook, please click here login for view all page.
Reset
13.58.116.51