This week’s selection is from Wade Davis’ brand-new book, River Notes.
Here's what author Terry Tempest Williams has to say about Wade's new book:
"The first six pages of this book will break your heart. The remaining pages will repair what has been broken."
The environmental justice movement is closely tied to urban planning and development. But, while planners and urban designers have made great strides in embracing the sustainability movement, social justice issues have not been getting the same attention. Of the three "e"s of sustainable planning—environment, economics, and equity—equity is the one most often left behind.
This week's selection for #forewordFriday is from the new book by Thomas W. Sanchez and Marc Brenman, Planning as if People Matter.
This week's #forewordFriday comes from twoauthors that want to expand the methodological toolbox used by ecological scientists, researchers, and students.