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The book aims to facilitate the development of circular bioeconomy education, research, policy, and engineering practices in global communities to benefit undergraduate and graduate students and professionals. The book is expected to guide future farming activities, reshape urban-rural relationships, promote economic regeneration, and improve science-based regulations and policies to ensure socio-demographic justice and resilience in climate-vulnerable communities. The book will stimulate the investment in new natural resource-based industries and contribute to addressing the challenges of climate change, nutrition security, biodiversity conservation, and realization of the net zero emission goal.
This book is open access.
Table des matières
.- Part I: Strategies and Impacts of a Circular Bioeconomy.
.- What is the Bioeconomy and How Does It Make a Difference? An Introduction.
.- Circular Bioeconomy Systems: A Path Towards a Sustainable Future.
.- Building A Better Bioeconomy from The Ground Up.
.- Building Supply Chains to Create a Climate-Smart Bioeconomy.
.- Bioeconomy, Agriculture, and The Circular Economy: Opportunity and Challenges Lessons Learned from The EU Biomonitor Project.
.- Circular Bioeconomy Principles, Implementation, and Policy Framework.
.- Regenerative Agriculture Bioeconomy: A Concept Facilitating Transition from Circular to Regenerative Systems.
.- The Bioeconomy and Historically Underserved Communities.
.- The Circular Bioeconomy: Concepts, Opportunities, and Limitations.
.- Incorporating Circular Bioeconomy into The Sustainable Development of Small Farms in The United States.
.- Alternative Bioeconomy Strategies for Decarbonization.
.- Part II: Technologies for a Circular Bioeconomy.
.- Diversifying Agriculture, Protecting the Environment, Stabilizing Economies: The Story of The Black Soldier Fly.
.- Climate-Smart Technologies and Food Security in the Context of a Circular Bioeconomy from Adaptation and Resilience to Mitigation.
.- Feedstock Choices for Advancing the Bioeconomy in the US and Policy Implications.
.- Biotechnology and Microbial Genomics for Circular Bioeconomy.
.- Plastic Pollution: Challenges and Strategies.
.- Circular Bioeconomy Toward Net-Zero Urban Systems by Food-Energy-Water Nexus Approach.
.- Impacts of Progress of Artificial Intelligence on Circular Bioeconomy: Applications, Challenges, and Future Directions.
.- One Health-Centric Circular Bioeconomy.
.- Amplifying a Macroalgae Bioeconomy.
.- Bioenergy for Inclusive and Sustainable Economic Growth.
.- Part III: Circular Bioeconomy Practices in Latin America and Around the World.
.- China s Bioeconomy Transition: A Policy Framework.
.- Circular Bioeconomy of Argentina's Fruit and Vegetable Agroindustry.
.- The Case of Sustainable Dairy Production Model.
.- Circular Sociobioeconomy: Collaborative Governance and Grassroots Innovation for Sociobiodiversity Products in the Amazon.
.- Promoting Circular Economy in an Argentinean Producers Network.
.- Forest-based Amazonian Bioeconomies: New Opportunities and Old Challenges.
.- Sugarcane Bioeconomy and Circularity in Latin America: Progress and Future Pathway.
A propos de l'auteur
Dr. David Zilberman is a Distinguished Professor of Agricultural and Resource Economics at UC Berkeley. He received the 2019 Wolf Prize in Agriculture and was elected a member of the U.S. National Academy of Science in 2019. David served as the 2018-19 President of the Agricultural & Applied Economics Association (AAEA). He's a fellow of multiple professional associations and has published in professional and popular outlets. He has over 400 referenced journal articles ranging from Science to ARE-Update and has edited 30 books. In addition, he has served as a Consultant to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, USDA, the World Bank, FAO, MARS, BP, WWF, Shell and others. David got a BA from Tel Aviv University and a Berkeley Ph.D. David co-founded the Beahrs Environmental Leadership Program, the International Consortium of Applied Bioeconomy Research and is the founder and academic director of the Berkeley MDP program. David's research analyzes water, innovation, supply chain, agriculture, energy, and the environment. He has researched the economics and political economy of COVID-19 and of agricultural biotechnology, and the potential of the bioeconomy. During the last two years he has studied the economics and supply chain design of Black Soldier Fly waste management systems.
Résumé
The book aims to facilitate the development of circular bioeconomy education, research, policy, and engineering practices in global communities to benefit undergraduate and graduate students and professionals. The book is expected to guide future farming activities, reshape urban-rural relationships, promote economic regeneration, and improve science-based regulations and policies to ensure socio-demographic justice and resilience in climate-vulnerable communities. The book will stimulate the investment in new natural resource-based industries and contribute to addressing the challenges of climate change, nutrition security, biodiversity conservation, and realization of the net zero emission goal.
This book is open access.