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Human Ecology and Interactional Ecology
American Sociological Review, 1940IF VARIETY is spice, human ecology should be highly seasoned, for ecological literature contains an amazing variety of opinions. Biologists,' geographers,2 and sociologists3 have each claimed the field as their own. H. G. Wells identifies this ecological branch of study either with history4 or with a general synthesis of social studies centering in man'
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The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1972
Summary Problems of malaria eradication are discussed in terms of relevant human ecological factors. Principal human factors seen as related to the success or failure of malaria eradication programs are: poverty, ignorance, illiteracy, social deprivation, migration and local mobility of populations, differential exposure of populations to Anopheles ...
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Summary Problems of malaria eradication are discussed in terms of relevant human ecological factors. Principal human factors seen as related to the success or failure of malaria eradication programs are: poverty, ignorance, illiteracy, social deprivation, migration and local mobility of populations, differential exposure of populations to Anopheles ...
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Ecology, 1922
It may seem to some of us questionable that ecology should need to be brought into any special or intimate relation to considerations of human welfare (which is what I mean by humanizing ecology)-questionable whether the so-called practical bias is not already too pronounced; whether, indeed, ecology as it should be pursued and developed by its ...
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It may seem to some of us questionable that ecology should need to be brought into any special or intimate relation to considerations of human welfare (which is what I mean by humanizing ecology)-questionable whether the so-called practical bias is not already too pronounced; whether, indeed, ecology as it should be pursued and developed by its ...
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Human ecological intervention and the role of forest fires in human ecology
The Science of The Total Environment, 2002The present text is a summary of research on the relationship between forest fires and human activities. Numerous theories have been created to explain changes in forests during the late Pleistocene and early Holocene, and a general understanding has developed in the past 50 years regarding natural fire regimes.
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Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 1923
(1923). GEOGRAPHY AS HUMAN ECOLOGY. Annals of the Association of American Geographers: Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 1-14.
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(1923). GEOGRAPHY AS HUMAN ECOLOGY. Annals of the Association of American Geographers: Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 1-14.
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Annual Review of Anthropology, 1991
Human behavioral ecology may be defined as the study of the evolutionary ecology of human behavior. Its central problem is to discover the ways in which the behavior of modern humans reflects our species' history of natural selection. During the last two decades this approach has grown rapidly, involving researchers from all the major branches of ...
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Human behavioral ecology may be defined as the study of the evolutionary ecology of human behavior. Its central problem is to discover the ways in which the behavior of modern humans reflects our species' history of natural selection. During the last two decades this approach has grown rapidly, involving researchers from all the major branches of ...
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2017
Human ecology encompasses a broad field, contemplating the relationships between human societies and the biophysical environment. Investigations include anthropogenic impacts and feedback, mostly of non-Western and non-industrialized societies, or rural populations within more contemporary urban societies (see Oxford Bibliographies in Ecology article ...
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Human ecology encompasses a broad field, contemplating the relationships between human societies and the biophysical environment. Investigations include anthropogenic impacts and feedback, mostly of non-Western and non-industrialized societies, or rural populations within more contemporary urban societies (see Oxford Bibliographies in Ecology article ...
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The Relation of General Ecology to Human Ecology
Ecology, 1935"Our coordinated knowledge which in the general sense of the term is Science, is formed by the meeting of two orders of experience. One order is constituted by the direct, immediate discriminations of particular observations. The other order is constituted by our general way of conceiving the Universe.
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