FYI. Wil

Dr. Wil Burns
Co-Executive Director, Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment
A Scholarly Initiative of the School of International Service, American 
University
2650 Haste Street, Towle Hall #G07
Berkeley, CA 94720
650.281.9126 (Phone)
http://www.dcgeoconsortium.org<http://www.dcgeoconsortium.org/>

[cid:[email protected]]
Blog: Teaching Climate/Energy Law & Policy, 
http://www.teachingclimatelaw.org<http://www.teachingclimatelaw.org/>
Twitter: https://twitter.com/wil_burns
Skype ID: Wil.Burns
View my research on my SSRN Author page:
http://ssrn.com/author=240348


The Journal of Environmental Studies (JESS) is pleased to announce that 
articles concerning the Food, Energy Water Nexus will be available online and 
accessible to all readers until April 23, 2016. This Special Issue features 
selected presentations from the 16th National Conference and Global Forum on 
Science, Policy and the Environment, sponsored by the National Center for 
Science and the Environment (NCSE) in January 2016, from related NSF workshops, 
and from other endeavors supported, among others, by NSF, USDA, NASA, the US 
Forest Service, NOAA, the US Geological Survey, and the Environmental 
Protection Agency. Papers are open access at the journal's website, 
http://link.springer.com/search?query=&search-within=Journal&facet-journal-id=13412&package=openaccessarticles
 The conference, engaging approximately 1200 individuals from diverse 
disciplines and sectors, explored opportunities and challenges in applying 
science at the Food, Energy, Water Nexus. Papers in this issue assess the 
nature of human and scientific challenges raised by considering food, energy, 
and water systems together at scales from cities, to aquifers and river basins, 
to the entire globe. Many of the papers identify research agendas or address 
specific critical research challenges such as identifying appropriate 
questions, developing and using analytical tools, spatial computing, sensing 
and monitoring, and defining metrics at appropriate scales.

Additional papers address important environmental challenges at the nexus, such 
as resilience and human adaptations, engineering, infrastructure, sustainable 
ecosystems, nutrients, aquifer depletion, public values, mediating human 
conflicts, sustainable energy systems, engineering solutions, and integrative 
systems management. One paper argues persuasively for advancing a "Community of 
Practice" that develops the cross-cutting tools and skills for those working on 
the very diverse set of initiatives described in this issue. It is appropriate 
after reviewing so many challenges that the issue ends with a commentary 
providing "A Positive Vision of Sustainability."

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