1st Edition
Routledge Handbook of the Resource Nexus
In recent years the concept of the resource "nexus" has been both hotly debated and widely adopted in research and policy circles. It is a powerful new way to understand and better govern the myriad complex relationships between multiple resources, actors and their security concerns. Particular attention has been paid to water, energy and food interactions, but land and materials emerge as critical too. This comprehensive handbook presents a detailed review of current knowledge about resource nexus-related frameworks, methods and governance, including a broad set of inter-disciplinary perspectives.
Written by an international group of scholars and practitioners, the volume focuses on rigorous research, including tools, methods and modelling approaches to analyse resource use patterns across societies and scales from a "nexus perspective". It also provides numerous examples from political economy to demonstrate how resource nexus frameworks can illuminate issues such as land grabs, mining, renewable energy and the growing importance of economies such as China, as well as to propose lessons and outlooks for sound governance.
The volume seeks to serve as an essential reference text, source book and state-of-the-art, science-based assessment of this increasingly important topic – the resource nexus – and its utility in efforts to enhance sustainability of many kinds and implement the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals in an era of environmental and geopolitical change.
Part I: Understanding the resource nexus: Setting scenes
- The Resource Nexus: Preface and Introduction
Raimund Bleischwitz, Holger Hoff, Catalina Spataru, Ester van der Voet, Stacy D. VanDeveer - Appreciating wider environmental angles
Kaysara Khatun and Gloria Salmoral - Scales and the resource nexus
Corey Johnson and Stacy D. VanDeveer - Security, climate change and the resource nexus
Bassel Daher, Sanghyun Lee, Rabi H. Mohtar, Jeremiah O. Asaka and Stacy D. VanDeveer - Life Cycle Assessment for resource nexus analysis
- Linking society and nature: material flows and the resource nexus
- Resource footprints
- Input-Output analysis and resource nexus assessment
Arnold Tukker and David Font Vivanco - Material criticality assessment and resource nexus analysis
Gavin M. Mudd - Industrial Ecology Methods and the Resource Nexus
- Integrating environmental and social impacts with Ecosystem services analysis
Perrine Hamel, Benjamin Bryant, Becky Chaplin-Kramer and Adrian Vogl - Modelling practices from local to global
Enrique Kremers, Andreas Koch and Jochen Wendel - Global change and K-waves: exploring nexus patterns
Markku Wilenius - Foresight and scenarios: modelling practices and resource nexus assessment
Gerd Ahlert, Martin Distelkamp and Mark Meyer - Extending macro-economic modelling into the resource nexus
- The five-node resource nexus dynamics: an integrated modelling approach
Catalina Spataru - The resource nexus in an uncertain world: a non-equilibrium perspective
Shilpi Srivastava and Jeremy Allouche - Mining and the resource nexus
- Scarcities, supply and new resource curses?
Raimund Bleischwitz and Jun Rentschler - The international commodity trade: Stylized facts
Vincenzo de Lipsis, Paolo Agnolucci and Raimund Bleischwitz - Rare Earth Elements and a resource nexus perspective
Eva Barteková - Governing land in the Global South
- Elements of the Water-Energy-Food nexus in China
- The Energy-Materials nexus: the case of metals
Ester v.d Voet, René Kleijn and Gavin M. Mudd - Unconventional oil and gas production meets the resource nexus
Tim Boersma and Philip Andrews-Speed - Feeding Africa: Nexus-related opportunities, challenges and policy options
- The five node resource nexus at sea
Tundi Agardy - Urban metabolism and new urban governance
Corey Johnson - Eco-innovation and resource nexus challenges: Ambitions and evidence
- Green Chemistry: Opportunities, waste and food supply chains
Avtar Matharu, Eduardo Melo and Joseph A. Houghton - California Innovations @ WEN
- The UN, Global Governance and the SDGs
Maria Ivanova and Natalia Escobar-Pemberthy
Part II: Analysing the resource nexus: Tools and metrics
Ester van der Voet and Jeroen B. Guinée
Anke Schaffartzik and Dominik Wiedenhofer
Stefan Giljum, Martin Bruckner and Stephan Lutter
Ester van der Voet
Part III: Resource nexus modelling: Practices and future transformations
Alvaro Calzadilla and Ramiro Parrado
Part IV: International political economy and the resource nexus
David Humphreys
Julia Tomei and Darshini Ravindranath
Part V: Applying the resource nexus: Regional and Global Scale
Philip Andrews-Speed and Carole Dalin
Timothy O. Williams, Fred Kizito and Marloes M. Mul
Part VI: Governing the resource nexus: Emerging responses
Michal Miedzinski, Will McDowall and Raimund Bleischwitz
Blas L. Pérez Henríquez
Biography
Raimund Bleischwitz is Chair in Sustainable Global Resources and Deputy Director at the UCL Institute for Sustainable Resources, University College London, UK.
Holger Hoff has a joint appointment as a Senior Researcher in the Resources and Development Group at the Stockholm Environment Institute, Sweden, and in the Research Domain "Earth System Analysis" at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Germany.
Catalina Spataru is a Lecturer on Energy Systems and Networks and Director of the MRes course Energy Demand Studies at UCL Energy Institute, University College London, UK.
Ester van der Voet is an Associate Professor of Industrial Ecology at the Institute of Environmental Sciences, Leiden University, The Netherlands. She is also a member of the UN International Resource Panel.
Stacy D. VanDeveer is a Professor of Global Governance and Human Security at the McCormack School of Policy and Global Studies at the University of Massachusetts Boston, USA.
"The language of the nexus highlights the need for interconnected thinking between the natural and social sciences, and between the research community and decision makers. By bringing together such an outstanding range of thinkers and perspectives from across the world, Routledge Handbook of the Resource Nexus looks set to become an indispensable volume for all those engaged in these debates. It sets out with admirable clarity the theoretical, empirical and research underpinnings of this field, and will provide nexus brokers and boundary-spanners with the intellectual tools they need to achieve tangible progress." - James Wilsdon, Professor of Research Policy, University of Sheffield, UK and Director, ESRC Nexus Network
"No energy myopia, no water myopia and no food cry of alarm, but a great handbook addressing the mutual relations." - Ernst von Weizsäcker, Past Co-Chair, International Resource Panel
"This handbook provides a qualified response, given by key experts, to the recurring question of what the Resource Nexus actually means. That nexus is presented as a useful heuristic for addressing the new challenges of the Anthropocene and for evidence-based support of a sustainability transition. Integrative methods and tools for systemic resource management and governance are illustrated, adaptable to a wide range of thematic and geographic contexts and scales." - Prof. Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, Director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany and Senior Research Fellow at the Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden
"[the handbook is] a massive volume packed with 32 interesting and thought-provoking chapters researched and written by over 50 contributors" - Anton Löf, in Mineral Economics (March, 2019)