Ways to Help and Ways to Hinder:
Climate, Health, and Food Security in
Alaska
A Thesis
Presented to the Faculty
of the University of Alaska Fairbanks
in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements
for
the Degree of
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
by
Philip A Loring, M.A.
Fairbanks, Alaska
May 2010
Dissertation:
http://www.archive.org/details/WaysToHelpAndWaysToHinderClimateHealthAndFoodSecurityInAlaska
(4.48 MB)
Video of Defense Abstract:
This dissertation explores various ecological, socioeconomic, sociopolitical,
physical dimensions food security in Alaska. The context for this work
is dramatic climatic change and ongoing demographic, socioeconomic and
cultural transitions in Alaska's rural and urban communities. The unifying
focus of the papers included here are human health. I provide multiple
perspectives on how human health relates to community and ecosystem health,
and of the roles of managers, policy makers, and researchers can play
in supporting positive health outcomes. Topics include methylmercury (MeHg)
contamination of wild fish, the impacts of changes to Alaskan landscapes
and seascapes on subsistence and commercial activities, and on ways to
design sustainable natural resource policies and co-management regimes
such that they mimic natural systems. The operating premise of this work
is that sustainability is ostensibly a matter of human health; the finding
is that human health can provide asocial and ecological sustainability
research.
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