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Stephen D. King has written 3 work(s)
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Cover for 9780300190526 Cover for 9780300205237 Cover for 9780300154320 Cover for 9780300170870 Cover for 9780792356868 Cover for 9789048152100
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Product Description: The Western world has experienced extraordinary economic progress throughout the last six decades, a prosperous period so extended that continuous economic growth has come to seem normal. But such an era of continuously rising living standards is an historical anomaly, economist Stephen D...read more

Hardcover:

9780300190526 | Yale Univ Pr, June 25, 2013, cover price $30.00

Paperback:

9780300205237 | Reprint edition (Yale Univ Pr, April 29, 2014), cover price $20.00 | About this edition: The Western world has experienced extraordinary economic progress throughout the last six decades, a prosperous period so extended that continuous economic growth has come to seem normal.

cover image for 9780300170870
Product Description: As the economic giants of Asia and elsewhere have awakened, Western leaders have increasingly struggled to maintain economic stability. The international financial crisis that began in 2007 is but one result of the emerging nations’ increased gravitational pull...read more

Hardcover:

9780300154320 | Yale Univ Pr, June 15, 2010, cover price $34.00 | About this edition: As the economic giants of Asia and elsewhere have awakened, Western leaders have increasingly struggled to maintain economic stability.

Paperback:

9780300170870 | Reprint edition (Yale Univ Pr, April 26, 2011), cover price $24.00 | About this edition: As the economic giants of Asia and elsewhere have awakened, Western leaders have increasingly struggled to maintain economic stability.

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The emphasis now placed on the concept of sediment cells as boundaries for coastal defence groups, and the development of SMPs, should help CPAs realise the importance of natural processes at the coast when designing defence and protection schemes. However, this will only be the case where defence groups exist, and where CPAs take up the challenge of developing SMPs. Coastal landscapes have been produced by the natural forces of wind, waves and tides, and many are nationally or internationally important for their habitats and natural features. Past practices at the coast, such as the construction of harbours, jetties and traditional defence systems may have contributed to the deterioration of the coast. English Nature (1992) have argued that if practices and methods of coastal defence are allowed to continue, then coastlines would be faced with worsening consequences, including: The loss of mudflats and the birds which live on them Damage to geological Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) and scenic heritage by erosion, due to the stabilisation of the coast elsewhere Cutting of sediment supplies to beaches resulting in the loss of coastal wildlife Cessation through isolation from coastal processes, of the natural operation of spits, with serious deterioration of rare plants, animals and geomorphological and scenic qualities (English Nature, 1992) A number of designations, provided by national and international legislation do exist to aid conservation.
By David R. Green (editor) and Stephen D. King (editor)

Hardcover:

9780792356868 | Kluwer Academic Pub, April 1, 2003, cover price $339.00

Paperback:

9789048152100 | Springer Verlag, April 1, 2003, cover price $339.00 | About this edition: The emphasis now placed on the concept of sediment cells as boundaries for coastal defence groups, and the development of SMPs, should help CPAs realise the importance of natural processes at the coast when designing defence and protection schemes.

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