Sustainable development

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

  • Use for records related to development that balances the fulfillment of human needs with the protection of the natural environment for the present and infinite future.

Source note(s)

  • LCSH

Display note(s)

Hierarchical terms

Sustainable development

Equivalent terms

Sustainable development

  • UF Ecologically sustainable development
  • UF Sustainable economic development

Associated terms

Sustainable development

9 Archival Description results for Sustainable development

9 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Community, State and Market on the North Atlantic Rim

Series comprises created and collected by Richard Apostle in the course of his study of the crisis in the fishing industries in Northern Norway and Atlantic Canada, which was funded by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and resulted in the publication of Richard Apostle et al., Community, State and Market on the North Atlantic Rim: Challenges to Modernity in the Fisheries. Record types include grant applications, reports and correspondence; publishing and editorial correspondence; secondary research materials; taped research interviews; manuscripts; and a copy of the published book.

Individual Transferable Fish Quotas

Series comprises records created and collected by Richard Apostle in the course of his study of the impact of individual quotas on the fishing industry in the Maritimes. Record types include transcripts of interviews with fishermen, completed surveys, draft manuscripts, notes, and secondary research materials.

Lessons from the abyss : reflections on recent fisheries crises in Atlantic Canada and North Norway / Richard Apostle and Knut H. Mikalsen

File also contains a photocopy of Richard Apostle, Bonnie McCay and Knut H. Mikalsen, "The Political Construction of an IQ Management System: The Mobile Gear ITQ Experiment in the Scotia Fundy Region of Canada," in Social Implications of Quota Systems in Fisheries: Proceedings of a Seminar Held in the Vestman Islands in May 1966.