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Campus Sustainability Month 2022: A Library Display of Electronic Resources

A library display celebrating the ASU 2022 Campus Sustainability Month. The display includes electronic resources available at ASU Library, many of them are open access.

eBooks

Cohen, Jeffrey Jerome. Elemental ecocriticism : thinking with earth, air, water, and fire. Minneapolis, MN : University of Minnesota Press, 2015.

Beckford, Fitzroy B. Poverty and Climate Change : Restoring a Global Biogeochemical Equilibrium. Routledge, 2018. 

Diavolo, Lucy. No Planet B: The Teen Vogue Guide to the Climate Crisis. Haymarket Books, 2021. 

Ely, Adrian. Transformative Pathways to Sustainability. Taylor & Francis, 2022. 

Gober, Patricia., and Barbara. Trapido-Lurie. Metropolitan Phoenix Place Making and Community Building in the Desert. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006. 

Keough, Noel. Sustainability Matters. University of Calgary Press, 2021. 

Mino, Takashi, and Shogo Kudo. Framing in Sustainability Science. Springer, 2020. 

Pfister, Thomas, et al. Sustainability. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016. 

Swilling, Mark. The Age of Sustainability: Just Transitions in a Complex World. Routledge, 2020. Taylor & Francis, 2020. 

The ASU Library acknowledges the twenty-three Native Nations that have inhabited this land for centuries. Arizona State University's four campuses are located in the Salt River Valley on ancestral territories of Indigenous peoples, including the Akimel O’odham (Pima) and Pee Posh (Maricopa) Indian Communities, whose care and keeping of these lands allows us to be here today. ASU Library acknowledges the sovereignty of these nations and seeks to foster an environment of success and possibility for Native American students and patrons. We are advocates for the incorporation of Indigenous knowledge systems and research methodologies within contemporary library practice. ASU Library welcomes members of the Akimel O’odham and Pee Posh, and all Native nations to the Library.