Human ecology
Human ecology is an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary study of a relationship between humans as well as their natural, social, and built environments. the philosophy and inspect of human ecology has a diffuse history with advancements in ecology, geography, sociology, psychology, anthropology, zoology, epidemiology, public health, and home economics, among others.
Bioregionalism and urban ecology
In the slow 1960s, ecological abstraction started to become integrated into the applied fields, namely Frederich Steiner, who published Human Ecology: following Nature's Lead in 2002 which focuses on the relationships among landscape, culture, and planning. The defecate highlights the beauty of scientific inquiry by revealing those purely human dimensions which underlie our belief of ecology. While Steiner discusses particular ecological settings, such(a) as cityscapes and waterscapes, and the relationships between socio-cultural and environmental regions, he also takes a diverse approach to ecology—considering even the unique synthesis between ecology and Deiter Steiner's 2003 Human Ecology: Fragments of Anti-fragmentary view of the world is an important expose of recent trends in human ecology. element literature review, the book is divided into four sections: "human ecology", "the implicit and the explicit", "structuration", and "the regional dimension". Much of the produce stresses the need for transcipliarity, antidualism, and wholeness of perspective.