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Index
Cover Title page Table of Contents Copyright Foreword Introduction 1: A Brief History on the Links between Health and Biodiversity
Abstract 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Millennium Development Goals for Ecosystem Services 1.3 From environmental health to “one health” 1.4 Formerly recognized links
2: Biodiversity, Cultural Diversity and Infectious Diseases
Abstract 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Distribution of infectious diseases: links to biological diversity and cultural diversity 2.3 Origins of parasitic and infectious diseases in non-human primates 2.4 The first epidemiological transition: "Out of Africa" human migration 2.5 Genetic diversity and human migration 2.6 Animal domestication 2.7 The beginning of globalization 2.8 Conclusion
3: Loss of Biological Diversity and Emergence of Infectious Diseases
Abstract 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Epidemiology of infectious diseases 3.3 Reservoirs of zoonotic infectious diseases 3.4 Emerging infectious diseases and the biodiversity crisis 3.5 Mechanisms of emergence through habitat modification 3.6 Mechanisms of emergence through community modification 3.7 Genetic diversity of hosts and transmission of infectious diseases 3.8 Conclusion
4: Loss of Biodiversity and Emergence of Non-infectious Diseases
Abstract 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Diversity, host parasite co-evolution and the immune system 4.3 The hygiene hypothesis and the parasitic diversity crisis 4.4 The "farm" hypothesis: biological diversity and allergies 4.5 Conclusion: towards an evolving medicine
5: Anthropogenic Stress
Abstract 5.1 Introduction: a planet dominated by humans and their animals 5.2 Impact of urbanization and road network 5.3 Physiology of stress and health 5.4 Effects of phytosanitation and biocides 5.5 Endocrine disruptors 5.6 Antibiotics 5.7 Conclusion
6: Biodiversity Response
Abstract 6.1 Introduction: how life has adapted 6.2 Anthropization and synanthropy 6.3 Resistance to insecticides 6.4 Resistance to genetically modified plants 6.5 Resistance to antiparasitic drugs: the example of artemisinin 6.6 Resistance to antibiotics 6.7 Evolution of virulence 6.8 New biotechnologies and evolution of resistance: Wolbachia, CRISPR-Cas 9 6.9 Ecological and evolutionary engineering 6.10 Conclusion
7: Animal and Human Pharmacopoeias
Abstract 7.1 Introduction 7.2 The diversity of plant secondary metabolites 7.3 Origin of self-medication in animals and hominids 7.4 Ethnobotany and traditional medicine 7.5 Bioprospecting, biopiracy and patents 7.6 Conservation biology and traditional pharmacopoeia 7.7 Loss of biodiversity and knowledge 7.8 Conclusion
8: Well-being
Abstract 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Objectivity and subjectivity of well-being 8.3 Psychology and the natural environment 8.4 Evolutionary psychology and well-being 8.5 Theories of habitat and visual refuge, topophilia and biophilia 8.6 Implications and applications of biophilia 8.7 Traditional knowledge and well-being 8.8 Conclusion
9: Ecosystem Services for Health and Biodiversity
Abstract 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Environmental impacts and well-being 9.3 Health of ecosystems 9.4 Ecosystem services 9.5 Ecosystem services and health 9.6 Ecosystem disservices and health 9.7 Compromise between services, economic development and health 9.8 Conclusion
10: Biodiversity and Health Scenarios
Abstract 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Prospects and global scenarios 10.3 Worst-case scenarios 10.4 Global risks and “preparedness” for the worst 10.5 Towards integrated scenarios 10.6 Observations and observatories 10.7 Experts and representation of knowledge 10.8 Conclusion: scenarios for research and governance
11: Governance of Biodiversity and Health
Abstract 11.1 Introduction 11.2 International governance of biodiversity and health 11.3 Regional challenges 11.4 Implementation at the national level
12: Ethics, Values and Responsibilities
Abstract 12.1 Introduction 12.2 Pluralism of scientific approaches 12.3 Some definitions 12.4 Humanist and human health ethics 12.5 Animal and animal health ethics 12.6 Environmental ethics 12.7 Applied and global environmental ethics 12.8 Ethics of foresight and scenarios 12.9 Confronting the ethics network 12.10 Necessity of pluralism of ethics 12.11 Conclusion
13: The Role of Law, Justice and Scientific Knowledge in Health and Biodiversity
Abstract 13.1 Introduction 13.2 Complexity, scientific knowledge and informing political decisions 13.3 For a law that is in line with reality: difficulty in implementing the principles of transparency, accountability and participation 13.4 Scientific knowledge used by citizens for environmental justice 13.5 Human rights and the right to science? Environmental and health challenges
Conclusion
Towards a socio-ecology of health Towards scientific pluralism Towards an adaptive law
Bibliography Index
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