A regular feature calling attention to important books and articles that CHN staff, board, and collaborating scholars are reading and recommend. Quot libros, quam breve tempus.
S. Alaimo, Bodily Natures: Science, the Environment and the Material Self (Indiana University Press, 2012).
B.R. Barber, If Mayors Ruled the World: Dysfunctional Nations, Rising Cities (Yale University Press, 2013).
W.E. Connolly, The Fragility of Things: Self-Organizing Processes, Neoliberal Fantasies, and Democratic Activism (Duke University Press, 2013).
S. Feinstein, The Just City (Cornell University Press, 2011).
K.J. Gergen, Relational Being: Beyond Self and Community (Oxford University Press, 2009).
J. Hackworth, The Neoliberal City: Governance, Ideology, and Development in American Urbanism (Cornell University Press, 2006).
A. Honneth, The I in the We (Polity Press, 2012).
M. Joseph, Fluid New York: Cosmopolitan Urbanism and the Green Imagination (Duke University Press, 2013).
R.W. Kimmerer, Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses (Oregon State University Press, 2003).
M.Z. Stange, Woman the Hunter (Beacon Press, 1997).
P.K. Tull, Inhabiting Eden: Christians, the Bible, and the Ecological Crisis (Westminster John Knox, 2013).