

Daly, Ecological Economics: a Workbook for Problem-Based Learning, Island Press, Washington, DC, 2005.

Ring (Eds.), Ecological Economics of Sustainable Watershed Management, Elsevier, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2007. Gowdy (Eds.), Frontiers in Ecological Economic Theory and Application, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, 2007. Whaley (Eds.), The Great Experiment in Conservation: Voices from the Adirondacks, Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, NY, 2009. Kubiszewski (Eds.), Sustainable Wellbeing Futures: a Research and Action Agenda for Ecological Economics, 26 chs., Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, 2020.
DAVE ERICKSON ESQ COLORADO SERIES
Bloom is a four-part PBS series on the causes and solutions to water pollution and eutrophication in America's rivers and lakes, narrated by Academy award-winning actor Chris Cooper, and including interviews with environmental scholars Bill McKibben, Maude Barlow and John Todd.

He co-founded Bright Blue EcoMedia with documentary film producer Victor Guadagno and author Amy Siedl, the non-profit media company that produced the two-time New England Emmy-award-winning Bloom film series. Įrickson is also a social entrepreneur, starting and incorporating a number of non-governmental organizations and working intently at the science to policy interface. Society for Ecological Economics and the Adirondack Research Consortium past editor of the Adirondack Journal of Environmental Studies has served on boards of the International Society for Ecological Economics and Conservation and Research Foundation was a member of the Technical Advisory Committee of the Lake Champlain Basin Program and the Vermont Governor's Council on Energy and the Environment. He is also Adjunct Professor at the University of Iceland, was a Fulbright Scholar at the Sokoine University of Agriculture in Tanzania, and has been a visiting professor at the Pontificia Universidad Católica Madre y Maestra in the Dominican Republic and the University of Agriculture in Nitra, Slovakia. This work has been published in 5 books, over 70 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters, and over 100 conference papers, research reports, and press articles. His research contributes to ecological economic theory and applied work on human health, sustainable development, land and biodiversity conservation, watershed planning, forest management, climate change economics, and renewable energy. in Natural Resource Economics at Cornell University in 1997. Before joining the University of Vermont in 2002 he was assistant professor in the Department of Economics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, USA.
