Current interdisciplinary research and practice in human-environment interactions This volume
outlines current interdisciplinary research on the reciprocal relations between humans and the
built and natural environments. The expert contributors investigate topics such as
environmental impact on health and well-being identity and place attachment urban
sustainability and challenges linked to global or national environmental phenomena. Some
chapters reflect on theoretical contributions that offer alternative ways of thinking about
human-environment interactions while others focus on methodological challenges and
innovations. The quality and interdisciplinary diversity of the chapters makes the book a
unique contribution to understanding present and future human-environment challenges at all
scales and in all global contexts. It will be valuable to researchers practitioners and
policy makers across a range of related disciplines including psychology architecture urban
design and planning education sociology human and social ecology interior design and
geography.