05412nam 2200649Ia 450 991100662570332120250710212007.097866110554799781281055477128105547697800805549380080554938(CKB)1000000000398916(EBL)330208(OCoLC)314398745(SSID)ssj0000269193(PQKBManifestationID)12050130(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000269193(PQKBWorkID)10243032(PQKB)10542122(MiAaPQ)EBC330208(EXLCZ)99100000000039891620070628d2008 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrWaste management for the food industries /Ioannis S. Arvanitoyannis[Oxford] Academic Press20081 online resource (1096 p.)Food science and technology international seriesDescription based upon print version of record.9780123736543 0123736544 Includes bibliographical references and index.Front Cover; Waste Management for the Food Industries; Copyright Page; Contents; Contributors; Preface; Abbreviations; PART 1 Environmental Management Systems: Applications and Potential; Chapter 1 Potential and Representatives for Application of Environmental Management System (EMS) to Food Industries; Current state of Environmental Management System (EMS) implementation; Emissions and wastewater management; Food industry and agricultural waste; Beverage industry; Fruit and vegetable industry; Meat and poultry; Agricultural waste; Effects of pollution on organismsGlass, chemicals and other productsEnvironmental attitudes and politics; Progress in alternative energy; Environmental impact assessment; Chapter 2 ISO 14000: A Promising New System for Environmental Management or Just Another Illusion?; Introduction of ISO 14000; The emergence of global environmental awareness; Technical Committee 207 (TC 207); Environmental management systems (EMS); Benefits of implementing ISO 14000; ISO 14000: a new approach; ISO 14001: what it is and what it is not; Similarity of ISO 14000 to other programs; Applications of ISO 14000; ISO 14000 and banksISO 14000 and governments/educationISO 14001 implementation; ISO 14010 - Environmental auditing; Brief presentation of new ISO 14001:2004; Overview of case studies reported on implementation of ISO 14001; Chapter 3 ISO 14040: Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) - Principles and Guidelines; The concept of LCA; The structure of LCA; Examples of LCA studies on food production systems; LCA case studies reported; LCA in the future; PART 2 Environmental Legislation; Chapter 4 Presentation and Comments on EU Legislation Related to Food Industries - Environment Interactions; IntroductionTopics/categories covered under EU legislationChapter 5 Presentation and Comments on USA and Canada Legislation Related to Food Industries - Environment Interactions; Introduction; US legislation for environment; Canadian legislation for environment; PART 3 Waste Treatment Methodologies; Chapter 6 Food Waste Treatment Methodologies; Introduction; Treatment methods; PART 4 Waste Treatment Methodologies of Foods of Plant Origin; Chapter 7 Wine Waste Management: Treatment Methods and Potential Uses of Treated Waste; Introduction; Wine waste treatment methodsMain applications/constituents to be exploitedChapter 8 Olive Oil Waste Management: Treatment Methods and Potential Uses of Treated Waste; Introduction; Olive oil production process and properties of OMW; Treatment methods; Uses; Disadvantages of several olive oil waste treatment methods; Inputs and outputs in olive oil industry; Chapter 9 Fruit/Fruit Juice Waste Management: Treatment Methods and Potential Uses of Treated Waste; Introduction; Treatment methods; Treatment of industrial water effluents; Uses of fruit wastes; Comparison of waste treatment methods; ConclusionsChapter 10 Cereal Waste Management: Treatment methods and Potential Uses of Treated Waste<![CDATA[The continuously increasing human population, has resulted in a huge demand for processed and packaged foods. As a result of this demand, large amounts of water, air, electricity and fuel are consumed on a daily basis for food processing, transportation and preservation purposes. Although not one of the most heavily polluting, the food industry does contribute to the increase in volume of waste produced as well as to the energy expended to do so. For the first time, nine separate food industry categories are thoroughly investigated in an effort to help combat this already acute probleFood science and technology international series.Food industry and tradeWaste disposalRefuse and refuse disposalFood industry and tradeWaste disposal.Refuse and refuse disposal.664.00286Arvanitoyannis Ioannis207563MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911006625703321Waste management for the food industries4389042UNINA05919nam 22004933 450 99667085860331620250822103505.03-8394-0072-410.14361/9783839400722(CKB)39693790500041(MiAaPQ)EBC32222964(Au-PeEL)EBL32222964(OCoLC)1525917271(Exl-AI)32222964(ScCtBLL)19c8a951-ab81-4962-8f37-0ed931f5a387(EXLCZ)993969379050004120250808d2025 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierContested Home Asylum-Seeking in Switzerland and the Politics of Belonging, Place, and Religion1st ed.Bielefeld :transcript Verlag,2025.©2025.1 online resource (293 pages)Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Contested Home 9783837669237 3-8376-6923-8 Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1Overview and Context -- 1.1.1Migration -- 1.1.2Home -- 1.1.3Research on Home -- 1.1.4Borders -- 1.2Migration and Churches -- 1.3Overview of Chapters -- 2. Explorations of Home -- 2.1Home as Place -- 2.1.1The Spatial Turn -- 2.1.1.1Space, Place, and Location -- 2.1.1.2Place as Being in the World -- 2.1.1.3Home as Process -- 2.1.2Home as Affective Associations -- 2.1.2.1Home as Absence -- 2.1.2.2Home as Narrative -- 2.1.2.3Home as Utopia -- 2.1.3Home as Personal and Political -- 2.1.4Vulnerability and Hospitality -- 2.2Home in Cultural and Political Contexts -- 2.2.1Heimat -- 2.2.2Swiss Migration Policy and Home -- 2.3Religious Threads of Home and Migration -- 2.3.1Home and Judaism -- 2.3.2Home in Islam -- 2.3.3Home in Christianity -- 2.4Engaging Home and Migration -- 3. Migration and Asylum‐Seeking in Switzerland -- 3.1The Context of Basel -- 3.2Migration Data -- 3.3Seeking Asylum in Switzerland -- 3.4The Asylum Process -- 3.5Swiss Citizenship -- 3.6Migration and Integration -- 3.7Home and Asylum‐Seeking -- 4. The Offene Kirche Elisabethen: History, Theology, and Context -- 4.1The Elisabethenkirche in Basel -- 4.1.1The Founding of the Offene Kirche Elisabethen -- 4.1.2The City Church Movement -- 4.2The Offene Kirche Elisabethen Today -- 4.2.1Membership at the OKE -- 4.2.2Openness -- 4.2.3Convivence -- 4.3Projekt DA‑SEIN -- 4.4An Open Church in Basel -- 5. Considerations on Research with Asylum‐Seekers -- 5.1Research in the Context of Migration -- 5.2Participant Observation -- 5.3Interviews -- 5.3.1Building Relationships -- 5.3.2Saying Yes -- 5.3.3Saying No -- 5.3.4Refusal and Agency -- 5.3.5Interview Scheduling -- 5.3.6Interview Protocols -- 5.3.7Language -- 5.3.8Home and Heimat in Translation -- 5.4Relational Ethnography -- 5.4.1Co‑production of Knowledge.5.4.2Practices of Pastoral Care -- 5.5A Relational Approach to Research -- 6. "A Piece of Home" at Projekt DA‑SEIN -- 6.1Welcome at Projekt DA‑SEIN -- 6.1.1Projekt DA‑SEIN: Motivations -- 6.1.2The Structure of Projekt DA‑SEIN -- 6.1.3Welcome as Openness to Asylum‐Seekers -- 6.1.3.1Volunteers and Openness -- 6.1.3.2Welcome as Affective Experiences -- 6.1.3.3Seasonal Festivals -- 6.1.4Program Leadership -- 6.1.5Program Volunteers and Welcome -- 6.2Ambivalence and "Being There" -- 6.3Helping at Projekt DA‑SEIN -- 6.3.1Customs and Practices -- 6.3.1.1Input Sessions -- 6.3.1.2A Focus on Integration -- 6.3.2Volunteers and Helping -- 6.3.3Home and Safety -- 6.3.4Learning German at Projekt DA‑SEIN -- 6.4Possibilities and Limitations of a Relational Home -- 7. The Place of Home -- 7.1The Location of Home -- 7.1.1Fuss Fassen -- 7.1.2Citizenship as a Marker of Home -- 7.1.3The Resources of Home -- 7.2Possibilities of Home in Switzerland -- 7.3Language and Home -- 7.4Relationships and Home -- 7.4.1Separation from Family -- 7.4.2Mother as Home -- 7.4.3Community as Home -- 7.4.4Complicated Relationships -- 7.5The Absence of Home -- 7.5.1Affective Dimensions of Nostalgia and Pride -- 7.5.2(Mis)remembering Home -- 7.6The Shifting Place of Home -- 8. Home and Agency -- 8.1Relational Agency -- 8.2Waiting -- 8.2.1Separating from Home -- 8.2.2Learning German -- 8.3Familiarity -- 8.3.1Bringing Practices from Home to Basel -- 8.3.2Creating Familiar Places in Basel -- 8.3.2.1The Rhine River -- 8.3.2.2Interviews -- 8.3.2.3Tactics -- 8.3.3Agency and Helping -- 8.4Creating Home -- 9. Conclusion: Contested Home -- 9.1Engaging in the Public Sphere -- 9.2Theological Engagements with a Contested Home -- 9.2.1Disrupting Isolation -- 9.2.2Grieving and Remembering -- 9.2.3Shared Vulnerability -- 9.3De‑heimatizing Belonging -- Bibliography.Katherine Kunz's 'Contested Home' explores the complex intersections of migration, religion, and belonging, with a focus on Switzerland's social and political landscape. Drawing on ethnographic research and practical theology, Kunz examines the experiences of asylum-seekers, the challenges of integration, and the role of religious communities in creating spaces of support and agency. The book emphasizes themes of home, relationality, and cultural identity, providing insights into the disparities faced by migrants compared to privileged individuals navigating the same systems. Intended for scholars, theologians, and policymakers, the work aims to foster understanding and engagement with migration and theological practices in dynamic contexts.Generated by AI.Religion and sociologyGenerated by AISwitzerlandGenerated by AIReligion and sociology362.8709494Kunz Katherine1830379MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996670858603316Contested Home4400683UNISA