“…With its long experience analysing epistemological and theoretical ways of approaching the relations between society and nature, Geography makes important contributions to this debate. By emphasising environmental issues with a holistic vision, Geography consolidates Environmental Geography as it presents new arguments to articulate those relationships and provides the possibility to focus on the environmental system as an object of study (Achkar et al, 2011;Bocco & Urquijo, 2013;Lorda, 2011). Environmental Geography focuses on the analysis of the interrelationships generated in a specific space, understanding the environmental issue as the new paradigm of approach, and using the concept of environmental systems as 'complex systems that include physical, biological, social, economic and political institutional components, whose characteristics vary in accordance with different spatial and temporal scales' (Achkar et al, 2010, p. 1).…”