![]() ![]() She loves trees, mysteries, and traditional recipes. Harini lives in Bangalore with her family, in a home filled with maps. The Bangalore Detectives Club is her first crime fiction novel. Her non-fiction books include Nature in the City: Bengaluru in the Past, Present and Future, and two books co-authored with Seema Mundoli – So Many Leaves, and Cities and Canopies: Trees in Indian Cities, which received the 2020 Publishing Next Awards for best English non-fiction book in India, and was featured on the 2021 Green Literature Festival’s honor list. She is internationally recognized for her scholarship on sustainability, with honors that include the 2009 Cozzarelli Prize from the US National Academy of Sciences, the 2013 Elinor Ostrom Senior Scholar award, and the 2017 Clarivate Web of Science award for interdisciplinary research in India. ![]() Over the centuries, the social function of lakes has changed from essential water reservoirs and locations of rich biodiversity to empty places valued for their ability to hold vast quantities of sewage, or as potential real estate gold mines. Harini Nagendra is a professor of ecology at Azim Premji University, and a well-known public speaker and writer on issues of nature and sustainability. Lakes constitute highly challenging contexts for the conservation of nature in the city. ![]()
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