... chain in differentways, and often at different times and places.’ In summary, integrating SAGA into research is important in de-veloping a better understanding and awareness of the social and ... integrate social and gender analysisinto naturalresourcemanagement research. They point to the im-portance of ‘local’ history and context, and to the increasingly inter-locking ‘local’ and ... commonissues; writing studies/stories; and planning.KEY COMMON ISSUES In reviewing individual case studies and synthesizing the most strikingthings and the missing or underemphasized elements, nine commonissues...
... Liu(1992), and Jiggins and Roling (1997) have noted that all types of actionresearch promote individual and collective learning and increase individualautonomy and problem-solving capacity in a durable ... and so on. The natural resource management analysis takes as basic elements the natural resources at stake and the stakeholders who have some interest—directly or indirectly in the use or maintenance ... claim on the natural resources and that shouldalso be heard in any planning exercise. In short, conflicts do exist and arethe rule rather than the exception in terms of naturalresource management. If...
... waste incineration.Solutions to waste-generation problems include innovative uses of waste, improved waste management systems, increases in recycling, advances in landfill safety, and reductions ... increasingly pristine wilderness areas, displacing more bears and requiring more labor and capital to clear trails and install infrastructure. Likewise, additional bear habitat comes at an increasing ... wife Donna and my children Austin and Alexandra are to thank for providing inspiration and practicing patience. For thoughtful comments and checks of accuracy I am grateful to the following reviewers:...
... suggested guidelines forestablishing and managing a program to encourage research on sustainability,agriculture, andnatural resources in U.S. institutions and their developing countrycounterparts.The ... associated with maintaining current production levels,including the mining of trace nutrients, declining incremental response to increasedfertilizer use, pest resistance, and reduced returns ... design and field test systems ofsustainable agriculture andnaturalresource management. Research, thus, mustilluminate the principles and theory that underlie sustainability. Those general principlesand...
... Laissez-Faire Banking (London, Routledge, 1993).Consumer Protection and the Criminal Law Law, Theory, andPolicyin the UKTo what extent should criminal law be used to protect the consumer? In this important ... play in fulfilling these. Hethen evaluates the interests that consumer law protects, such as physicalintegrity and economic interests. In addition, he analyses the nature ofcriminal law doctrines ... actors,including consumers, have ‘perfect information’ about the nature and value of commodities traded. In reality, we know that consumers canface difficulties in obtaining and using information...
... Gumucio10COMMUNICATION ANDNATURAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT • EXPERIENCE/THEORY IntroductionUSING THIS BOOK This book has been written as a tool for people involved or interested in communica-tion andnaturalresource ... Ndangang, in the Co -management of Natural Resources: Organizing, Negotiating and Learning-by-Doing: In the past, many traditional societies formed relatively closed systems in which nat-ural resources ... social change, and a commitment to enhance rural people’s capac-ities in managing communication processes. FAO is interested in exploring this in therealm of naturalresourcemanagementand rural...
... emphasis on estuarine, intertidal harvesting of salmon. Beginning in 1973, I began inves-tigating a related set of questions pertaining to the process whereby the Kla-wock Tlingit had transitioned ... North Carolina, New England, and Newfoundland. In all of these cases the fundamental point of similar-ity lies in the close connection between local resources users and the envi-ronment in which ... to contribute to more effective and sustain-able approaches to forest managementin particular andnaturalresource management in general. A central strength (and weakness) to tek is the fact...
... hoes and other “grubbing”20 WEEDS AND INVASIVE PLANTSWeeds in Rangelands, 26Original Vegetation and Early Land Use History ofGreat Basin, 28Introduction of Cheatgrass and Fire, 28Invasive ... believed then and continue to believe thatbetter management results from the understanding of how plants interact wit heach other and their environment andmanagement to create and maintain weedpopulations.We ... completely in the seedling stage. Mowingor grazing in early spring makes little difference since developing seed ofthe species are readily viable and capable of germinating the following autumn.Even...
... similar in nature, forinstance harvesting of marine living resources, scientific research, and tourism. Asis the case with shipping, they too will often differ considerably in intensity and patterns.It ... America and the Law of the Sea’, in L. M. Alexander (ed.), The Law of the Sea: A New Geneva Conference. Proceedings of the 6th Annual Conference of the Law of theSea Institute, Kingston, Rhode Island, ... must bear in mind the close natural interaction betweenthe marine and terrestrial areas within the polar regions, all the while seeing thetwo polar oceans as integral parts of the Arctic and Antarctic...
... understanding lawand authority as it has operated in the past and maybe improved upon in the future.Indeed, law is, in Robert Cover’s words, ‘the projection of an imagined futureupon reality’.73 Law ... constructedindividual. Law is dependent upon tapping into ultimate reality and meaningas the moral, metaphysical grundnorm or foundation, if law is to be more than55 Lawand authority in space and ... parents:the world begins and stops with them. The first people and things we learn toname are the most intimate, and the order of naming and hearing names gen-erally coincides with the unfolding of the...
... 3ContentsAcknowledgmentspageviiiIntroduction: Romance and the ethics of expansion 1part i romance andlaw 151 Transnational justice and the genre of romance 172 Naturallawand charitable intervention in Sir PhilipSidney’s ... contingent of Englishmen involved in the planning and administration of settlements in Ireland, any legal rights or benefitsthat the inhabitants might have ideally had either to their own land ... Historical contexts: common law, natural law, civil law 1456 Roman Conquest and English legal identity in Cymbeline 1607 Love’s justice and the freedom of Brittany in Lady MaryWroth’s Urania...
... Case Study in Family Law- Making’ (1987) 1 InternationalJournal of Lawand the Family 133; Gibson, Dissolving Wedlock, p. 46.8C. Lasch, ‘The Suppression of Clandestine Marriage in England: the ... ‘Control overMarriage in England and Wales, 1753–1823: the Clandestine Marriages Act of1753 in Context’ (2009) 27 Lawand History Review (forthcoming).Introduction 13lawyers was rather more ... Moral Offences in England, Scotland and New England, 1300–1800 (London: Elek Books, 1972).87R. A. Marchant, The Church under the Law: Justice, Administration and Discipline in the Diocese of...
... environment. Ruhl,Kraft, and Lant outline the concrete changes inlawandpolicy needed togo further and turn thinking into action. This book is packed with intel-lectual excitement and practical promise.”—Gretchen ... cap-ital and ecosystem service values innaturalresource decision making will notnecessarily be a “win–win” for all stakeholders. Trade-offs are inevitable, and 10IntroductionRuhl-00-Intro ... Haiti and China, that are similarly depleting, throughpopulation and economic growth and poor resource management, natural cap-ital that underlies necessary ecosystem service systems. In bringing...
... Limdescribed it as tasteless. One Singaporean eats them for aches and pains in his legs. In a bizarre incident the buyer of a flat found itinfested with mealworms, and there having been some disputeover ... available only in early winter.9 Marvin Harris statesthat the insects habitually eaten in China include silkworm pupae,cicadas, crickets, giant water beetles (Lethocerus indicus), stinkbugs,cockroaches ... PressPrinted in Singapore1 2 3 4 5 SLP 05 04 03 02ISBN 981-243-388-0ivCengage Learning,Cengage Learninghttp://www.cengagelearningasia.cominfo@cengagelearningCengageCengage Cengage LearningFood...