Final Report
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
Preliminary Assessment Waste Management
Executive Summary 1 The purpose of this report is to make a preliminary assessment of green jobs potentials in the waste management sector in Lebanon, including solid waste management, hazardous waste management and wastewater treatment. This report provides an overview of waste management in Lebanon, considers potentials for greening the sector, and estimates current and future green jobs in waste management. The current state of the waste management sector in Lebanon is far from ideal. Collection activities are fairly advanced when it comes to municipal solid waste, but insufficient for wastewater, and totally lacking for hazardous waste. Currently only two-thirds of the total generated solid waste undergoes some form of treatment, while the remainder is discarded in open dumpsites or directly into nature. Moreover, wastewater treatment is insufficient and Lebanon currently lacks any effective strategy or system for dealing with most hazardous waste. Incrementally, the sector is nonetheless changing. In recent years green activities such as sorting, composting and recycling have become more common, advanced medical waste treatment is being developed, and several international organisations, NGOs and private enterprises have launched initiatives to green the sector and reduce its environmental impact. Also large-scale governmental initiatives to close down and rehabilitate dumpsites and construct new waste management facilities and wastewater treatment plants are currently being planned or implemented, which will have a considerable impact in greening the waste management sector in Lebanon. In this report, green jobs in waste management are defined as jobs providing decent work that seek to decrease waste loads and the use of virgin resources through reuse, recycling and recovery, and reduce the environmental impact of the waste sector by containing or treating substances that are harmful to the natural environment and public health. -
Characiformes, Stevardiinae, Characidae) from the Pacific Coast of Northwestern Ecuador, South America
Animal Biodiversity and Conservation 38.2 (2015) 241 A new species of Bryconamericus (Characiformes, Stevardiinae, Characidae) from the Pacific coast of northwestern Ecuador, South America C. Román–Valencia, R. I. Ruiz–C., D. C. Taphorn B., P. Jiménez–Prado & C. A. García–Alzate Román–Valencia, C., Ruiz–C., R. I., Taphorn B., D. C., Jiménez–Prado, P. & García–Alzate, C. A., 2015. A new species of Bryconamericus (Characiformes, Stevardiinae, Characidae) from the Pacific coast of northwestern Ecuador, South America. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation, 38.2: 241–252, Doi: https://doi.org/10.32800/ abc.2015.38.0241 Abstract A new species of Bryconamericus (Characiformes, Stevardiinae, Characidae) from the Pacific coast of northwes- tern Ecuador, South America.— A new species of Bryconamericus (Characiformes, Characidae, Stevardiinae) is described from the Pacific coast of northwestern Ecuador, South America. The new species is distinguished from all congeners by the presence in males of bony hooks on the caudal fin rays (vs. absence). The different layers of pigment that constitute the humeral spots have differing degrees of development and structure that are independent of each other. Brown melanophores are distributed in a thin, vertical, superficial layer of the epithelium (layer 1) and in another deeper (layer 2) that overlaps the first and is centered over the lateral–line. B. ecuadorensis has a horizontally oval or elliptical shape layer 2 pigment in the anterior humeral spot (vs. a rectangular or circular layer 2). The new species further differs in having an anterior extension of the caudal peduncle spot (vs. no anterior extension of the caudal peduncle spot) and by having a dark lateral stripe overlaid by the peduncular spot and by the regularly distributed pigmentation on scales on the sides of the body (vs. -
Discursive and Practical Challenges in Global Health: Pesticide- Related Health Impacts in Ecuadorian Banana Production
DISCURSIVE AND PRACTICAL CHALLENGES IN GLOBAL HEALTH: PESTICIDE- RELATED HEALTH IMPACTS IN ECUADORIAN BANANA PRODUCTION by BENJAMIN WESLEY BRISBOIS B.Sc. McGill University, 2001 M.E.S. York University, 2006 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL STUDIES (Healthcare and Epidemiology) THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver) October 2014 © Benjamin Wesley Brisbois, 2014 Abstract This dissertation aims to inform more equitable and effective practice in the emerging field of global health. To address this overriding question of how principles of equity and effectiveness can best be implemented, I critically analyze discursive and practical challenges facing Northern researchers as they approach health problems in the global South, and explore solutions to these challenges. This exploration employs a case study on the articulation of a specific problem in a specific, nominally ‘Southern’, setting: pesticide- related health effects in Ecuador's banana-producing El Oro province. I employ three methodological approaches, in three substantive chapters. Chapter 2 uses discourse analysis to understand how Latin American research sites are framed in peer-reviewed pesticide epidemiology articles. These articles often employ geographic representations of Latin America as inexplicably underdeveloped to demonstrate the need for pesticide research and health sector interventions, typically exhibiting ‘mainstream’ (Northern) public health institutional dynamics. I also show how some epidemiologists are pursuing more politically engaged approaches, in an uneasy negotiation with epidemiology's disciplinary norms. Chapter 3 reports on ethnographic pesticide risk perception work in El Oro, drawing on theories from anthropology and human geography. -
Towards Food Sovereignty Reclaiming Autonomous Food Systems
Towards Food Sovereignty Reclaiming autonomous food systems Michel Pimbert Reclaiming Diversi TY & CiTizensHip Towards Food Sovereignty Reclaiming autonomous food systems Michel Pimbert Table of Contents Chapter 7. Transforming knowledge and ways of knowing ........................................................................................................................3 7.1. Introduction...............................................................................................................................................................................................3 7.2. Transforming knowledge..........................................................................................................................................................................6 7.2.1. Beyond reductionism and the neglect of dynamic complexity ..........................................................................................6 7.2.2. Overcoming myths about people and environment relations .........................................................................................10 7.2.3. Decolonising economics......................................................................................................................................................17 7.3. Transforming ways of knowing..............................................................................................................................................................22 7.3.1. Inventing more democratic ways of knowing...................................................................................................................22 -
Dr. C. Padoch Scientist Institute of Economie Botany the Newyor K Botanical Garden Piôo&Dpi T2000
Promotor: dr.ir. R.A.A. Oldeman Hoogleraar in de bosteelt en bosoecologie Co-promotor: dr. C. Padoch Scientist Institute of Economie Botany The NewYor k Botanical Garden piôO&dpi t2000 WIL DE JONG DIVERSITY, VARIATION, AND CHANGE IN RIBERENO AGRICULTURE AND AGROFORESTRY Proefschrift ter verkrijging van de graad van doctor in de landbouw- en milieuwetenschappen op gezag van de rector magnificus, dr. C. M. Karssen, in het openbaar te verdedigen op woensdag 25 oktober 1995 des namiddags te vier uur in de Aula van de Landbouwuniversiteit te Wageningen. ff 933 CIP-DATAKONINKLIJK E BIBLIOTHEEK, DENHAA G 1995 Diversity, varation, and change in Ribereno agriculture and agroforestry / Wil de Jong. [S.I.;s.n.]. Fig.,Tab . Thesis Landbouwuniversiteit Wageningen.Wit hréf .Wit h summary in Dutch. ISBN 90-5485-469-3 Subject headings:agriculture ;Amazonia-Peru/varze aresourc eutilization/ribereno s Riberenos, the native farmers ofth e lowland Peruvian Amazon region, subsist in an ecologically complex Amazonian varzea environment by practicing a highly diverseagriculture , and following individualistic agricultural strategies.A tota lo f 14 different agricultural methods, identified as agricultural types, and the varia tion inagricultura l strategies are described for two villages located atth e Ucayali river.Diversit y ofswidden-fallo w agroforestry onterr a firme lands,an d ofvarze a agroforestry is investigated. Riberefio agricultural diversity and variation inagri cultural strategies can be explained as adaptations to the complex and dynamic conditions of the varzea. The case of ribereno resource use gives reason to ques tion several theories that have been formulated about varzea resource utilization. i \NVBO!""''IJ:'^ •"•],\-2iT'y " ''•'O-.Cé.N A/^JÛÏ'iOt , 2.00Q STELLINGEN î De diversiteit van ribereno landbouw in de varzea weerlegt Ross' stelling (The evolution of the Amazon peasantry. -
Sundials for Urban Farming in an Early Inca City
Universal Journal of Agricultural Research 2(3): 107-114, 2014 http://www.hrpub.org DOI: 10.13189/ujar.2014.020305 Sundials for Urban Farming in an Early Inca City Uwe Christian Plachetka University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU), Vienna, Austria *Corresponding Author: [email protected] Copyright © 2014 Horizon Research Publishing All rights reserved. Abstract Information systems are essential for farming the methods of these indigenous farmers promote “response agriculture”. The famous IntiWatanas, the Inca an increase in crop diversity to avoid adverse effects of sundials were a technological detail of “response agriculture” inbreeding (Brush 2004). The Andean highlands and their as the development of the Inca Empire was a matter of traditional farmers harbor the genetic reserves for potatoes coping with the challenges of the Medieval Climatic (solanum tuberosum spp.), Quinoa (Chenopodia quinoa) Anomaly in the Central Andean Highlands. Such archaic and a wide range of other nutritive crops. Consequently the but smart techniques can be understood only when intervention of the last pre-European government of Peru, considered in their original socio-ecologic context. that of the Incas in agricultural systems and food production is palpable, which does matter for a proper understanding of Keywords Urban Farming, Inca, Sundial, Ecologic diversity-promoting agricultural systems and response Management agriculture because the Incas had to face the challenges of the Medieval Climatic Anomaly(MCA) (Haberle S.G., Chepstow-Lusty -
Aquculture and Deforestation in the Peruvian Amazon Gator Halpern Pomona College
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Keck Graduate Institute Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont Pomona Senior Theses Pomona Student Scholarship 2012 Aquculture and Deforestation in the Peruvian Amazon Gator Halpern Pomona College Recommended Citation Halpern, Gator, "Aquculture and Deforestation in the Peruvian Amazon" (2012). Pomona Senior Theses. Paper 40. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/pomona_theses/40 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Pomona Student Scholarship at Scholarship @ Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in Pomona Senior Theses by an authorized administrator of Scholarship @ Claremont. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Aquaculture and Deforestation in the Peruvian Amazon Gator Halpern In partial fulfillment of a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Environmental Analysis, 2011‐12 academic year, Pomona College, Claremont, California Readers: Bowman Cutter Rick Hazlett Acknowledgments The completion of this thesis would not have been possible without the help of many individuals and institutions. First, I would like to thank Pomona College and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; it was their generous support that provided me the opportunity to travel to the Amazon. A large thanks is due to Professor Bowman Cutter, who has been my advisor throughout my Peruvian adventures and my reader during this thesis process. Also there to read my drafts along the way was Professor Rick Hazlett, thank you for always being so prompt in getting things back to me, and Magister Ken Martin, thanks for steadily improving my prose for nearly a decade now. -
Constructing Markets for Agroecology — an Analysis of Diverse Options for Marketing Products from Agroecology FAO/INRA
Constructing markets for agroecology for Constructing markets — An analysis of diverse options for marketing products from agroecology from products diverse options for marketing An analysis of CONSTRUCTING MARKETS FOR AGROECOLOGY An analysis of diverse options for marketing products from agroecology FAO/INRA Constructing markets for agroecology An analysis of diverse options for marketing products from agroecology Published by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) Rome, 2018 Recommended citation FAO/INRA. 2018. Constructing markets for agroecology – An analysis of diverse options for marketing products from agroecology, by Loconto, A., Jimenez, A. & Vandecandelaere, E. Rome, Italy. Cover photographs Background: ©J. Aguirre Top to bottom: ©FAO/R. Gangale; ©INRA/A. Loconto; ©INRA/Y. Chiffoleau; ©INRA/A. Loconto The designations employed and the presentation of material in this information product do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), or of the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique concerning the legal or development status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The mention of specific companies or products of manufacturers, whether or not these have been patented, does not imply that these have been endorsed or recommended by FAO, or INRA preference to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned. The views expressed in this information product are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of FAO, or INRA. -
Successful Malaria Elimination in the Ecuador–Peru Border Region: Epidemiology and Lessons Learned Lyndsay K
Krisher et al. Malar J (2016) 15:573 DOI 10.1186/s12936-016-1630-x Malaria Journal CASE STUDY Open Access Successful malaria elimination in the Ecuador–Peru border region: epidemiology and lessons learned Lyndsay K. Krisher1, Jesse Krisher2, Mariano Ambuludi3, Ana Arichabala3, Efrain Beltrán‑Ayala3,4, Patricia Navarrete3, Tania Ordoñez3, Mark E. Polhemus2, Fernando Quintana5, Rosemary Rochford6, Mercy Silva3, Juan Bazo7 and Anna M. Stewart‑Ibarra2* Abstract Background: In recent years, malaria (Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum) has been successfully con‑ trolled in the Ecuador–Peru coastal border region. The aim of this study was to document this control effort and to identify the best practices and lessons learned that are applicable to malaria control and to other vector-borne diseases. A proximal outcome evaluation was conducted of the robust elimination programme in El Oro Province, Ecuador, and the Tumbes Region, Peru. Data collection efforts included a series of workshops with local public health experts who played central roles in the elimination effort, review of epidemiological records from Ministries of Health, and a review of national policy documents. Key programmatic and external factors are identified that determined the success of this eradication effort. Case description: From the mid 1980s until the early 2000s, the region experienced a surge in malaria transmission, which experts attributed to a combination of ineffective anti-malarial treatment, social-ecological factors (e.g., El Niño, increasing rice farming, construction of a reservoir), and political factors (e.g., reduction in resources and changes in management). In response to the malaria crisis, local public health practitioners from El Oro and Tumbes joined together in the mid-1990s to forge an unofficial binational collaboration for malaria control. -
Bangladesh Shrimp and Fish Foundation (BSFF)
Report on Preparation of Inventory and List of Aqua Inputs in Bangladesh with their Generic Names and Source/Origin Study conducted by Bangladesh Shrimp and Fish Foundation (BSFF) Supported by Feed the Future Bangladesh Aquaculture and Nutrition Activity October 2019 Report Prepared & Submitted by Bangladesh Shrimp and Fish Foundation Road-4 Block-F House-3 Flat-5A Banani Dhaka Bangladesh Tel: +88-029893406 Fax: +88-02-9891056 Website: www.shrimpfoundation.org BSFF Study Team Md. Mahabubul Hasan, Aquaculture Specialist, FtF BANA-BSFF. Md. Imran Chowdhury, Data Management Officer FtF BANA-BSFF. Md Ratul Hasan, Field Supervisor, FtF BANA-BSFF. Md. Jimi Reza, Sr. Aqua. Specialist, BSFF and Monitoring Focal Person, FtF- BANA-BSFF. Policy Advisory and Editorial Team Ambassador (Rtd) Mr. Liaquat Ali Choudhury, Policy Advisor and Director, BSFF and Analytical Support Specialist, FtF BANA-BSFF Project. Mr. Imtiaz Uddin Ahmad, Policy Advisor, FtF BANA-BSFF Project. Mr. Nittya Ranjan Biswas, Team Leader, FtF BANA BSFF Project. Md. Rafiqul Islam, Executive Director, BSFF and Quality Assurance Specialist, FtF BANA- BSFF. Implemented by Bangladesh Shrimp and Fish Foundation (BSFF) In collaboration with Department of Fisheries (DoF), Bangladesh Supported by FtF BANA BSFF Project of WorldFish, USAID Study period July – October 2019 Report Prepared & Submitted by Bangladesh Shrimp and Fish Foundation Road-4 Block-F House-3 Flat-5A Banani Dhaka Bangladesh Tel: +88-029893406 Fax: +88-02-9891056 Website: www.shrimpfoundation.org Acronym AHCAB Animal Health -
Chaikuni Institute Annual Report 2018
ANNUAL REPORT 2018 Life is Flourishing! We are a grassroots collective which investigates, promotes and protects equitable, inclusive, interrelated and abundant living systems 1 ANNUAL REPORT 2018 Letter from the Director Earth Care, People Care, Fair Share: These three well known, simple, yet all-encompas- sing ethical Permaculture principles guide our work at the Chaikuni Institute. They are, howe- ver, not an invention by the Permaculture current, but found in many traditional and indigenous societies. They are also fundamental pillars of the Latin American indigenous understanding of “Buen Vivir” (good living), in all its diverse interpretations. For us at Chaikuni, they provide us with a solid compass of values and serve as inspiration for our daily work. The year 2018 was a year of change, renovation, growth, achievements and learning for us at the Institute. We bid farewell to several dear colleagues off to new adventures, and welcomed in new, talented and dedicated Chaikunis. The everyday functioning of our multidisciplinary and multicultural team is a constant exercise of interculturality – an ideal that we promote throu- ghout our programs. On an institutional level, we gained new and important donors and allies, as our overall budget, expenses and reach of our programs increased. Finally, together with our sister organization the Temple of the Way of Light, we embarked on an alignment journey, star- and exciting formulation of our mission. ting to revise and (re)define the “blueprint” of our Institute. Among others, we decided on a new On a socio-political level, Peru was ravaged by one major corruption scandal after another. -
Current and Potential Agroforestry in a Rural Paraguayan Village
PLANTING SHADE FOR THE NEXT GENERATION: CURRENT AND POTENTIAL AGROFORESTRY IN A RURAL PARAGUAYAN VILLAGE Joshua Kursky A Professional Paper Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Master of Forestry Peace Corps Masters International Program Northern Arizona University May 2020 Dr. James A. Allen, Ph.D. Dr. Pete Fulé, Ph.D. Dr. Michael Wagner, Ph.D. Abstract PLANTING THE SHADE FOR THE NEXT GENERATION: CURRENT AND POTENTIAL AGROFORESTRY IN A RURAL PARAGUAYAN VILLAGE Joshua Kursky Agroforestry, the integration of trees into farming systems, has been promoted in the developing world as a way to avoid deforestation, improve crop and livestock productivity, and provide greater economic benefit from agricultural land. Adding trees can improve soil fertility and physical properties, support biodiversity, and mitigate the effects of climate change while making farms more resilient. Successful agroforestry promotion will address site specific conditions, local concerns, and be compatible with existing agricultural practices. Paraguay has experienced one of the highest deforestation rates in the world in recent years and suffers from endemic rural poverty, land degradation, and a lack of economic opportunity for small farmers. As a Peace Corps volunteer in the rural village of Laguna Pytã, the author had the opportunity to live for two years in a small subsistence-farming community and observe residents’ agricultural practices. Semi-structured interviews with 15 households, farm visits, and participatory group activities were used to determine agricultural attributes of the community, identify perceived agricultural issues, and characterize agroforestry systems currently used in the community. Farmers pinpointed increasing drought and declining soil fertility as the most pressing of seven main agricultural problems.