737 results
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2. THE GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL.
- Author
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Millington, Andrew
- Subjects
PERIODICAL publishing - Abstract
Editorial. Presents an update on the periodical 'The Geographical Journal' as of March 2002. Rejection and acceptance rates; State of autorship of papers; Policy on overseas reviewer for papers that do not have Great Britain-based content.
- Published
- 2002
3. Editorial.
- Author
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Briggs, John
- Subjects
PREFACES & forewords - Abstract
A preface for "The Geographical Journal," vol. 174, no. 1, March 2008 issue, is presented.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Environmental knowledge and small-scale rural landholding in south-west England.
- Author
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MORRIS, CAROL
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,LANDOWNERS ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,LAND management - Abstract
This paper explores the environmental knowledge of small-scale rural landholders and comments on the implications of this for environmental policy. The paper draws on conceptualisations of knowledge as ‘know what’, ‘know why’, ‘know how’ and ‘know who’, recognises a distinction between tacit and codified environmental knowledges and highlights the need to consider the politics of knowledge surrounding environmental issues. Both quantitative and qualitative data are reported, and are derived from structured interviews with 30 small-scale landholders who were participants in a nature and landscape conservation initiative – the Landscape Heritage Scheme – within South Devon, England. These data are used to explore the place of environmental concerns within the land management objectives of respondents; the nature and extent of their environmental knowledge; how a range of factors alongside their environmental knowledge shaped the environmental practices of respondents; and the politics of knowledge associated with the Landscape Heritage Scheme. The paper suggests that small-scale landholders should be of interest to environmental policy, prioritising environmental objectives in their land management, being relatively knowledgeable about the environment and highly responsive to environmental advice and financial incentives that support environmental management. A case is made for developing research in this area, given ongoing processes of rural demographic change and the rising importance within this of an increasingly diverse landholding population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Editorial.
- Author
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Briggs, John
- Subjects
PUBLISHING ,TSUNAMIS - Abstract
This article offers an activity report for the "Geographical Journal" in 2006. The periodical carried several papers, book reviews and commentary papers relating to the Indian Ocean Tsunami special section which was published during the end of 2005. The number of papers submitted which included at least one female author increased from 30 percent in 2005 to 36 percent in 2006.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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6. Editorial.
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY ,PERIODICALS ,SERIAL publications ,COSMOGRAPHY ,EARTH sciences - Abstract
Comments on the achievements of "The Geographical Journal" as of May 1, 2005. Number of new submissions received by the journal during the reporting year; Information on the papers carried out by the journal during 2004; Plans of the journal for the future.
- Published
- 2005
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7. Coastal and marine governance in the United Kingdom Editorial.
- Author
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FLETCHER, STEPHEN and POTTS, JONATHAN
- Subjects
PERIODICALS ,GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
An introduction to this issue of "The Geographical Journal" is presented.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Azerbaijan's resource wealth: political legitimacy and public opinion.
- Author
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O'Lear, Shannon
- Subjects
PRACTICAL politics ,SOVEREIGNTY ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POLITICAL stability ,AZERBAIJANI politics & government - Abstract
After considering how well Azerbaijan's economy follows the trajectory of a ‘resource curse’ state, this paper investigates the political dimensions of the resource curse evident in Azerbaijan. Of particular interest is how Azerbaijan appears to establish external and internal political legitimacy. These dimensions of sovereignty are not necessarily balanced or present in equal measure. The paper assesses the recent transition in leadership in Azerbaijan as well as Azerbaijan's interactions with, and assessment by, the international community. Additionally, national survey data provide insights into public concerns, satisfaction with government policy, and views on democracy and freedom of expression. The paper concludes that at present there appears to be sufficient public expectation for future benefits, combined with institutional stability, to stave off widespread political instability for the time being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Editorial.
- Subjects
PERIODICALS ,GEOGRAPHY ,AUTHORS ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,SCIENTIFIC literature - Abstract
Provides information on the "Geographical Journal." Goals of the journal; Number of issues published in 2005; Topics tackled in the special issues of the journal; Provenance of authors.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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10. Halford Mackinder and the‘geographical pivot of history’: a centennial retrospective.
- Author
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Dodds, Klaus and Sidaway, James D.
- Subjects
GEOPOLITICS ,IMPERIALISM - Abstract
Introduces a series of articles on the imperial geopolitics views of Halford Mackinder.
- Published
- 2004
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11. Biosecurity's unruly spaces.
- Author
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MATHER, CHARLES and MARSHALL, AMY
- Subjects
GEOPOLITICS ,BIOSECURITY ,ANIMAL health ,ANIMAL diseases ,RISK ,SWINE breeders ,LIVESTOCK diseases ,FOOD security ,VETERINARY medicine ,VIRUS diseases in swine ,SWINE influenza - Abstract
This paper is about the geopolitics of animal health governance. Through a biosecurity event in South Africa's pig sector we examine changes in the way the governance of disease risk is configuring intra-national spaces. Our case suggests an emerging geopolitics of animal health, one that is defined not by differences between nations but by a more complex patchwork of 'secure' and 'unruly spaces'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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12. Protocols, particularities, and problematising Indigenous ‘engagement’ in community-based environmental management in settled Australia.
- Author
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CARTER, JENNIFER
- Subjects
ABORIGINAL Australians -- Land tenure ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,LAND tenure ,COMMUNITY organization ,RESOURCE management - Abstract
Many Aboriginal Australians in regional and urban Australia hold attachments to their homelands that have been compromised by policies of removal and dispossession. Government agencies and community groups have ‘protocols’ for engaging with Aboriginal communities, but these protocols have been transferred from remote parts of Australia where land tenure and rights are relatively secure and people can readily claim their community of belonging. The efficacy and applicability of engagement protocols are rarely evaluated, and have not been evaluated with respect to the differing tenure regimes of settled Australia under which rights to land and its resources remain contested and unfolding. This paper describes research conducted in three study areas of regional Australia, where resource management practitioners apply projects according to engagement protocols transferred from remote Australia. Analysis of government and community-based documents, and interviews with agency staff and Aboriginal people, identifies that genuine participation, cultural awareness, agreement-making, appropriate representation and the unique place-based factors affecting engagement remain key barriers to effective engagement with Aboriginal people by institutions in urbanising Australia. In particular, appropriate representation and a need for place-based approaches emerge as critical to engagement in settled Australia. This paper recommends that engagement be considered as a multi-layered approach in which generic ‘engagement’ threads are selected and re-selected in different combinations to suit contexts, places and purposes. Thus each place-based engagement initiative is not readily typified at the local scale, but taken together, make up a regional mosaic of different engagement structures and processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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13. ‘The gloomy forebodings of this dread disease’, climate, famine and sleeping sickness in East Africa.
- Author
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ENDFIELD, GEORGINA H, RYVES, DAVID B, MILLS, KEELY, and BERRANG-FORD, LEA
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PUBLIC health ,CLIMATE & civilization ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,EPIDEMIC encephalitis ,AFRICAN trypanosomiasis ,EPIDEMICS ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
Identifying the nature of the association between climate, environmental, socio-economic and political context and disease remains a major challenge, yet a better comprehension of the linkages is imperative if predictive models to guide public health responses are to be devised. Our understanding of the relationships could be improved through investigations of historical epidemics. In this paper we draw on a range of published and unpublished documents to explore the complex relationship between climate, environmental change and epidemic disease (re)emergence in East Africa, and Uganda in particular. This is a region which has experienced climate variability at a range of temporal and spatial scales, but which also has a long history of episodic epidemic disease. We focus on the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries – a time of social, economic and political reordering in East Africa associated with European colonial intervention, but also a period which witnessed a variety of climatic, ecological and disease events. It will be argued that these developments coalesced, creating a set of spatially distinctive social and environmental conditions which fostered the emergence and prolongation of one of the most deadly episodes of disease in East African history, the sleeping sickness epidemic of c.1900–20. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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14. Global–local interactions: socioeconomic and spatial dynamics in Vietnam's coffee frontier.
- Author
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AGERGAARD, JYTTE, FOLD, NIELS, and GOUGH, KATHERINE V.
- Subjects
CROPS ,AGRICULTURE ,FLUCTUATIONS (Physics) ,MARKET prices ,ECONOMICS ,COMMERCIAL products - Abstract
Due to their dependence on a single crop, agricultural frontiers are often considered to be formed through phases of ‘boom and bust’. These phases are closely related to fluctuations in world market prices of the commodity that constitutes the frontier's economic basis. This paper demonstrates how although migration patterns and economic growth are conditioned by world market dynamics, local socioeconomic outcomes within frontier regions are diverse. Frontier formation is far from a homogenous process that slowly incorporates all localities and communities in the same way. Dak Lak Province, in the Central Highlands of Vietnam, produces more than 50% of Vietnam's coffee. As Vietnam is the world's largest exporter of Robusta coffee, Dak Lak is highly embedded in the dynamics of the world coffee market. Planned settlement in Dak Lak started in the 1950s and has continued in phases orchestrated by the state's changing economic, social and political motives. Spontaneous immigration has dominated since the early 1990s when the coffee sector took off and regulations on population mobility were relaxed. This paper shows how household livelihoods differ substantially between four communes in Dak Lak Province due to different combinations of migrant and indigenous groups, the ease of transport to the main urban centres, and the timing of coffee planting in the settlements. These temporal and spatial variations in livelihoods both condition and are conditioned by the organisational set-up of the local coffee marketing chain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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15. Laos and the making of a ‘relational’ resource frontier.
- Author
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BARNEY, KEITH
- Subjects
RESOURCE-based communities ,COMMODIFICATION ,ECONOMICS ,INVESTMENTS ,DISCOURSE analysis - Abstract
This paper seeks to reconsider the contemporary relevance of the resource frontier, drawing on examples of nature's commodification and enclosure under way in the peripheral Southeast Asian country of Laos. Frontiers are conceived as relational zones of economy, nature and society; spaces of capitalist transition, where new forms of social property relations and systems of legality are rapidly established in response to market imperatives. Customary property rights on the resource frontier can be seized by powerful actors in crucial political moments, preparing the territorial stage for more intensive phases of resource commodity production and accumulation. Relational frontier space is understood through the work of geographers such as Doreen Massey, who views the production of space as ‘constituted though the practices of engagement and the power-geometries of relations’. In Laos, a twenty-first century resource frontier is being driven by new corporate investments in natural resources, and a supporting array of land reform programmes. The paper focuses on both the material and representational aspects of the production of the resource frontier, through policy and discourse analysis, and village level research in Laos’ Khammouane province. By rethinking a dualist and hierarchical-scaled imaginary of frontier places, both rural people and local ecologies are shown to be key actors, in a complex, relational reproduction of frontier zones. An emerging Lao spatial and political assemblage – a form of ‘frontier-neoliberalism’– is shown as producing dramatic changes in socio-natural landscapes, as well as new patterns of marginalisation and livelihood insecurity for a vulnerable rural population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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16. Revisiting frontiers as transitional spaces in Thailand.
- Author
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HIRSCH, PHILIP
- Subjects
AGRICULTURE ,NATURAL resources ,ECONOMIC history ,REGIONALISM ,HEURISTIC - Abstract
This paper explores the notion of frontiers as ‘in-between’ spaces that define particular transitions. Three contexts of frontier and their rapidly changing nature form the basis of the analysis. Agricultural frontiers (typically between farmland and forest) are defined by new relations of production and interplays between conservation, shifting modes of agriculture and natural resource use and management. Peri-urban frontiers (between countryside and city) are taken beyond their desakota/chaan-meuang locations to a more generic interplay between urbanity and rurality in defining livelihood and identity. National frontiers (between nation states with sharply different political and economic conditions) are transcended from above in the form of new regionalisms, and, from below, in migrations and other transboundary influences and flows. The paper proposes the frontier as both a spatial and temporal heuristic for understanding development and associated societal transitions in Thailand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Finding common ground: relational concepts of land tenure and economy in the oil palm frontier of Papua New Guinea.
- Author
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CURRY, GEORGE N. and KOCZBERSKI, GINA
- Subjects
OIL palm ,LAND tenure ,AGRICULTURAL development ,DEMOGRAPHY ,LANDOWNERS - Abstract
In the oil palm frontier regions of West New Britain and Oro provinces, Papua New Guinea, customary land tenure arrangements are changing in response to the growing demand for land for agricultural development. This paper examines one aspect of these changes, namely the gifting and selling of customary land for oil palm development to people who have no customary birthrights to the land. By analysing how access rights are maintained over the relatively long cultivation cycle of oil palm (approximately 25 years), and in the context of the rapidly changing socio-economic and demographic environments of the oil palm frontiers, the paper demonstrates that while land transactions seemingly entail the commodification of land, land rights and security of land tenure remain embedded in social relationships. For customary landowners, the moral basis of land rights is contingent on ‘outsiders’ maintaining particular kinds of social and economic relationships with their customary landowning ‘hosts’. In exploring how these social relationships are constituted through the performance of particular kinds of exchange relationships, the paper provides insights into relational concepts of land rights and how these are able to persist in Papua New Guinea's oil palm frontier regions where resource struggles are often intense and where large migrant populations are seeking land for agricultural development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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18. Exploring the challenges of integrated coastal zone management and reflecting on contributions to ‘integration’ from geographical thought.
- Author
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MCFADDEN, LORAINE
- Subjects
COASTAL zone management ,COASTS ,FLOODS ,GEOGRAPHY ,MANAGEMENT science - Abstract
Integrated coastal zone management (ICZM) is a challenging process, defined by stakeholder engagement and underpinned by knowledge on the integrated behaviour of coastal systems. While significant advancements in ICZM have been made, a range of difficult and important questions about ‘integration’ remain to be explored. This paper discusses opportunities for addressing such challenges of integration through the application of geographical thinking to understanding and managing coastal environments. It focuses on geographical traditions on systems thinking, the process-based nature of geographic research and geographical contributions to conceptualising place and our relationships to it. Using UK-based case studies the paper explores integration challenges from three different coastal contexts and management perspectives, examining: adaptation through managed realignment in a local community, integrated flood risk management in London and the Thames Estuary and enhancing the ‘socially just’ nature of coastal management. The case-study discussion highlights the importance of ‘geographical thought’ to improving the integrative basis of strategies for managing complex coastal environments. This paper argues that ‘thinking geographically’ is one logical vehicle for increasing our understanding of, and providing solutions to, barriers which limit progress towards greater ‘integration’ in coastal management. Geography is dynamic, plural and based on the recognition that reality is contested and as such geographical ideas could add considerably to emerging cross-disciplinary knowledge on the interactions and interdependencies of behaviours within coastal systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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19. Governance and planning policy in the marine environment: regulating aquaculture in Scotland.
- Author
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PEEL, D. and LLOYD, M. G.
- Subjects
COASTAL zone management ,AQUACULTURE ,PLANNING ,MARINE resources ,PUBLIC interest ,COASTS - Abstract
This paper provides a new discussion of the emerging governance regime for marine and coastal environments. It examines the evolution from a non-statutory to a statutory planning regulatory regime for marine aquaculture in Scotland. Specifically, the definition of development, which underpins the statutory operation of the terrestrial planning system, has been extended to include aquaculture developments within 12 nautical miles of the coast. This effectively expands the geographical territory over which land use planning controls operate in Scotland, and coincides with an emerging interest in the governance, planning and management of the marine environment. Taking into account the various controls put in place over time, the paper identifies the changing state–market–civil relations involved in this shift. Notably, over time, the state has progressively intervened in different ways to correct the perceived market failures associated with aquaculture and its environment. The analysis presented here illustrates the deliberate transition to a statutory planning context through a review of the steps taken by the stakeholders involved to devise a regulatory regime that better serves a contemporary social construction of the public interest. It provides evidence of an explicit attempt within the wider modernisation project to design an appropriate form of governance that is open, participative, accountable, coherent and effective. The paper suggests that the elaboration of such contemporary forms of active mediation remain iterative, partial and dysfunctional and points to an important research agenda to inform the emerging marine environmental planning and governance debates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Improving governance through local Coastal Partnerships in the UK.
- Author
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STOJANOVIC, TIM and BARKER, NATASHA
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,COASTAL zone management ,COASTS ,PLANNING ,POLICY sciences - Abstract
The effectiveness of institutional arrangements and policies for governance has become a key question within the sustainability paradigm. The term ‘Coastal Partnerships’ describes a variety of arrangements in the UK that bring together interested stakeholders to advocate sustainable management of the coast, based on the principles of integrated coastal management (ICM). This paper considers the unique role, achievements and challenges facing local Coastal Partnerships in the UK. The paper examines empirical evidence of how Coastal Partnerships are contributing to sustainable coastal management. The first section considers their shortfalls, the second section their achievements, and the final section discusses their potential role in the context of the evolving policy framework. The policy drivers include European Directives, the reform of the Terrestrial Planning System, and proposals for Marine Spatial Planning through a UK Marine Bill. The authors present a blueprint for the future of Coastal Partnerships, based on this policy analysis. The findings contribute to the ongoing debate in geographical literature on how the scale and structure of governance can be best organised to deliver local sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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21. Understanding pastoral mobility: the case of Senegalese Fulani.
- Author
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ADRIANSEN, HANNE KIRSTINE
- Subjects
PASTORAL systems ,ANIMAL culture ,RANGELANDS ,RANGE management ,HERDING - Abstract
Based on a case study from Sahelian Senegal, this paper analyses how various actors perceive the importance of pastoral mobility and presents issues of importance for understanding the use of mobility among Fulani of Ferlo. One knowledge system is a scientific one, the ‘new rangeland paradigm’. According to this, pastoral mobility is a means to balance variability in dryland resources; hence, ‘nature’ is the point of departure. Another knowledge system is local pastoral knowledge. For the pastoralists, the well-being of their animals is the point of departure and mobility is used to ensure that the livestock are in good condition. The paper shows that it is important to distinguish between mobility of pastoralists and of their herd; even though the pastoralists of northern Senegal have become semi-sedentary, their herds are still quite mobile. The pastoralists are willing to move around within a small territory, which they consider their place, but are unwilling to employ large-scale mobility themselves. Mobility is not of importance for their ethnic identity and some use paid herders to care for their livestock. By looking at both knowledge systems, we achieve a better understanding of pastoral mobility and how this may change in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The geography of tyranny and despair: development indicators and the hypothesis of genetic inevitability of national inequality.
- Author
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MORSE, STEPHEN
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY ,DESPOTISM ,IMPERIALISM ,RACISM ,GROSS domestic product ,INTELLIGENCE levels - Abstract
Development geography has long sought to understand why inequalities exist and the best ways to address them. Dependency theory sets out an historical rationale for under development based on colonialism and a legacy of developed core and under-developed periphery. Race is relevant in this theory only insofar that Europeans are white and the places they colonised were occupied by people with darker skin colour. There are no innate biological reasons why it happened in that order. However, a new theory for national inequalities proposed by Lynn and Vanhanen in a series of publications makes the case that poorer countries have that status because of a poorer genetic stock rather than an accident of history. They argue that IQ has a genetic basis and IQ is linked to ability. Thus races with a poorer IQ have less ability, and thus national IQ can be positively correlated with performance as measured by an indicator like GDP/capita. Their thesis is one of despair, as little can be done to improve genetic stock significantly other than a programme of eugenics. This paper summarises and critiques the Lynn and Vanhanen hypothesis and the assumptions upon which it is based, and uses this analysis to show how a human desire to simplify in order to manage can be dangerous in development geography. While the attention may naturally be focused on the ‘national IQ’ variables as a proxy measure of ‘innate ability’, the assumption of GDP per capita as an indicator of ‘success’ and ‘achievement’ is far more readily accepted without criticism. The paper makes the case that the current vogue for indicators, indices and cause–effect can be tyrannical. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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23. Natural and imposed injustices: the challenges in implementing ‘fair’ flood risk management policy in England.
- Author
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Johnson, Clare, Penning-Rowsell, Edmund, and Parker, Dennis
- Subjects
FLOOD control ,FLOOD damage prevention ,DECISION making ,SOCIAL justice ,EQUALITY - Abstract
This paper examines the challenges facing English flood risk management (FRM) policy and practice when considering fair decision-making processes and outcomes at a range of spatial scales. It is recognised that flooding is not fair per se: the inherent natural spatial inequality of flood frequency and extent, plus the legacy of differential system interventions, being the cause. But, drawing on the three social justice models – procedural equality, Rawls’ maximin rule and maximum utility – the authors examine the fairness principles currently employed in FRM decision-making. This is achieved, firstly, in relation to the distribution of taxpayer's money for FRM at the national, regional and local levels and, secondly, for non-structural strategies – most notably those of insurance, flood warnings and awareness raising, land use control, home owner adaptation and emergency management. A case study of the Lower Thames catchment illustrates the challenges facing decision-makers in ‘real life’: how those strategies which appear to be most technically and economically effective fall far short of being fair from either a vulnerability or equality perspective. The paper concludes that if we are to manage flood risk somewhat more fairly then a move in the direction of government funding of nationally consistent non-structural strategies, in conjunction with lower investment decision thresholds for other local-level FRM options, appears to offer a greater contribution to equality and vulnerability-based social justice principles than the status quo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Operationalising sustainability science for a sustainability directive? Reflecting on three pilot projects.
- Author
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Blackstock, K. L. and Carter, C. E.
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,INTEGRATED water development ,WATER resources development ,WATER conservation ,WATER use - Abstract
The implementation of the Water Framework Directive (WFD) will challenge traditional single discipline or single issue approaches to research, requiring instead new forms such as ‘sustainability science’. Sustainability science requires the integration of multiple perspectives to resolve place-based problems. This paper will illustrate some of the challenges and emergent understandings that were observed during three research projects that could be characterised as attempting to practice sustainability science. The first two projects focused on designing and developing an integrated assessment approach to analyse possible programmes of measures for the WFD. The third project is an evaluation of a European project that piloted specific measures that might be implemented under WFD. The findings highlight the institutional changes required to deliver sustainability science. To summarise, both the ‘rules-in-use’ and the ‘play-of-the-game’, to use the language of the institutional analysis and development framework, will have to change to provide sufficient incentives to make the transition from traditional science to sustainability science. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Developing KaNgwane: geographies of segregation and integration in the new South Africa.
- Author
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King, Brian H.
- Subjects
APARTHEID ,RURAL development ,SEGREGATION - Abstract
This paper examines social, political and economic processes within the former KaNgwane bantustan to understand the changing relationships between society and space in the post-apartheid era. Research on rural development and reconstruction in South Africa attest to the spatial legacy of apartheid while suggesting that dynamic transformations are occurring within the former bantustans. A central concern of this paper is the ways the apartheid government constructed and presented KaNgwane as a development project in order to justify racial segregation and control. While the bantustans have been effectively erased from the popular imagination, these spaces continue to be framed developmentally in ways that provide limited attention to local context and change. In order to consider the shifts in environment and development discourses within these territories, a case study is employed to evaluate livelihood production systems, environmental change, and governance institutions. It is argued that these patterns reveal the simultaneously static and dynamic nature of the bantustans while demonstrating that their reincorporation will remain an ongoing process in the post-apartheid era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Environment and development in the former South African bantustans.
- Author
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King, Brian H. and McCusker, Brent
- Subjects
PREFACES & forewords ,GLOBAL environmental change - Abstract
This article discusses several papers that examined livelihood systems, development processes and environmental change within South Africa.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Resilient geographies: land, boundaries and the consolidation of the former bantustans in post-1994 South Africa.
- Author
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Ramutsindela, Maano
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY ,LAND reform ,APARTHEID ,DEMOCRACY ,REPRESENTATIVE government - Abstract
This paper focuses on the spatial impact of land reform and the redrawing of internal boundaries on South Africa's former bantustans. It argues that, in contrast to the democratic government's intention to use land reform and boundary demarcation to effectively change the spatial legacy of apartheid, these processes tend to cement the geography of the former bantustans. Though earlier research correctly projected that post-apartheid policies could result in the enlargement of the areas of the former bantustans, the ways in which this could happen were still unclear. This paper draws on experiences of land reform and boundary demarcation to demonstrate how and why the areas of the former bantustans have been enlarged over the 12 years of democracy in South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Partnerships for protected area conservation in Rwanda.
- Author
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Rutagama, Eugene and Martin, Adrian
- Subjects
BUSINESS partnerships ,NATIONAL parks & reserves ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,DECISION making ,PARK management - Abstract
This paper seeks to contribute to Rwanda's ongoing restructuring of protected area management. The early part of the paper draws on experiences elsewhere in Africa, as well as key contexts in Rwanda, to assert that conservation of national parks may best be served by flexible and inclusive partnerships that seek to integrate conservation activities across different agents and scales. This assertion is then explored more critically through empirical research that investigates the views of potential conservation partners. The findings suggest that attempts to develop partnerships that are built around national parks will face difficulties. Whilst there is a general willingness to be further involved in park management, this is complicated by cleavages in beliefs about how wider participation might be implemented. In particular, it is only international conservation NGOs that currently seem to be comfortable with the national park approach to conservation management: only they see themselves as having the expertise to be decision-making partners and only they would want their role in a partnership to be formalized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Competing narratives for the future of European agriculture: the agri-environmental consequences of neoliberalization in the context of the Doha Round.
- Author
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Potter, Clive
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL trade ,NEGOTIATION ,NEOLIBERALISM ,AGRICULTURE ,AGRICULTURAL industries - Abstract
Whatever their eventual outcome, the current round of international trade negotiations taking place as part of the Doha Development Round offers a clear demonstration of the growing influence of a neoliberal agenda for international agricultural policy reform. Despite being powerfully supported by an alliance of agribusiness interests and country groupings, neoliberalism is far from universally accepted as the model for the future governance of an agriculture which is both commodifying and market led. This paper assesses the nature of the resulting debate and the range of alternative visions being proposed. It analyses the development of the European negotiating stance within the current round of trade talks and compares the merits of a decoupled policy approach to managing the rural environment with one much more closely linked to the practice of farming. The paper concludes by suggesting that an outcome of the continuing liberalization of agricultural policy will be a more demarcated countryside, in which productive and internationally competitive operators will increasingly be removed in space and in terms of policy treatment from the large number of economically marginal producers whose role will be to supply the public environmental goods under contract from the state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Can we sustain sustainable agriculture? Learning from small-scale producer-suppliers in Canada and the UK.
- Author
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Maxey, Larch
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE agriculture ,ORGANIC farming ,AGRICULTURE - Abstract
There has been particular interest in ‘alternative’ food over the last 10 years, with many policymakers and researchers throughout the Minority World following a growing number of consumers and producers in supporting organic farming and a host of ‘alternative’ food networks. To date, there has been a tendency for theory and policy to emerge somewhat divorced from the grounded practices and experiences of producer-suppliers themselves within these networks. Urging a shift from ‘alternativity’ to ‘sustainability’ as a more critical and valuable tool to analyse food networks, this paper draws upon in-depth ethnographic research with small-scale producer-supplier case studies in south Wales and southern Ontario. In so doing it explores often overlooked voices and stories within sustainable food discourses. Focusing on the value of farmer-led understandings and responses, the paper highlights important implications for policymakers and consumers and outlines future research on sustainable food networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Malaria and technological networks: medical geography in the Pontine Marshes, Italy, in the 1930s.
- Author
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Caprotti, Federico
- Subjects
FASCISM ,MARSHES ,MALARIA ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
This paper examines the struggle against malaria undertaken by the fascist regime in the Pontine Marshes, south of Rome, and relates it to discourses of domination of nature on the one hand, and modernization and civilization through technological networks such as health and medical networks on the other. The marshes’‘first nature’ is described first of all, focusing on malaria and the difficulty of making an impact on marsh biology before the fascist enterprise and before the large-scale employment of modern technology for the subjugation, channelling and development of the marshes. Secondly, the paper focuses on the organization of medical anti-malaria networks in the marshes during the years immediately preceding and during the fascist period (1922–43). Thirdly, the ‘second nature’ produced in the marshes following the land reclamation and anti-malaria projects is examined, and an assessment is provided of the fascist anti-malaria project in the marshes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Transnational development networks: bringing development and postcolonial approaches into dialogue.
- Author
-
McFarlane, Colin
- Subjects
POSTCOLONIALISM ,THEORY of knowledge ,POLITICAL ethics ,SOCIAL networks ,SUBALTERN - Abstract
This paper explores some of the ways in which a dialogue between development and postcolonial scholarship might contribute to the theorizing of transnational networks in contemporary development. It does so through consideration of three inter-related themes: epistemologies, spatialities and ethico-politics. The discussion of epistemologies points to the potential benefit in reworking the analysis of the relationship between structure and agency in networks, whereas the discussion of spatialities focuses attention on the interface between the global and the local. Dialogue between development and postcolonial approaches also creates space for considering the politics and ethics of transnational development networks. In particular, this discussion prompts challenges around how to ethically research subaltern knowledge in transnational development networks, including how to trace the translation and redeployment of subaltern knowledge through networks. Consideration of these themes highlights not just overlaps and disjunctures between development and postcolonial approaches, but opportunities for further dialogue and future research on transnational development networks. To illustrate the points made in the paper, examples are drawn from Slum/Shack Dwellers International (SDI), a transnational network of civil society organizations working with urban poverty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Tree integration in homestead farms in southeast Nigeria: propositions and evidence.
- Author
-
Ite, Uwem E.
- Subjects
FOREST management ,NATIONAL parks & reserves ,SOCIAL factors ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
This paper contributes to wider debates on the dominant factors determining the emergence and sustainability of intermediate systems of forest management in developing countries. The theoretical framework and propositions for analysing tree integration in homestead farms are presented, with reference to southeast Nigeria. The paper argues that, first, at the household level, livelihood strategies constitute the main determinant of the decision to integrate trees in homestead farms. Secondly, induced innovation has a wider and more significant role at the community level than at the household level in encouraging the integration of trees in farms. Thirdly, the sustainability of observed patterns of tree integration is influenced by the interaction of environmental, ecological, political, economic and social factors. Based on these propositions, the paper analyses the internal (household) and external (wider community) factors influencing tree integration in homestead farms in southeast Nigeria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. South American heartland: the Charcas, Latin American geopolitics and global strategies.
- Author
-
Hepple, Leslie W.
- Subjects
GEOPOLITICS ,POLITICAL science ,MILITARY strategy - Abstract
‘geographical pivot of history’ concept, subsequently developed into his famous‘Eurasian heartland thesis’, marginalizes South America, yet his ideas have attracted considerable interest there, including interpretations (and fantasies) of a‘South American heartland’. This paper examines the reception of Mackinder's ideas in Latin American geopolitics and how his heartland thesis was adapted for the South American context. It traces the roots of this adaptation in earlier South American geopolitical writing, and examines these ideas of counter-insurgency policies and global geopolitical strategies, analysing their relationship to military and anticommunist perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Revisiting the‘pivot’: the influence of Halford Mackinder on analysis of Uzbekistan's international relations.
- Author
-
Megoran, Nick
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,GEOPOLITICS ,POLITICAL science - Abstract
Since the end of the Soviet Union, many foreign policy intellectuals have peculiarly identified the Republic of Uzbekistan as the locus of‘pivot’ designation. A century on from his original‘Geographical pivot of history’ lecture, this paper examines the work of a Russian, an Uzbek, and an American who use Mackinder to understand contemporary Uzbekistani geopolitical orientations, in particular with reference to the USA. Drawing on critical work on the history of geopolitics, it highlights that whilst these texts claim objectivity, they betray political and subjective foreign policy choices. It suggests that whilst the revival of interest in Mackinder testifies to the continued attraction of his ideas, this has, with rare exceptions, been based upon a superficial reading of both his work and the body of secondary literature, and that this raises both disciplinary and ethical concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Revisiting Mackinder 1904–2004.
- Author
-
Hyndman, Jennifer
- Subjects
GEOPOLITICS ,IMPERIALISM ,POLITICAL doctrines ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
Examines the relevance of the 1904 paper "The Geographical Pivot of History," by Halford Mackinder, which states his views on imperial geopolitics, to the study of the ways in which imperial visions are developed and deployed. Change in the thinking about geopolitical strategy; Policy relevance of geography in aiding statecraft; Significance of critical geopolitics to the emerging debates about empire.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The imperial vision of Halford Mackinder.
- Author
-
Blouet, Brian W.
- Subjects
IMPERIALISM ,FREE trade ,TARIFF ,POLITICAL science - Abstract
From 1899 to 1939, Halford Mackinder was active in imperial affairs. In 1899, the same year he climbed Mount Kenya, he set out the case for free trade. Rapidly he converted to imperial protectionism, left the Liberal Party and joined the Conservatives. Mackinder, along with his associates in the Conservative Party, Leo Amery and Lord Milner, promoted the cause of imperial unity and imperial preference in trade. During the period 1899–1903, Mackinder's evolving ideas about empire helped shape the Pivot paper, and he spelt out a prescription to avoid imperial decline: bind Britain and the Dominions into a League of Democracies with one fleet and one foreign policy, and encourage economic growth within the empire by a system of tariffs that promoted imperial trade. In Mackinder's parliamentary career (1910–22), his party was never in power and the Liberals retained free trade. Only after World War I, at the end of his parliamentary career, did Mackinder become active in imperial policy as chair of the Imperial Shipping Committee and the Imperial Economic Committee. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The political pivot of geography.
- Author
-
Kearns, Gerry
- Subjects
GEOPOLITICS ,GEOGRAPHY ,IMPERIALISM ,ANARCHISM - Abstract
The paper examines the geographical work of Peter Kropotkin and Halford Mackinder, making clear the political choices behind their very different geographical imaginations. Both writers responded directly to Keltie's report on geographical education and the paper uses these manifestoes as the starting point for an analysis of their relations to geographical thought and geographical institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Beyond the‘Outer Crescent’: the Mackinder century in New Zealand geopolitics.
- Author
-
Mayell, Peter
- Subjects
GEOPOLITICS ,POLITICAL science ,WAR - Abstract
This paper proposes that, although Mackinder never mentions New Zealand in his influential 1904 paper and despite the absence of a formal Kiwi geopolitical tradition,‘The geographical pivot of history’ provides a useful framework with which to approach New Zealand geopolitics. The argument uses two Mackinderian ideas to suggest three phases in New Zealand's security relationships during the Mackinder century. First, New Zealand's commitment to Mackinder's‘pivot area’ notion of‘imperial defence’ and‘collective security’ characterized its dependent security phase. Between 1973 and 1990/91 there was a transitional security phase towards Mackinder's second‘global interconnectedness’ idea. Third, this shift led to a current interdependent security phase which is characterized by the recognition that New Zealand's security relationships, despite its geographic isolation, are mutually dependent on political, economic, and military events around the world. The impact of 11 September 2001 and the consequent‘war on terror’ are also considered. The paper concludes by suggesting that New Zealand's post-conflict reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq point to the continuing relevance of Mackinder's‘The geographical pivot of history’ to New Zealand geopolitics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A macroscale analysis of coastal steepening around the coast of England and Wales.
- Author
-
Taylor, J. A., Murdock, A. P., and Pontee, N. I.
- Subjects
COASTS ,COASTAL ecology ,GEOMORPHOLOGY - Abstract
Coastal steepening potentially presents an array of management issues in the form of financial implications of sea defence degradation, increased risk posed to the hinterland as wave attenuation is reduced,‘coastal squeeze’ and statutory requirements in the light of the Habitats Directive. The extent to which coastal steepening has occurred throughout England and Wales has been investigated through use of a GIS and dataset based on historical Ordnance Survey map information. Data were collected along 1084 selected profile lines, positioned so as to be geomorphologically representative of the coast. Features recorded from each map year included the positions of mean high water (MHW) and mean low water (MLW), the relative movements of which infer changing intertidal gradients. The results presented in this paper are on a subject and scale not previously published. It is revealed that 61% of the coastline studied has experienced a tendency towards steepening. Of the remainder, 33% has flattened, and 6% has experienced no rotational movement. This tendency towards steepening has been the dominant movement on each of the west, south, and east coasts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Peopling mountain environments: changing Andean livelihoods in north-west Argentina[sup 1].
- Author
-
Tanner, Thomas
- Subjects
ECONOMIC reform ,MOUNTAIN life ,NATURAL resources ,RURAL industries - Abstract
Structural adjustment and neoliberal policy implementation in Latin America have had dramatic consequences for livelihoods and patterns of natural resource use in mountain regions. Restructuring of the agricultural economy has increased socio-economic hardship and reduced industrial labour requirements, altering traditional patterns of seasonal migration from these areas. This paper examines the implications of recent economic and political transformation for Andean livelihoods in the mountains of north-west Argentina. Case study material illustrates the local impacts of such changes on socio-economic dynamics, patterns of urban–rural interaction, and natural resource use. The research highlights the influence of agro-industrial restructuring, protected areas creation, and the distribution of social funds in the region. It reveals that local development is constrained and controlled not only by distant policies but also by contemporary local networks of political clientalism. The influence of both distant and proximate factors governing livelihoods and environmental impacts reinforces the value of geographical study in mountain areas, given its acute spatial and scalar awareness. The paper reaffirms the conception of mountain livelihoods as diverse and dynamic, shaped by economic, political, social and cultural factors as well as physical reality, and critiques the economic rationality of resource use assumed by policymakers and economic models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Book reviews.
- Author
-
Lawrence, Peter
- Subjects
- AUSTRALIA on Paper (Book)
- Abstract
Reviews the book `Australia on Paper: The Story of Australian Mapping,' by John D. Lines.
- Published
- 1994
43. Assessing common(s) arguments for an equal per capita allocation.
- Author
-
STARKEY, RICHARD
- Subjects
COMMODIFICATION ,GREENHOUSE gases ,EMISSIONS trading ,RESOURCE allocation ,EMISSIONS (Air pollution) ,COMMONS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Emissions rights are commodities and many hold that these commodities (or alternatively the revenue from their auction) should be allocated to (adult) individuals on an equal per capita basis. Proponents of this equal per capita allocation (EPCA) often argue for it on the grounds that the atmosphere or greenhouse gas emissions sinks are a 'commons'. But how can we assess the strength of these 'commons arguments' for EPCA? As most of those making such arguments do not have a background in academic philosophy, their arguments are not grounded in the philosophical literature on justice - a literature that seeks to provide a specification and justification of what constitutes a fair distribution of resources within society. This paper therefore seeks to set out clearly the various commons arguments for EPCA and to assess what, if any, support can be found for them within the justice literature. To make the various commons arguments as clear as possible, and to make analysis of these arguments as straightforward as possible, they are set out formally, that is, as premises followed by a conclusion. The conclusion of the analysis is that there is little support within the justice literature for these commons arguments for EPCA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Global energy dilemmas: a geographical perspective.
- Author
-
BRADSHAW, MICHAEL J
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,HUMAN geography ,GLOBALIZATION ,DILEMMA ,GREENHOUSE gases ,HUBBERT peak theory ,ENERGY policy ,HYDROCARBONS - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between global energy security and climate change policy. There are growing concerns about the sustainability of the future supply of hydrocarbons. The energy system is the single largest source of anthropogenic greenhouse gases, therefore it is no surprise that decarbonising the supply of energy services is a key element of climate change policy. The central proposition of this paper is that the world faces a global energy dilemma: can we have secure, reliable and affordable supplies of energy and, at the same time, manage the transition to a low-carbon energy system? The paper is divided into five sections. The first section considers the contemporary challenges to global energy security, focusing on the possibility that in the future oil production might not be able to meet demand. The second section considers how the perils of climate change are forcing us to rethink the very meaning of energy security such that a low-carbon energy revolution is now called for. The third section explains that while the developed world is largely responsible for the anthropogenic carbon emissions currently in the atmosphere, a global shift in energy demand is underway and over the next 20 years it is the developing world that will contribute an ever-increasing share of global emissions. The fourth section introduces the notion of the global energy dilemma nexus to explain how the processes of globalisation are the driving force behind this global shift in energy demand and carbon emissions. The final section explains how the global energy dilemma nexus plays itself out in different ways across the globe. The conclusions suggest that human geography can make a significant contribution to social science research on energy security and climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Governing shared groundwater: the controversy over private regulation.
- Author
-
LOPEZ-GUNN, ELENA
- Subjects
WATER supply ,WATER utilities ,WATER consumption ,GROUNDWATER ,HYDRAULIC structures ,PUBLIC utilities - Abstract
This paper examines, mainly at the theoretical level, current academic debates around private environmental governance, private regulation and its role (or not) in management choices over shared groundwater resources. The conclusions reached are based on a literature review and a theoretical analysis to give possible points for discussion and potential research questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Editorial.
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Introduces the December 2004 issue of the "The Geographical Journal," which focuses on the 1904 paper "The Geographical Pivot of History," written by Sir Halford Mackinder.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The pedagogy of integrated coastal management.
- Author
-
FLETCHER, STEPHEN, POTTS, JONATHAN, and BALLINGER, RHODA
- Subjects
COASTAL zone management ,COASTS ,LEARNING ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
Capacity building is commonly considered to be a fundamental prerequisite to successful integrated coastal management (ICM). Capacity building for ICM is an educational process, in which skills and knowledge are taught, learned and then applied, within a coastal management process. Previous research into ICM capacity building has tended to focus upon identifying the skills and knowledge required for effective ICM rather than the pedagogic elements of capacity building; that is, how the effectiveness of learning can be improved. This paper reports on a study that focuses on establishing the favoured learning style of students studying ICM in UK universities in order to consider more generally the role of pedagogy in ICM. Kolb's Learning Styles Inventory, a widely used generic learning styles test, was used to establish preferred learning styles. The results showed that ICM learners exhibited a complete range of learning styles, but that 47% were classified as ‘convergers’, who prefer to learn through practice and consider the teacher to be a facilitator and role model rather than knowledge giver. It is concluded that ICM capacity building leaders should consider pedagogic issues more fully in the design and delivery of capacity-building activities and that a specific pedagogy of ICM is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. UK retail concentration, Chilean wine producers and value chains.
- Author
-
Gwynne, Robert N.
- Subjects
VALUE added (Marketing) ,WINE industry ,PRODUCTION methods ,WINES ,RETAIL industry - Abstract
This paper seeks to examine how value chains impinge upon firms within the Chilean wine sector. The value chain analysis will further link the production and export of wine in Chile with the import and retailing of this wine in one key core economy market, namely that of the UK. The analysis is divided into three sections. First, the political economy of value chains in agro-industry is discussed, particularly in relation to the distinction between network or quasi-hierarchical relationships. Then the paper examines the theme of retail concentration in the UK and the impacts that this has on global value chains which incorporate Chilean wine firms. The focus then moves to value chains and the nature of upgrading within Chilean wine firms by examining the strategic example of the lead firm and firm upgrading as a response to demands of UK retailers and through the flying winemaker model. Broad conclusions on the comparative nature of value chains and the scramble for value within them are finally made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Negotiating partnerships, understanding power: doing action research on Chilean Fairtrade wine value chains.
- Author
-
Kleine, Dorothea
- Subjects
ACTION research ,WINE industry ,BAR codes ,PRODUCT coding ,VALUE added (Marketing) - Abstract
Sales in Fairtrade wine have been growing rapidly worldwide, and the UK is the most important market. This paper reports on an action research project undertaken with different economic actors along the value chain of a Chilean Fairtrade wine. The aim of the interdisciplinary project was to explore how the internet and tracking and tracing technologies could be used to render value chains more transparent for consumers and producers. An internet interface combined with a barcode-based data retrieval system could allow actors in the value chain to call up economic, social and environmental information about a product. Early findings from the action research process show that while supermarkets are the lead firms in the Fairtrade wine chain in terms of economic power, the producers and the Fairtrade certification body wield ‘moral power’ over other actors in the value chain. Fairtrade producers and the Fairtrade certification body relate to each other in cycles of mutual recognition, thus underpinning each others’ legitimacy and moral power. The paper argues that action research, in particular the positionality of the researcher team as a collaboration partner, can lead to a better understanding of the nature of linkages and power relations between the economic actors in value chains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Learning about learning: lessons from public engagement and deliberation on urban river restoration.
- Author
-
Petts, Judith
- Subjects
STREAM restoration ,REGULATION of rivers ,RIVER engineering ,LEARNING - Abstract
This paper provides a new discussion of how people learn through deliberative processes, drawing upon empirical analysis of a novel public engagement process for urban river restoration. Such critical evaluation is rare and yet will be crucial to both theoretical development and learning about engagement practice, not least in a policy area subject to strong regulatory drivers for public participation. The analysis supports two important learning mechanisms – the use of ‘gatekeepers’ of knowledge, interests and values, and the privileging of narrative. It provides new evidence of instrumental and communicative learning about shared priorities and criteria for effective river restoration that evolved through the deliberative process and directly informed the restoration scheme. It is important to question whether and how such site or context-specific learning might inform other restoration schemes. Finally, the paper questions the often ignored issue of expert learning, not least the issue of the link between individual and organizational learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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