12 results on '"EMERGING ISSUES"'
Search Results
2. Emerging issues for protected and conserved areas in Canada
- Author
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Laura E. Coristine, Andre Vallillee, Karen F. Beazley, Risa Smith, Fawziah (ZuZu) Gadallah, Karen Richardson, Robert G. Davis, Kevin Smith, James Snider, Colleen Cassady St. Clair, Christopher J. Lemieux, Graham J. Forbes, Carolynn Beaty, Nicholas E. Mandrak, Edward Cheskey, John P. Smol, William J. Sutherland, Scott Parker, Sabine Dietz, Faisal Moola, Peter Kendall, Alison Woodley, Lori White, Marlow G. Pellatt, Justina C. Ray, Lindsay Crawford, James Quayle, Eric Higgs, Steven J. Cooke, Sutherland, William [0000-0002-6498-0437], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
emerging issues ,Indigenous-led conservation ,Horizon scan ,conserved areas ,Multidisciplinary ,systematic planning ,Ecosystem services ,Biodiversity conservation ,Geography ,Indigenous knowledge system ,Indigenous knowledge systems ,protected areas ,biodiversity conservation ,ecosystem services ,Environmental planning ,Horizon scanning - Abstract
Horizon scanning is increasingly used in conservation to systematically explore emerging policy and management issues. We present the results of a horizon scan of issues likely to impact management of Canadian protected and conserved areas over the next 5–10 years. Eighty-eight individuals participated, representing a broad community of academics, government and nongovernment organizations, and foundations, including policymakers and managers of protected and conserved areas. This community initially identified 187 issues, which were subsequently triaged to 15 horizon issues by a group of 33 experts using a modified Delphi technique. Results were organized under four broad categories: ( i) emerging effects of climate change in protected and conserved areas design, planning, and management (i.e., large-scale ecosystem changes, species translocation, fire regimes, ecological integrity, and snow patterns); ( ii) Indigenous governance and knowledge systems (i.e., Indigenous governance and Indigenous knowledge and Western science); ( iii) integrated conservation approaches across landscapes and seascapes (i.e., connectivity conservation, integrating ecosystem values and services, freshwater planning); and ( iv) early responses to emerging cumulative, underestimated, and novel threats (i.e., management of cumulative impacts, declining insect biomass, increasing anthropogenic noise, synthetic biology). Overall, the scan identified several emerging issues that require immediate attention to effectively reduce threats, respond to opportunities, and enhance preparedness and capacity to react.
- Published
- 2021
3. Editorial: Invaders on the Horizon! Scanning the Future of Invasion Science and Management
- Author
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Ana Sofia Vaz, Ana Novoa, Joana R. Vicente, João P. Honrado, and Ross T. Shackleton
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emerging issues ,Geography ,Ecology ,Evolution ,Multidisciplinary approach ,biological invasions ,horizon scan ,technology ,QH359-425 ,Environmental planning ,multidisciplinary ,QH540-549.5 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2021
4. How To Prepare for the Unexpected: a Public Health Laboratory Response
- Author
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Rafia Razzaque, Noah Hull, Cari Roark Sloma, Tyler Wolford, Sherrie Staley, Carey Perkins, Colleen Courtney, Mary Bonifas, Eric Bind, Carmen L. Charlton, Matthew Johnson, and Anna K Strain
- Subjects
public health laboratories ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Epidemiology ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Review ,03 medical and health sciences ,COVID-19 Testing ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Natural disaster ,emerging issues ,Government ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola ,Public relations ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Subject-matter expert ,Infectious Diseases ,Public Health ,Laboratories ,business ,Measles - Abstract
Public health laboratories (PHLs) continue to face internal and external challenges to their abilities to provide successful, timely responses to public health crises and emerging threats. These laboratories are mandated to maintain the health of their communities by identifying, diagnosing, and warning constituents of potential and real health emergencies., SUMMARY Public health laboratories (PHLs) continue to face internal and external challenges to their abilities to provide successful, timely responses to public health crises and emerging threats. These laboratories are mandated to maintain the health of their communities by identifying, diagnosing, and warning constituents of potential and real health emergencies. Due to the changing characteristics of public health threats and their cross-jurisdictional nature, laboratories are facing increased pressure to ensure that they respond in a consistent and coordinated manner. Here, the Association of Public Health Laboratories (APHL) Emerging Leader Program Cohort 11 members have compiled stories from subject matter experts (SMEs) at PHLs with direct involvement in crises to determine the characteristics of a successful response. Experts examined a diverse selection of emerging threats from across PHLs, including infectious diseases, opioids, natural disasters, and government shutdowns. While no public health crisis will be identical to another, overarching themes were consistent across subjects. Experiences from SMEs that could improve future responses to emerging threats are highlighted.
- Published
- 2021
5. Cooperative Extension and Sustainability Outreach: Programmatic Successes, Administrative Support, and Areas for Improvement
- Author
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McCann, Roslynn Brain, Apel, Mark, Dove, Clark, Madhosingh-Hector, Ramona, Searcy, Jennison Kipp, Kay, David, and Extension Journal, Inc.
- Subjects
U.S. Department of Agriculture climate hubs ,University Extension ,emerging issues ,climate change ,public issues education ,sustainability ,Environmental Sciences - Abstract
According to the 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, without urgent global changes, climate catastrophe caused by warming of greater than 1.5°C will occur by 2030, endangering the planet's capacity to sustain human populations and livelihoods. The National Network for Sustainable Living Education administered a national survey in January 2017 to assess how well-positioned Extension is to address sustainability in the communities the organization serves. Educators from 40 states responded, and 1,395 usable surveys were received. Survey results will help Extension employees discover opportunities for innovation and relevancy in their programming.
- Published
- 2020
6. Neo-spaces for urban livability? Urbanites’ versatile mental images of green roofs in the Helsinki metropolitan area, Finland
- Author
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Susanna Lehvävirta, Kaisa Hauru, Marja Mesimäki, D. Johan Kotze, Environmental Sciences, Fifth Dimension - Vegetated roofs and walls in urban areas, and Urban Ecosystems
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Engineering ,Architectural engineering ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Green roof ,PSYCHOLOGICAL BENEFITS ,INFRASTRUCTURE ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,Plan (drawing) ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Urban area ,Vegetated roof ,01 natural sciences ,Civil engineering ,Liveable city ,Pleasure ,11. Sustainability ,User-centered ,Future ,ADAPTATION POLICY ,1172 Environmental sciences ,RESTORATION ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,media_common ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,LANDSCAPE ,business.industry ,Urban greening ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Forestry ,Metropolitan area ,Mixed method ,13. Climate action ,SETTINGS ,BIODIVERSITY ,HEALTH ,Cityscape ,business ,Green infrastructure ,EMERGING ISSUES ,ENVIRONMENTS - Abstract
Within the context of enhancing sustainable and livable urban environments, one aim is to establish multifunctional green infrastructure (GI). We argue that in order to successfully plan and manage the development of GI, an inclusive and future-oriented stance concerning the needs and expectations of urbanites is required. By using green roofs as an example, the aim of this paper was to offer insights into how people envisage novel GI in urban environments and to reveal the scope of meanings and values people attach to these kinds of green infrastructure. We present results based on 149 stories collected with the method of empathy-based stories. Respondents were asked to use their imagination to produce mental images of not-yet-existing green roofs in different urban situations. Our results reflect a rich set of dimensions of green roofs that the respondents vividly imagined. Green roofs may contribute to the livability of urban areas in multiple ways, such as strengthening social cohesion, providing space for everyday renewal and restoration, offering interesting sceneries and multisensory experiences, softening the hard cityscape, showing ephemeral events and making experiences of "height" possible, as well as increasing the "contact with nature" experiences for residents, e.g. through biodiverse nature in the middle of built environments. Furthermore, the need for local, customized solutions that offer different benefits and experiences was expressed. Using both qualitative and quantitative analyses, we idealized four green roof meta-types for understanding the diverse expectations people may have for green roofs in urban area: Urban farm, Oasis, Urban hill and Meadow. Based on our results we suggest that comprehensive experiences and needs of people should be taken into account when designing urban green roofs or urban green in general not only, e.g. visual pleasure. Also, site- and user-specific solutions should be considered instead of generally applied ones. Our results offer tools for, e.g. urban planners to understand the value of diverse green roof solutions to the user. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
- Published
- 2017
7. Computer animation data management: Review of evolution phases and emerging issues
- Author
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Jian J. Zhang, Jason Sit, Hui Liang, and Jian Chang
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Knowledge management ,Computer Networks and Communications ,Computer science ,Process (engineering) ,Data management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,02 engineering and technology ,Library and Information Sciences ,Management Information Systems ,Business Information Systems ,020204 information systems ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Information system ,Quality (business) ,Computer animation ,media_common ,computer animation ,emerging issues ,business.industry ,Information technology ,020207 software engineering ,Animation ,embargoover12 ,Conceptual framework ,open product model ,data management ,conceptual framework ,business ,Information Systems - Abstract
The reviewers comments on the issues of criteria and sources have been used to develop the literature review.We have included a new section titled Literature review explaining the process and stages involved in searching the literature, selecting the literature, and analysing the literature.The criteria and sources used for each stage have been included in the section of Literature review. The computer animation industry has been booming and prospering in recent thirty years. One of the significant changes faced by this industry is the evolution of computer-animation data and, yet, extant literature has offered very little insights into the evolution process and management issues pertinent to computer- animation data. Hence, many questions have surfaced in the extant literature of computer- animation data management. For example, to what extent has the data content expanded in terms of quantity and quality? To what extent has the information technology used to store and process the data changed? To what extent have the user and the community groups diversified in terms of their nature and number? Knowledge pertaining to these issues can provide new research directions to academics and also insights to practitioners for more effective and innovative management of computer- animation data. This conceptual paper, therefore, takes the pioneering step to address these issues by proposing four factors prudent for examining the evolution phases associated with computer-animation data management: technology, content, users, and community. Next, this paper presents a conceptual framework illustrating the inter- dependent relationships between these four factors together with associated theoretical and managerial issues. This paper, albeit limited by its conceptual nature, advances the extant literature of computer animation, information system, and open-product model.
- Published
- 2016
8. Sand, rarer than one thinks
- Author
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Pascal Peduzzi
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Hydrology ,Aggregates ,Water table ,ddc:354.3 ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Sediment ,Emerging issues ,Environmental impacts ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Solid material ,Coastal erosion ,Sand mining ,Sustainable development ,Extraction (military) ,Marine ecosystem ,Beach erosion ,Geology ,ddc:910 - Abstract
Sand and gravel are mined world-wide and account for the largest volume of solid material extracted globally. Formed by erosive processes over thousands of years they are now being extracted at a rate far greater than their renewal. Furthermore, the volume being extracted is having a major impact on rivers, deltas and coastal and marine ecosystems results in loss of land through river or coastal erosion, lowering of the water table and decreases in the amount of sediment supply. Despite the colossal quantities of sand and gravel being used, our increasing dependence on them and the significant impact that their extraction has on the environment, this issue has been mostly ignored by policy makers and remains largely unknown by the general public.
- Published
- 2014
9. Early awareness of emerging risks associated with food and feed production: Synopsis of pertinent work carried out within the SAFE FOODS project
- Author
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Gijs Kleter and Hans J.P. Marvin
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media_common.quotation_subject ,RIKILT - Business Unit Veiligheid & Gezondheid ,Food Contamination ,Toxicology ,Risk Assessment ,Food Supply ,Food safety ,Emerging issues ,Product Surveillance, Postmarketing ,Animals ,Humans ,Production (economics) ,Quality (business) ,European Union ,Information exchange ,media_common ,Early warning ,Warning system ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Risk factor (computing) ,Animal Feed ,Microbial pathogens ,Identification (information) ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Work (electrical) ,Consumer Product Safety ,Food Microbiology ,RIKILT - Business Unit Safety & Health ,Hazardous chemicals ,Business ,Environmental Monitoring ,Food Science - Abstract
This introduction to the journal's supplement on emerging food and feed safety issues summarizes the objectives and activities of the EU-funded SAFE FOODS project in general and its work package focusing on the early identification of emerging food safety risks, in particular. Within this work package, a number of studies have been carried out on methods enabling the early awareness, identification, and prevention of emerging issues before they can become real risks. The various reviews in this supplement explore the background of the emergence of known food safety risks, both of microbial and chemical/biochemical nature, as well the methods that can be used to identify such risks. Another review identifies a number of chemical and microbiological hazards that are likely to be affected by a changing climate. A major conclusion from these explorative reviews is that monitoring and information exchange systems or procedures are in place to detect, in an early phase, the emergence of potential food safety risks linked to known hazards. Additional systems are needed to predict the development of new potential food safety risks, which are linked to either new hazards or known hazards to which exposure has been altered.
- Published
- 2009
10. Legal and regulatory developments associated with carbon dioxide capture and storage: A global update
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Ian Havercroft, Tim Dixon, and Tom Kerr
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Engineering ,Commercial scale ,business.industry ,Information sharing ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Legal developments ,Environmental resource management ,Regulatory frameworks ,Presentation ,Emerging issues ,Energy(all) ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,Networks ,business ,Environmental planning ,media_common ,Regulation - Abstract
Carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS) is widely seen as a critical technology to de-carbonise the power and industrial sectors. As such, many nations have ambitious plans to demonstrate and then promote commercial scale development of CCS. To facilitate early demonstrations and lay the groundwork for widespread use of CCS, governments are rapidly developing new CCS regulations and policies. There have been a number of important regulatory and legal developments in the European Union, United States, Australia, Canada, Norway and several other jurisdictions. This paper and presentation will provide a brief but comprehensive update of these developments and will document and synthesise discussions and activities that were undertaken as part of the IEA’s International CCS Regulator’s Network. It is hoped that information sharing of this kind can help to facilitate harmonised global approaches to regulating CCS.
- Published
- 2009
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11. EFSA's approach to identifying emerging risks in food and feed: taking stock and looking forward
- Author
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Tobin Robinson, Djien Liem, Tilemachos Goumperis, Hubert Deluyker, Andrea Altieri, Arianna Chiusolo, Agnès Rortais, Jean-Lou Dorne, and Vittorio Silano
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Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,TP1-1185 ,Plant Science ,Microbiology ,Emerging risks ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,TX341-641 ,European union ,Stock (geology) ,media_common ,emerging issues ,Potential impact ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,business.industry ,Task force ,Chemical technology ,Environmental resource management ,Futures studies ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Safety risk ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Parasitology ,Risk assessment ,business ,expert judgment ,Food Science ,Omics technologies - Abstract
The Emerging Risks Unit has the responsibility for coordinating EFSA’s activities to establish a capacity for the identification of emerging risks. A process was trialled and further developed during a pilot period of 18 months from 2010-2012. This included the implementation of an operational procedure for emerging risks identification, the assessment of selected data sources, the testing of tools for collecting information, the consolidation of knowledge networks for sharing information and the development of a methodological framework. Specific issues were identified for follow-up activities using an expert judgment approach. These include a study on climate change and the emergence of aflatoxins in cereal crops in the European Union (EU), a European-wide survey on the consumption of energy drinks, a task force on human risk assessment of chemical mixtures, an internal task force on bee health, and a foresight study on the potential impact of omics technologies on food and feed safety risk assessment. These follow-up activities will contribute to the determination of whether the issues identified can indeed give rise to emerging risks. Overall, our experience shows that emerging risks identification requires a high level of expertise due to major data gaps and uncertainties in the evaluation process. Effective networking has proven to be essential for exchanging methods, data and evaluations of emerging risks. The system piloted has shown some potential for the identification of issues that may give rise to emerging risks. Useful knowledge has been gained in the area of gathering and filtering large amounts of information and building knowledge networks on emerging risks. Next steps include the establishment of a standing Working Group (WG) on Emerging Risks, the reinforcement of the engagement with Member States and Stakeholders, the fine tuning of the revised methodological framework, and the completion of the projects on the issues identified.
- Published
- 2012
12. Fredrick Sidell, M.d., Et Al., Jane's Chem-bio Handbook (Alexandria: Jane's Information Group 1999). Super Terrorism: Biological, Chemical, And Nuclear (yonah Alexander And Milton Hoenig Eds., Transnational Publishers 2001)
- Author
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Martinez, Ian Illych
- Subjects
emerging issues ,Comparative and Foreign Law ,weapons of mass destruction ,International Law ,handbook ,Law - Published
- 2003
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