Taking Stock of Nature
Herausgeber: Lawrence, Anna
Taking Stock of Nature
Herausgeber: Lawrence, Anna
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Critical examination of participatory biodiversity assessment focusing on lessons for policy makers and planners. With case studies from 17 countries.
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Critical examination of participatory biodiversity assessment focusing on lessons for policy makers and planners. With case studies from 17 countries.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Februar 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9780521876810
- ISBN-10: 0521876818
- Artikelnr.: 28244946
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Februar 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9780521876810
- ISBN-10: 0521876818
- Artikelnr.: 28244946
1. What does participatory biodiversity assessment mean for planners and
policy makers? Anna Lawrence; 2. Monitoring and assessment of biodiversity
under the Convention on Biological Diversity and other international
agreements Ruth Mackenzie; 3. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: a
multiscale assessment for global stakeholders Ciara Raudsepp-Hearne and
Doris Capistrano; 4. Conservation of biological diversity in El Salvador
shade coffee: the importance of taxonomic capacity for participatory
assessments Alex Monro and David Jones; 5. Taking stock of nature in
species-rich but economically poor areas: an emerging discipline of
locally-based monitoring Finn Danielsen, Neil Burgess, Mikkel Funder, Tom
Blomley, Justin Brashares, Amina Akida, Arne Jensen, Marlynn Mendoza, Greg
Stuart-Hill, Michael K. Poulsen, Hadija Ramadhani, Moses K. Sam and Elmer
Topp-Jørgensen; 6. Researching local perspectives on biodiversity in
tropical landscapes: lessons from ten case studies Manuel Boissière,
Marieke Sassen, Douglas Sheil, Miriam van Heist, Wil de Jong, Robert
Cunliffe, Meilinda Wan, Michael Padmanaba, Nining Liswanti, Imam Basuki,
Kristen Evans, Peter Cronkleton, Tim Lynam, Piia Koponen and Christiana
Bairaktari; 7. Participatory resources monitoring in SW China: lessons
after five years Jeannette van Rijsoort, Zhang Jinfeng, Marlon Ten Hoonte
and Wang Lei; 8. Forest inventory in Nepal - technical power or social
empowerment? Jane Hull, Hemant Ojha and Krishna Paudel; 9. Perceptions of
landscape change in British Columbia's Northwest: implications for
biodiversity and participatory management John Lewis; 10. How thousands
planned for a billion: lessons from India on decentralized, participatory
planning Seema Bhatt and Tejaswini Apte; 11. Inside monitoring: a
comparison of bird monitoring groups in Slovenia and the United Kingdom
Sandra Bell, Mariella Marzano and Dan Podjed; 12. The personal and
political of volunteers' data: towards a national database in the UK Anna
Lawrence; 13. Improving forest management through participatory monitoring:
a comparative case study of four community-based forestry organizations in
the Western United States Heidi L. Ballard, Victoria Sturtevant and Maria
E. Fernandez-Gimenez; 14. Conclusions: towards effectiveness in
participatory biodiversity assessment Anna Lawrence.
policy makers? Anna Lawrence; 2. Monitoring and assessment of biodiversity
under the Convention on Biological Diversity and other international
agreements Ruth Mackenzie; 3. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: a
multiscale assessment for global stakeholders Ciara Raudsepp-Hearne and
Doris Capistrano; 4. Conservation of biological diversity in El Salvador
shade coffee: the importance of taxonomic capacity for participatory
assessments Alex Monro and David Jones; 5. Taking stock of nature in
species-rich but economically poor areas: an emerging discipline of
locally-based monitoring Finn Danielsen, Neil Burgess, Mikkel Funder, Tom
Blomley, Justin Brashares, Amina Akida, Arne Jensen, Marlynn Mendoza, Greg
Stuart-Hill, Michael K. Poulsen, Hadija Ramadhani, Moses K. Sam and Elmer
Topp-Jørgensen; 6. Researching local perspectives on biodiversity in
tropical landscapes: lessons from ten case studies Manuel Boissière,
Marieke Sassen, Douglas Sheil, Miriam van Heist, Wil de Jong, Robert
Cunliffe, Meilinda Wan, Michael Padmanaba, Nining Liswanti, Imam Basuki,
Kristen Evans, Peter Cronkleton, Tim Lynam, Piia Koponen and Christiana
Bairaktari; 7. Participatory resources monitoring in SW China: lessons
after five years Jeannette van Rijsoort, Zhang Jinfeng, Marlon Ten Hoonte
and Wang Lei; 8. Forest inventory in Nepal - technical power or social
empowerment? Jane Hull, Hemant Ojha and Krishna Paudel; 9. Perceptions of
landscape change in British Columbia's Northwest: implications for
biodiversity and participatory management John Lewis; 10. How thousands
planned for a billion: lessons from India on decentralized, participatory
planning Seema Bhatt and Tejaswini Apte; 11. Inside monitoring: a
comparison of bird monitoring groups in Slovenia and the United Kingdom
Sandra Bell, Mariella Marzano and Dan Podjed; 12. The personal and
political of volunteers' data: towards a national database in the UK Anna
Lawrence; 13. Improving forest management through participatory monitoring:
a comparative case study of four community-based forestry organizations in
the Western United States Heidi L. Ballard, Victoria Sturtevant and Maria
E. Fernandez-Gimenez; 14. Conclusions: towards effectiveness in
participatory biodiversity assessment Anna Lawrence.
1. What does participatory biodiversity assessment mean for planners and
policy makers? Anna Lawrence; 2. Monitoring and assessment of biodiversity
under the Convention on Biological Diversity and other international
agreements Ruth Mackenzie; 3. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: a
multiscale assessment for global stakeholders Ciara Raudsepp-Hearne and
Doris Capistrano; 4. Conservation of biological diversity in El Salvador
shade coffee: the importance of taxonomic capacity for participatory
assessments Alex Monro and David Jones; 5. Taking stock of nature in
species-rich but economically poor areas: an emerging discipline of
locally-based monitoring Finn Danielsen, Neil Burgess, Mikkel Funder, Tom
Blomley, Justin Brashares, Amina Akida, Arne Jensen, Marlynn Mendoza, Greg
Stuart-Hill, Michael K. Poulsen, Hadija Ramadhani, Moses K. Sam and Elmer
Topp-Jørgensen; 6. Researching local perspectives on biodiversity in
tropical landscapes: lessons from ten case studies Manuel Boissière,
Marieke Sassen, Douglas Sheil, Miriam van Heist, Wil de Jong, Robert
Cunliffe, Meilinda Wan, Michael Padmanaba, Nining Liswanti, Imam Basuki,
Kristen Evans, Peter Cronkleton, Tim Lynam, Piia Koponen and Christiana
Bairaktari; 7. Participatory resources monitoring in SW China: lessons
after five years Jeannette van Rijsoort, Zhang Jinfeng, Marlon Ten Hoonte
and Wang Lei; 8. Forest inventory in Nepal - technical power or social
empowerment? Jane Hull, Hemant Ojha and Krishna Paudel; 9. Perceptions of
landscape change in British Columbia's Northwest: implications for
biodiversity and participatory management John Lewis; 10. How thousands
planned for a billion: lessons from India on decentralized, participatory
planning Seema Bhatt and Tejaswini Apte; 11. Inside monitoring: a
comparison of bird monitoring groups in Slovenia and the United Kingdom
Sandra Bell, Mariella Marzano and Dan Podjed; 12. The personal and
political of volunteers' data: towards a national database in the UK Anna
Lawrence; 13. Improving forest management through participatory monitoring:
a comparative case study of four community-based forestry organizations in
the Western United States Heidi L. Ballard, Victoria Sturtevant and Maria
E. Fernandez-Gimenez; 14. Conclusions: towards effectiveness in
participatory biodiversity assessment Anna Lawrence.
policy makers? Anna Lawrence; 2. Monitoring and assessment of biodiversity
under the Convention on Biological Diversity and other international
agreements Ruth Mackenzie; 3. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: a
multiscale assessment for global stakeholders Ciara Raudsepp-Hearne and
Doris Capistrano; 4. Conservation of biological diversity in El Salvador
shade coffee: the importance of taxonomic capacity for participatory
assessments Alex Monro and David Jones; 5. Taking stock of nature in
species-rich but economically poor areas: an emerging discipline of
locally-based monitoring Finn Danielsen, Neil Burgess, Mikkel Funder, Tom
Blomley, Justin Brashares, Amina Akida, Arne Jensen, Marlynn Mendoza, Greg
Stuart-Hill, Michael K. Poulsen, Hadija Ramadhani, Moses K. Sam and Elmer
Topp-Jørgensen; 6. Researching local perspectives on biodiversity in
tropical landscapes: lessons from ten case studies Manuel Boissière,
Marieke Sassen, Douglas Sheil, Miriam van Heist, Wil de Jong, Robert
Cunliffe, Meilinda Wan, Michael Padmanaba, Nining Liswanti, Imam Basuki,
Kristen Evans, Peter Cronkleton, Tim Lynam, Piia Koponen and Christiana
Bairaktari; 7. Participatory resources monitoring in SW China: lessons
after five years Jeannette van Rijsoort, Zhang Jinfeng, Marlon Ten Hoonte
and Wang Lei; 8. Forest inventory in Nepal - technical power or social
empowerment? Jane Hull, Hemant Ojha and Krishna Paudel; 9. Perceptions of
landscape change in British Columbia's Northwest: implications for
biodiversity and participatory management John Lewis; 10. How thousands
planned for a billion: lessons from India on decentralized, participatory
planning Seema Bhatt and Tejaswini Apte; 11. Inside monitoring: a
comparison of bird monitoring groups in Slovenia and the United Kingdom
Sandra Bell, Mariella Marzano and Dan Podjed; 12. The personal and
political of volunteers' data: towards a national database in the UK Anna
Lawrence; 13. Improving forest management through participatory monitoring:
a comparative case study of four community-based forestry organizations in
the Western United States Heidi L. Ballard, Victoria Sturtevant and Maria
E. Fernandez-Gimenez; 14. Conclusions: towards effectiveness in
participatory biodiversity assessment Anna Lawrence.