9,001 research outputs found
Impact of payments for environmental services and protected areas on local livelihoods and forest conservation in northern Cambodia
The potential impacts of payments for environmental services (PES) and protected areas (PAs) on environmental outcomes and local livelihoods in developing countries are contentious and have been widely debated. The available evidence is sparse, with few rigorous evaluations of the environmental and social impacts of PAs and particularly of PES. We measured the impacts on forests and human well-being of three different PES programs instituted within two PAs in northern Cambodia, using a panel of intervention villages and matched controls. Both PES and PAs delivered additional environmental outcomes relative to the counterfactual: reducing deforestation rates significantly relative to controls. PAs increased security of access to land and forest resources for local households, benefiting forest resource users but restricting households’ ability to expand and diversify their agriculture. The impacts of PES on household well-being were related to the magnitude of the payments provided. The two higher paying market-linked PES programs had significant positive impacts, whereas a lower paying program that targeted biodiversity protection had no detectable effect on livelihoods, despite its positive environmental outcomes. Households that signed up for the higher paying PES programs, however, typically needed more capital assets; hence, they were less poor and more food secure than other villagers. Therefore, whereas the impacts of PAs on household well-being were limited overall and varied between livelihood strategies, the PES programs had significant positive impacts on livelihoods for those that could afford to participate. Our results are consistent with theories that PES, when designed appropriately, can be a powerful new tool for delivering conservation goals whilst benefiting local people. El Impacto de los Pagos por Servicios Ambientales y Áreas Protegidas sobre la Subsistencia Local y la Conservación del Bosque en el Norte de Camboya RESUMEN: Los impactos potenciales de los pagos por servicios ambientales (PSA) y áreas protegidas (APs) sobre los resultados ambientales y las subsistencias locales en los países en desarrollo son polémicos y se han debatido ampliamente. La evidencia disponible es escasa; ha habido pocas evaluaciones rigurosas de los impactos ambientales y sociales de las APs y particularmente los PSA. Medimos el impacto sobre los bosques y el bienestar humano en tres diferentes programas de PSA que se llevan a cabo dentro de dos APs en el norte de Camboya usando un panel de aldeas de intervención y controles emparejados. Tanto los PSA como las APs brindaron resultados ambientales adicionales en relación a los contrafácticos, esto quiere decir que redujeron las tasas de deforestación significativamente en relación a los controles. Las áreas protegidas incrementaron el acceso seguro a los recursos del suelo y el bosque para las viviendas locales, beneficiando a los usuarios de los recursos del bosque pero restringiendo la habilidad de las viviendas para expandirse y diversificar su agricultura. Los impactos de los pagos por servicios ambientales sobre el bienestar de las viviendas estuvieron relacionados con la magnitud de los pagos proporcionados. Los dos programas de PSA de mayor paga y con conexión al mercado tuvieron impactos positivos significativos, mientras que un programa de menor paga con el objetivo de proteger a la biodiversidad no tuvo un efecto detectable sobre las viviendas, a pesar de sus resultados ambientales positivos. Las viviendas que se inscribieron a los programas de PSA con mayor paga, sin embargo, necesitaban típicamente más bienes capitales, por lo que eran menos pobres y tenían mayor seguridad alimentaria que otros aldeanos. Por esto, mientras los impactos de las APs sobre el bienestar de las viviendas fueron limitados en general y variaron dependiendo de las estrategias de subsistencia, los programas de PSA tuvieron impactos positivos significativos sobre las viviendas para aquellos que podían costear participar. Nuestros resultados son congruentes con las teorías de que los PSA, cuando se designan apropiadamente, pueden ser una herramienta poderosa y novedosa para obtener objetivos de conservación mientras se beneficia a la gente local
Teach phenomenology the bomb: Starship Troopers, the technologized body, and humanitarian warfare
Paul Verhoeven's SF films are often concerned with how the future body will be reshaped as a technological device. Starship Troopers strangely departs from Verhoeven's own work, other SF films, and current directions in cultural theory by seeing the future body as one that is more organic than mechanical. Drawing upon and challenging ideas developed by Paul Virilio, this article argues that Starship Troopers' departure from the notion of the 'post-human' mechanized body needs to be understood not as a nostalgic reassertion of de-technologized subjectivity. Rather, Verhoeven's film sees the idea of the pure body as a dangerous anachronism. And, this article further argues, Starship Troopers suggests that narratives of human salvation - such as those that arose during Nato's interventions in the Balkans - often conceal an appetite for territorial conquest
"Indirect Network Effects and the Product Cycle: Video Games in the U.S., 1994-2002"
This paper examines the importance of indirect network effects in the U.S.video game market between 1994 and 2002. The diffusion of game systems is analyzed by the interaction between console adoption decisions and software supply decisions. Estimation results suggest that introductory pricing is an effective practice at the beginning of the product cycle, and expanding software variety becomes more effective later. The paper also finds a degree of inertia in the software market that does not exist in the hardware market. This observation implies that software providers continue to exploit the installed base of hardware users after hardware demand has slowed.
EFOSC2 Spectroscopy of SWIRE-CDFS Galaxies
We present the optical spectra of a sample of 34 SWIRE-CDFS sources observed
with EFOSC2 on the ESO 3.6m Telescope. We have used the spectra and
spectroscopic redshifts to validate our photometric redshift codes and SED
template fitting methods. 12 of our sources are Infrared Luminous Galaxies. Of
these, five belong to the class of ULIRGs and one to the class of HLIRGs with
evidence of both an AGN and starburst component contributing to their extreme
infrared luminosity for 3, starburst contributing for 1 and AGN contributing
for 2 of them.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Enhancing electricity production in microbial fuel cells using defined co-cultures
Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) hold great promise for the simultaneous treatment of wastewater and electricity production. However, the electricity recovery is currently poor, typically <10% of what is theoretically possible, and the extracellular electron transfer mechanisms are poorly understood.
The influence of using cocultures as a way of improving substrate turnover rate and hence electricity produced was investigated using synthetic wastewater as a substrate. Cocultures used were (i) Shewanella oneidensis and Clostridium beijerinckii; (ii) combinations of Geobacter sulphurreducens, Clostridium beijerinckii and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The relative abundances test showed mutualistic relationship within the cocultures and was determined using RT-PCR at the end of the investigation. The coculture of S.oneidensis and C.beijerinkii gave a maximum power density of 87mWm-2 compared to 60 mWm-2 for C.beijerinckii alone and 48 mWm-2 for S.oneidensis alone. In the second study the best coculture combination was a mixture of Geobacter sulphurreducens, Clostridium beijerinckii and Saccharomyces cerevisiae giving a maximum power density of 80 mWm-2.
Another study investigated the contribution of direct electron transfer mechanism on electricity production by physically separating Shewanella oneidensis to/from the anode electrode using a dialysis membrane. The outcome of this study indicated a maximum power output of 114±6 mWm-2 when cells were restricted close to the anode, 3.5 times more than when the cells were restricted away from the anode. Without the membrane the maximum power output was 129±6 mWm-2.
These results highlight the importance of cocultures and direct electron transfer mechanism in improving electricity recovery in microbial fuel cells. Further work will seek to heterologously express the proteins in Shewanella involved in direct electron transfer in E.coli
El enfoque de Uganda respecto de la autonomía de los refugiados
Uganda ha preferido la inclusión a la marginación; en lugar de obligar a los refugiados a permanecer en los campamentos, Uganda defiende el derecho a trabajar, a asistir a la escuela y a moverse con libertad
Outflows in Infrared-Luminous Starbursts at z < 0.5. I. Sample, NaI D Spectra, and Profile Fitting
We have conducted a spectroscopic survey of 78 starbursting infrared-luminous
galaxies at redshifts up to z = 0.5. We use moderate-resolution spectroscopy of
the NaI D interstellar absorption feature to directly probe the neutral phase
of outflowing gas in these galaxies. Over half of our sample are ultraluminous
infrared galaxies that are classified as starbursts; the rest have infrared
luminosities in the range log(L_IR/L_sun) = 10.2 - 12.0. The sample selection,
observations, and data reduction are described here. The absorption-line
spectra of each galaxy are presented. We also discuss the theory behind
absorption-line fitting in the case of a partially-covered, blended absorption
doublet observed at moderate-to-high resolution, a topic neglected in the
literature. A detailed analysis of these data is presented in a companion
paper.Comment: 59 pages, 18 figures in AASTeX preprint style; to appear in September
issue of ApJ
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