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Unlocking the potential of community composting: Full project report
Community based composting schemes can make valuable contributions to the development of local infrastructure and amenities by improving soils and green spaces in addition to diverting waste from landfill. Furthermore, well managed community activities have potential for providing work and volunteering opportunities, as well as bringing people together and improving skills, knowledge and self-confidence. Considered collectively these factors may contribute to local sustainability more effectively than focusing on meeting particular waste related targets. Although there is some anecdotal and financial evidence for the growth in, and diversity of, community composting, there is very little comprehensive data that draws together the activity of the sector as a whole. This research set out to understand and assess the current and potential role of the community composting sector in achieving Defra’s waste related targets and Government’s other wider environmental and social objectives. Thus this research is timely both in terms of establishing what has been achieved in the community composting sector to-date and in terms of possibilities for future achievements
Worship & sightseeing: building a partnership approach to a ministry of welcome
This paper explores diverse opportunities for partnerships between the sacred and secular at religious sites. It identifies ways in which tourism suppliers can work collaboratively with sacred sites to enable sites to meet the demands of contemporary secular and sacred stakeholders. In the review of contemporary literature we consider supply and demand issues, site management, key components of partnership, ecumenical co-creation resources, cost-benefit and marketing needs. The paper is predicated on the provision of information and interpretation services for guidance, and development of all of these services. Methodologically, a participant observation approach was employed to confirm that tourism fits the strategic intent of religious leaders. We consider that partnership at a national, diocesan and parish level is an important part in effective tourism development. Elements of community involvement; capacity building and in-community development through engaging stakeholders are discussed. The balance achieved between stakeholders is important, and in our context the balance between local government and the tourism industry, and between active partners and the passive policy community, reflects the aims of the sacred and the private sector key partners, and the wider social capacity building aspects of community development agendas and government
Urban heritage conservation and rapid urbanization : insights from Surat, India
Currently, heritage is challenged in the Indian city of Surat due to diverse pressures, including rapid urbanization, increasing housing demand, and socio‐cultural and climate changes. Where rapid demographic growth of urban areas is happening, heritage is disappearing at an alarming rate. Despite some efforts from the local government, urban cultural heritage is being neglected and historic buildings keep being replaced by ordinary concrete buildings at a worryingly rapid pace. Discussions of challenges and issues of Surat’s urban area is supported by a qualitative dataset, including in‐depth semi‐structured interviews and focus groups with local policy makers, planners, and heritage experts, triangulated by observation and a photo‐survey of two historic areas. Findings from this study reveal a myriad of challenges such as: inadequacy of urban conservation management policies and processes focused on heritage, absence of skills, training, and resources amongst decision makers and persistent conflict and competition between heritage conservation needs and developers’ interests. Furthermore, the values and significance of Surat’s tangible and intangible heritage is not fully recognized by its citizens and heritage stakeholders. A crucial opportunity exists for Surat to maximize the potential of heritage and reinforce urban identity for its present and future generations. Surat’s context is representative of general trends and conservation challenges and therefore recommendations developed in this study hold the potential to offer interesting insights to the wider planners and conservationists’ international community. This paper recommends thoughtful integration of sustainable heritage urban conservation into local urban development frameworks and the establishment of approaches that recognize the plurality of heritage values
Re-Imagining Journalism: Local News for a Networked World
Details strategies for realizing healthy local information ecologies through for-profit and nonprofit media; higher education and community institutions; emphasis on relevance, research, and revenues; and government support. Includes case summaries
Chasing Sustainability on the Net : International research on 69 journalistic pure players and their business models
This report outlines how online-based journalistic startups have created their economical locker in the evolving media ecology. The research introduces the ways that startups have found sustainability in the markets of ten countries. The work is based on 69 case studies from Europe, USA and Japan.
The case analysis shows that business models can be divided into two groups. The storytelling-oriented business models are still prevalent in our findings. These are the online journalistic outlets that produce original content – news and stories for audiences. But the other group, service-oriented business models, seems to be growing. This group consists of sites that don’t try to monetize the journalistic content as such but rather focus on carving out new functionality.
The project was able to identify several revenue sources: advertising, paying for content, affiliate marketing, donations, selling data or services, organizing events, freelancing and training or selling merchandise. Where it was hard to evidence entirely new revenue sources, it was however possible to find new ways in which revenue sources have been combined or reconfigured. The report also offers practical advice for those who are planning to start their own journalistic site
Sustainable urban regeneration of historic city centres: lessons learnt
Cities are society’s centres of human interaction, creativity, knowledge, diversity, culture,
commerce and economic creativity. The accretion of several layers of history tends to reveal a
great deal about the city's past, present and even future. Historic city centres are usually endowed
with a multitude of historic buildings, heritage sites and the like. However, it is also these historical
centres that are most prone to the undesirable and consequential effects of growth and rapid
technological advancement, where a range of environmental and developmental challenges find
their crude expression. The rehabilitation and conservation of historic city centres serves as a
fundamental catalyst for change. Furthermore, urban regeneration of historical city centres also
promotes social interaction between inhabitants of the city, and the adoption of its urban spaces
encourages public activity. This paper scrutinizes the city centre of two historical cities which are
Barcelona, Spain and Istanbul, Turkey. Successful aspects of their ecological performance are
highlighted. The two downtown areas discussed in this paper represent the downtown of two
Mediterranean cities, and both are distinguished historical cities who have contextual similarities.
The historical city centres of these Mediterranean cities have undergone variety of projects and
strategic plans for urban regeneration, development and beautification. Moreover, various attempts
have been made for the improvement of their environmental quality and ecological performance.
This is through increases in urban green spaces and public parks, increased dependence on
renewable energy technologies (RETs) and adopting sustainable transportation modes as opposed
to undesirable and harmful vehicular transport. In essence, many urban regeneration plans have
been aimed at conserving and preserving buildings and sites that are considered symbolic of the
two cities heritage and legacy. Concomitantly, the paper presents a review of sustainability issues
related to these two city centres and analyses the strategies that have been used through various
urban regeneration projects and development plans. The paper particularly focuses on
investigating the strategic plans and attempts that have been made at urban regeneration level by
the Barcelona City Council and the Greater Municipality of Istanbul for the revitalization of their
core areas
Learning from the World: Good Practices in Navigating Cultural Diversity. Bertelsmann Stiftung Study 2018
The Reinhard Mohn Prize 2018 “Living Diversity – Shaping Society” focuses on diversity
in German society, that is the plurality of cultural, religious and linguistic identities found
among the people who live in the country. With this focus, the RMP 2018 highlights a
variety of successful strategies for living peacefully in diversity. In historical terms, cultural
diversity is nothing new or unique for Germany. In fact, though we are often unaware of
it, cultural diversity has been a feature of our daily life for a long time. Indeed, religious
differences have shaped German society since the Reformation. And Judaism has always
been present in the area we now call Germany
Sustainability and Spread of Community-based Initiatives: A case study of Community Cares, a Children’s Hospital’s 16 year effort to serve its community
The sustainability and spread of innovations is often elusive, presenting continuous challenges to clinicians and healthcare leaders. Somewhere between 33 - 70% of all innovations are reportedly not sustained, and even fewer are spread beyond the original team, or to other units within an organization. In plain language, sustainability is defined as locking in progress, while continually building upon that foundation, while spread is the exchange of knowledge and experience to others beyond the original implementing team. The literature supports the concept that sustainability is both multi-dimensional and multi-factorial and has several characteristics and pre-conditions. Tax-exempt, not-for-profit organizations in the USA must provide measurable community benefits to the populations they seek to serve. Many of these community benefits take the form of locating necessary services closer to or directly within the communities being served in order to enhance access. A case study of a 16 year effort to provide a medical home-oriented primary care model to underserved children in Houston, Texas Children’s Pediatrics’ Community Cares, is presented as illustrative of such a community benefit. Many of the characteristics and preconditions essential to a model for sustainability and spread are highlighted and the Community Cares case study is discussed from the standpoint of this framework
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