113 research outputs found

    Getting farming on the agenda: Planning, policymaking, and governance practices of urban agriculture in New York City

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    How and why is urban agriculture taken up into local food policies and sustainability plans? This paper uses a case study of urban agriculture policymaking in New York City from 2007 to 2011 to examine the power-laden operation of urban environmental governance. It explores several ‘faces of power,’ including overt authority, institutionalized ‘rules of the game,’ and hegemony. It also investigates how multiple actors interact in policymaking processes, including through the construction and use of broad discursive concepts. Findings draw upon analysis of policy documents and semi-structured interviews with 43 subjects engaged in food systems policymaking. Some municipal decision-makers questioned the significance of urban agriculture, due to the challenges of quantifying its benefits and the relative scarcity of open space in the developed city. Yet, these challenges proved insufficient to prevent a coalition of civic activists working in collaboration with public officials to envision plans on food policy that included urban agriculture. Actors created the ‘local/regional food system’ as a narrative concept in order to build broad coalitions and gain entry to the municipal policy sphere. Tracing the roll-out of plans reveals the way in which both the food systems concept and specific policy proposals were repeated and legitimized.Unpacking the dynamics of this iterative policymaking contributes to an understanding of how urban environmental governance happens in this case

    Targeting Conservation Investments in Heterogeneous Landscapes: A distance function approach and application to watershed management

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    To achieve a given level of an environmental amenity at least cost, decision-makers must integrate information about spatially variable biophysical and economic conditions. Although the biophysical attributes that contribute to supplying an environmental amenity are often known, the way in which these attributes interact to produce the amenity is often unknown. Given the difficulty in converting multiple attributes into a unidimensional physical measure of an environmental amenity (e.g., habitat quality), analyses in the academic literature tend to use a single biophysical attribute as a proxy for the environmental amenity (e.g., species richness). A narrow focus on a single attribute, however, fails to consider the full range of biophysical attributes that are critical to the supply of an environmental amenity. Drawing on the production efficiency literature, we introduce an alternative conservation targeting approach that relies on distance functions to cost-efficiently allocate conservation funds across a spatially heterogeneous landscape. An approach based on distance functions has the advantage of not requiring a parametric specification of the amenity function (or cost function), but rather only requiring that the decision-maker identify important biophysical and economic attributes. We apply the distance-function approach empirically to an increasingly common, but little studied, conservation initiative: conservation contracting for water quality objectives. The contract portfolios derived from the distance-function application have many desirable properties, including intuitive appeal, robust performance across plausible parametric amenity measures, and the generation of ranking measures that can be easily used by field practitioners in complex decision-making environments that cannot be completely modeled. Working Paper # 2002-01

    Obesity prevention and personal responsibility: the case of front-of-pack food labelling in Australia

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In Australia, the food industry and public health groups are locked in serious struggle for regulatory influence over the terms of front-of-pack food labelling. Clear, unambiguous labelling of the nutritional content of pre-packaged foods and of standardized food items sold in chain restaurants is consistent with the prevailing philosophy of 'personal responsibility'. An interpretive, front-of-pack labelling scheme has the capacity to encourage healthier patterns of eating, and to be a catalyst for improvements in the nutritional quality of food products through re-formulation. On the other hand, the strength of opposition of the Australian Food and Grocery Council to 'Traffic Light Labelling', and its efforts to promote a non-interpretive, voluntary scheme, invite the interpretation that the food industry is resistant to any reforms that could destabilise current (unhealthy) purchasing patterns and the revenues they represent.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>This article argues that although policies that aim to educate consumers about the nutritional content of food are welcome, they are only one part of a broader basket of policies that are needed to make progress on obesity prevention and public health nutrition. However, to the extent that food labelling has the capacity to inform and empower consumers to make healthier choices - and to be a catalyst for improving the nutritional quality of commercial recipes - it has an important role to play. Furthermore, given the dietary impact of meals eaten in fast food and franchise restaurants, interpretive labelling requirements should not be restricted to pre-packaged foods.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>Food industry resistance to an interpretive food labelling scheme is an important test for government, and a case study of how self-interest prompts industry to promote weaker, voluntary schemes that pre-empt and undermine progressive public health regulation.</p

    Common value: transferring development rights to make room for water

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    In 2019 floods made up 49 % of disasters and 43 % of disaster related deaths globally. Flooding is also the costliest natural disaster, with yearly estimated losses of $36.3 billion. In order to counter these challenges, the flood risk management (FRM) narrative is evolving towards integration of blue/green infrastructure (BGI), using projects that harness nature and mimic natural processes. However, there is very little research into how BGI-related innovations will be mainstreamed, nor, particularly, how they will be funded. In order to reflect upon this situation, this paper analyses current academic literature and international best practice in BGI and Land Value Capture (LVC) instruments - to form a novel conceptual framework that is designed to act as a staging post for new research into BGI and its practical delivery. Specifically, this analysis focuses on the Transferable Development Rights (TDR) instrument, which has enabled some planning authorities to successfully push forward their environmental agendas, through land conservation, including in flood prone areas. This gap in knowledge has multiple significance. Firstly, land management decisions related to BGI can have deep distributive-justice implications that need to be addressed. Secondly, there is an immediate need to pay for such FRM measures across the world. Thirdly, this financial imperative takes place against an international backdrop of reduced government funding in a time of deep structural change and Covid-19 pressure. Findings in this paper suggest that TDR has the potential to be a successful conduit for managing all three conditions. Yet, the success of TDR is closely linked to the specific legal, market and urban development contexts, which further research should explore within the framework of BGI implementation

    Comment letters to the National Commission on Commission on Fraudulent Financial Reporting, 1987 (Treadway Commission) Vol. 1

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    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aicpa_sop/1661/thumbnail.jp

    Directory of social and health agencies of New York City.

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    No volumes were issued in 1884-86? 1889, 1891, 1893-94, 1897, 1908; 1927/28 issued in 1 vol.The 7th edition is dated 1896 on t.-p., 1897 on cover.Mode of access: Internet.Published 1883-1933/1934 by the Charity Organization Society of the City of New York (1927- in cooperation with the Welfare council and the Association of Catholic day nurseries, Association of day nurseries of New York, Association to promote proper housing for girls, etc,); 1935-1950/1951 for the Welfare Council of New York City; 1952/1953-1954/1955 for the Welfare and Health Council of New York City; 1956/1957- for the Community Council of Greater New York

    Valentine's manual of old New York.

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    Editor: 1916/17-19 H.C. Brown.Issue for 1916/17 is "Founders edition": issue for 1926 lettered on cover: The last fifty years in New York; 1927: New York in the elegant eighties; 1928 has distinctive title: In the golden nineties, by Henry Collins Brown. Valentine's manual ...Issues for 1916/17-1922 are numbered new series, no. 1-6. Called new series because of its similarity to "Manual of the corporation of the city of New York," 1841-1870.Electronic text and image dataMode of access: Internet.Mode of access: World Wide Web.Title varies: 1916/17-1917/18. Valentine's manual of the city of New York. 1919-19 Valentine's manual of old New York

    Arab-West Report 1998, Week 14-48: Press Freedom, Religious Freedom, and Religious Tensions in Egypt

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    This dataset contains the 15 Arab-West Report Special Reports that were published in 1998. At the time the articles were published, Arab-West Report did not exist. Religious News Service from the Arab World, the organization which would ultimately become Arab-West Report, is the publisher of the following articles. Broadly speaking, the special reports in this dataset address issues of press freedom and discussions surrounding the actual or perceived persecution of Coptic Christians in Egypt. The dataset also contains letters, responses, book reviews, and media critiques related to these subjects. Authors include Dr. Nasr Hamid Abu-Zayd, Cornelis Hulsman (Drs.), and Fr. Dr. Christiaan Van Nispen. Institutional authors include The Council of Churches of the City of New York, The Higher Council for Journalism, The Center for Human Rights Legal Aid, and Board of Directors of the Foreign Press Association in Egypt
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