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Top 40 Priorities for Science to Inform US Conservation and Management Policy
To maximize the utility of research to decisionmaking, especially given limited financial resources, scientists must set priorities for their efforts.
We present a list of the top 40 high-priority, multidisciplinary research questions directed toward informing some of the most important current
and future decisions about management of species, communities, and ecological processes in the United States. The questions were generated
by an open, inclusive process that included personal interviews with decisionmakers, broad solicitation of research needs from scientists and
policymakers, and an intensive workshop that included scientifically oriented individuals responsible for managing and developing policy related
to natural resources. The process differed from previous efforts to set priorities for conservation research in its focus on the engagement of decisionmakers
in addition to researchers. The research priorities emphasized the importance of addressing societal context and exploration of trade-offs
among alternative policies and actions, as well as more traditional questions related to ecological processes and functions.Keywords: Priority setting, Natural resource management, Ecosystems, Conservation, Decisionmaker
Are mixed-ethnic unions more likely to dissolve than co-ethnic unions? New evidence from Britain
The increasing proportion of ethnic minorities in Britain has been paralleled by an increase in the occurrence of mixed-ethnic marriages between one White partner and an ethnic minority partner. Such marriages are thought to be at higher risk of divorce, but empirical studies so far have been inconclusive. This paper uses the Office for National Statistics longitudinal study for England and Wales to investigate whether mixed-ethnic unions are more likely to end in divorce than co-ethnic unions. We followed married couples in 1991–2001 and examined their risks of divorce. We found evidence that mixed-ethnic unions have a higher risk of dissolution than co-ethnic unions. However, after controlling for partners’ characteristics, most importantly the younger ages of people in mixed-ethnic unions, the risk of divorce for mixed-ethnic unions was no longer elevated, but lay close to the higher risk found for the two constituent co-ethnic unions.OTB Research Institute for the Built Environmen