2,618 research outputs found

    Shaping globalization for poverty alleviation and food security:

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    CONTENTS: Brief 1. Introduction / Eugenio DĂ­az-Bonilla and Sherman Robinson Brief 2. The Nature of Disagreements / Ravi Kanbur Brief 3. Growth and Poverty / Manohar Sharma, Sam Morley, and Eugenio DĂ­az-Bonilla Brief 4. Trade and Food Security / Eugenio DĂ­az-Bonilla and Marcelle Thomas Brief 5. Nutrition / Julie Babinard and Per Pinstrup-Andersen Brief 6. High-Value Agriculture / Christopher Delgado, Nicholas Minot, and Nikolas Wada Brief 7. Food Safety and Food Quality / Laurian J. Unnevehr Brief 8. Technological Change / Peter B. R. Hazell Brief 9. Intellectual Property Rights and Agricultural R&D / Philip G. Pardey and Brian D. Wright Brief 10. Environment / Stanley Wood Brief 11. Democracy and Civil Society / Marzia Fontana and Yukitsugu Yanoma Brief 12. Conflict and Food Insecurity / Ellen Messer and Marc J. Cohen Brief 13. Governments and Public Policy / Eugenio DĂ­az-Bonilla and Sherman RobinsonNutrition., Intellectual property., Conflict management., Food security., Poverty alleviation., Afghanistan., Globalization,

    Getting ready for the millennium round trade negotiations:

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    Contents: 1. Overview / Eugenio Diaz-Bonilla and Sherman Robinson 2. Latin American perspective / Eugenio Diaz-Bonilla and Lucio Reca 3. Asian perspective / Marcus Noland 4. African perspective / Natasha Mukherjee and Rebecca Lee Harris 5. Transition Economies' perspective / Ulrike Grote and Peter Wehrheim 6. European Union perspective / Stefan Tangermann 7. United States of America perspective / Dale Hathaway 8. Least-developed Countries' perspective / Eugenio Diaz-Bonilla, Marcelle Thomas, and Valeria Piñeiro 9. Cairns Group perspective / Kym Anderson.World Trade Organization., Produce trade Government policy International cooperation., Tariff on farm produce International cooperation., Agricultural policy International cooperation.,

    Globalization, trade reform, and the developing countries: essay in IFPRI Annual Report

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    This essay focuses on trends reflecting the globalization of the international economy and on changes in agricultural markets. In this context it assesses how these factors are affecting developing countries and how, in turn, those countries could affect the Millenium Round of agricultural trade agreements,International economic relations., Trade policy Developing countries Reform., Globalization, Development policies.,

    Crommet Creek Conservation Area Management Plan

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    The Crommet Creek Conservation Area comprises the largest block of natural lands in the immediate Great Bay watershed, and in New Hampshire’s North Atlantic Coast Ecoregion. It includes the entire watershed of two tidal creeks that flow directly into the Great Bay Estuary. The area has been identified by the Great Bay Resource Protection Partnership as a protection priority due to the size of the natural area; the diversity of habitats and wildlife it supports; and it’s integral role in protecting the regional water quality and resources within the Great Bay Estuary. The Conservation Area includes headwater wetlands, and the entire spectrum of freshwater and estuarine wetland and aquatic communities along both Lubberland and Crommet creeks. The Great Bay is a shallow inland tidal estuary of national importance for migratory birds. The Great Bay supports 29 species of waterfowl, 27 species of shorebirds, 13 species of wading birds, osprey and bald eagle. The Estuary is unique in that it is recessed 9 miles from the ocean along the Piscataqua River. Although development is increasing in the watershed, it remains one of the more healthy and viable estuarine ecosystems on the North Atlantic coast

    The Public Papers of Governor Bert T. Combs: 1959–1963

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    This volume presents the most important public papers of Bert T. Combs during the four years he served as governor of Kentucky. Arranged chronologically, the papers reveal the policy of the Combs administration as it evolved in the early years of the 1960s and show how the governor dealt with varying concurrent problems. Although this collection is not intended as a definitive statement of the Combs administration, it provides important source material that will enable historians to study the broad spectrum of issues faced by the people of the Commonwealth at a time when considerable government-inspired change was occurring. John Ed Pearce has provided a perceptive introductory essay to the volume. The appendix offers a complete listing of speeches delivered by Governor Combs during his term of office. George W. Robinson is professor of history and chairman of the department at Eastern Kentucky University.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_political_science_papers/1016/thumbnail.jp

    The dogs bark and the circus moves on

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    Purpose: The paper aims to set out challenges that libraries face while developing their Digital Library capabilities and capacity and propose an approach to estimating the costs for these functions. There is a skills challenge as well as an organisational challenge. The opportunities to build new teams or re-train existing staff are discussed. Design/methodology/approach: The approach builds on a 2008 paper about Digital Library economics and discusses the changes in the environment since then. A model is described in which a library takes on the full responsibility for building and operating a Digital Library function in-house. This is used to benchmark other options such as managed services, outsourced infrastructure and "cloud" services. Findings: The Open Access Publication and Research Data Management mandates present challenges to all libraries based in academic institutions in the UK. New working methods and new costs are unavoidable. There are a number of ways to deal with this depending upon the institutional circumstance. The bottom line can be increases in revenue budgets of around 10 per cent with variable requirements for capital investment. Originality/value: Libraries and librarians have different experiences in closely working with colleagues in information technology (IT). A number of propositions are presented about the value of cooperation and collaboration between library and IT and also with external partners and service providers

    Submaximal Oviposition Rates in a Mymarid Parasitoid: Choosiness Should Not Be Ignored

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    Cronin and Strong (1993a, b) examined the oviposition behavior of Anagarus delicatus Dozier (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae), an egg parasitoid of the leafhopper Prokelisia marginate Van Duzee (Homoptera: Delphacidae). They reported oviposition rates that were lower than predicted if the rate of egg-laying was maximized. Cronin and Strong (1993a) considered, and subsequently rejected, several “rules of thumb” (Stephens and Krebs 1986) as explanations for the observed patterns of patch departure. They observed that hosts on leaves experience density-independent mortality due to leaf senescence. Based on that, they advanced the hypothesis that submaximal oviposition rates in A. delicatus are best explained as risk-spreading by the parasitoid. (That is, by laying a small number of eggs on many leaves, the parasitoid increases the probability that some of her offspring will survive; Cronin and Strong 1993a.) An alternative hypothesis (Rosenheim and Mangel 1994) suggests that by distributing the eggs among several leaves, A. delicatus avoids self-superparasitism. Here, we take a somewhat different approach than those provided above to explain an additional observation of Cronin and Strong (1993a): female wasps rejected most of the hosts that they had probed. In so doing, we argue that rate maximization was an inappropriate prediction for A. delicatus, and in light of the life history parameters of this species, egg limitation is more suitable. Furthermore, egg limitation, when combined with one of the proposed explanations for the distribution of eggs, can explain the high rejection level of potential hosts

    Submaximal Oviposition Rates in a Mymarid Parasitoid: Choosiness Should Not Be Ignored

    Get PDF
    Cronin and Strong (1993a, b) examined the oviposition behavior of Anagarus delicatus Dozier (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae), an egg parasitoid of the leafhopper Prokelisia marginate Van Duzee (Homoptera: Delphacidae). They reported oviposition rates that were lower than predicted if the rate of egg-laying was maximized. Cronin and Strong (1993a) considered, and subsequently rejected, several “rules of thumb” (Stephens and Krebs 1986) as explanations for the observed patterns of patch departure. They observed that hosts on leaves experience density-independent mortality due to leaf senescence. Based on that, they advanced the hypothesis that submaximal oviposition rates in A. delicatus are best explained as risk-spreading by the parasitoid. (That is, by laying a small number of eggs on many leaves, the parasitoid increases the probability that some of her offspring will survive; Cronin and Strong 1993a.) An alternative hypothesis (Rosenheim and Mangel 1994) suggests that by distributing the eggs among several leaves, A. delicatus avoids self-superparasitism. Here, we take a somewhat different approach than those provided above to explain an additional observation of Cronin and Strong (1993a): female wasps rejected most of the hosts that they had probed. In so doing, we argue that rate maximization was an inappropriate prediction for A. delicatus, and in light of the life history parameters of this species, egg limitation is more suitable. Furthermore, egg limitation, when combined with one of the proposed explanations for the distribution of eggs, can explain the high rejection level of potential hosts
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