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RECORD NUMBER: 41 OF 109

Main Title Integrating Ecology and Poverty Reduction The Application of Ecology in Development Solutions / [electronic resource] :
Type EBOOK
Author Ingram, Jane Carter.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
DeClerck, Fabrice.
Rumbaitis del Rio, Cristina.
Publisher Springer New York : Imprint: Springer,
Year Published 2012
Call Number GE300-350
ISBN 9781461401865
Subjects Environmental sciences ; Applied Ecology ; Environmental law ; Environmental management ; Sustainable development
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-0186-5
Collation XVI, 328 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Chapter 1. Introduction: Changing Societal Paradigms-Education and Gender as Critical Starting Points, Authors:Fabrice DeClerck and Jane Carter Ingram -- Chapter 2: Changing Societal Paradigms-Education and Gender as Critical Starting Points: Education, Ecology and Poverty Reduction, Authors: Robin Sears and Angela M. Stewart -- Chapter 3: Changing Societal Paradigms-Education and Gender as Critical Starting Points: Why Gender Matters to Ecological Management and Poverty, Author: Isabelle Guttierez -- Chapter 4. Introduction to Population Growth, Ecology and Poverty, Author: Alex de Sherbinin -- Chapter 5. Population Growth, Ecology and Poverty, Authors: Jason Bremner, Jason Davis, and David Carr -- Chapter 6. Alliances, conflicts and mediations: the role of population mobility in the integration of ecology into poverty reduction, Authors: Susana Adamo, Sara Curran -- Chapter 7. Urbanization, poverty reduction and ecosystem integrity, Authors: Peter Marcotullio, Hunter College, Sandra Baptista and Alex de Sherbinin -- Chapter 8. Introduction to Innovative Financing for Conservation and Poverty Reduction, Author: Jane Carter Ingram -- Chapter 9. Innovative Financing: Payments for Ecosystem Services- an Introduction, Author: Michael Jenkins -- Chapter 10. Innovative Financing: The potential of carbon offsetting projects in the forestry sector for poverty reduction in developing countries, Authors: Manuel Estrada, Esteve Corbera -- Chapter 11. Innovative Financing: The Development of Payments for Ecosystem Services as a Community-based Conservation Strategy in East Africa, Authors: Hassan Sachedina, Fred Nelson -- Chapter 12. Innovative Financing: 12. Innovative Financing: Poverty, Payments and Ecosystem Services in the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania, Author: Brendan Fisher -- Chapter 36. Innovative Financing: Prioritizing and targeting payments for ecosystem services for energy, biodiversity conservation and poverty alleviation, Authors: Natalia Estrada Carmona and Fabrice DeClerck -- Chapter 13. Introduction to Ecosystem Based Management for Conservation and Poverty Reduction, Author: Jane Carter Ingram -- Chapter 14. Governing Ecosystems for Conservation and Poverty Reduction: Ecological Principles for Managing Sustainable Fisheries, Author: Caleb McClenn -- Chapter 15. Governing Ecosystems for Conservation and Poverty Reduction: Land Use Zoning as a Tool for Balancing Conservation and Poverty Reduction, Author: Lisa Naughton -- Chapter 16. . Governing Ecosystems for Conservation and Poverty Reduction: The Role of Protected Areas for Poverty Reduction, Author: Maggie Holland -- Chapter 17. Looking Ahead: The Future and Evolving Role of Ecology in Society, Author: Shahid Naeem -- Chapter 18. Conclusions, Authors: Jane Carter Ingram, Fabrice DeClerck, Cristina Rumbaitis del Rio. Integrating Ecology and Poverty Reduction offers a timely assessment of the current and potential role of ecological science and tools for contributing to poverty reduction. The chapters in the first volume, Ecological Dimensions, address the ecological aspects of major development challenges and the contributions of ecological science to solving these problems. In the second volume, Application of Ecology in Development Solutions, authors address the roles and limitations of ecological science in creating longterm sustainable solutions to some of those problems and the social, economic and governance factors that mediate the implementation of these solutions. Integrating Ecology and Poverty Reduction is designed to illustrate the opportunities for ecological science to contribute to international development challenges and solutions; to foster new ways of thinking about the relationships between humans and the ecosystems in which they live; and to explore the tradeoffs and advantages in using an ecological approach to addressing poverty in a world of increasing population, high rates of poverty and continued ecological degradation. The issues addressed and explored by experts in ecology and international development fields will be especially relevant for students and professionals interested in the intersection of poverty reduction and environmental sustainability. About the Editors J. Carter Ingram is the lead of the Ecosystem Services and Payments for Ecosystem Services group at the Wildlife Conservation Society in New York, NY. Fabrice DeClerck is a professor of community and landscape ecology at CATIE in Costa Rica. Cristina Rumbaitis del Rio is an Associate Director at the Rockefeller Foundation in New York, NY.