Skip to main content

Home/ envscisociety/ Group items tagged development

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Joanna Newton

The Origins of Empathetic Concern - 0 views

  •  
    This article is the summary of a study done with two-year old children and their ability to develop empathy. Temperament and environment contribute to the development of empathy.
Melika Uter

Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) - 0 views

  •  
    Structural Adjustment Programs are economic policies required by the IMF before loans are given to developing countries.
pjt111 taylor

Catalog of forms of diagramming with examples - 0 views

  •  
    All diagrams simply; many do so in a way that makes it hard to depict the way the situation has developed and the way further influences can move the situation into new places. Some of the diagrams cataloged here, e.g., the force-field diagram, allow for a more dynamic sense of competing influences and possibilities of change.
pjt111 taylor

The 1991 Lawrence Summers World Bank Memo on underpolluted countries - 0 views

  •  
    The original text of Larry Summers' memo on underpolluted countries--"shouldn't the World Bank be encouraging MORE migration of the dirty industries to the LDCs [Less Developed Countries]" Summers went on to become treasury secretary under Clinton, Harvard U. president (until he was forced out), and chief economic advisor to Obama.
pjt111 taylor

Relating traditional and academic ecological knowledge: mechanistic and holistic episte... - 0 views

  •  
    "Current debates about the integration of traditional and academic ecological knowledge (TEK and AEK) struggle with a dilemma of division and assimilation. On the one hand, the emphasis on differences between traditional and academic perspectives has been criticized as creating an artificial divide that brands TEK as "non-scientific" and contributes to its marginalization. On the other hand, there has been increased concern about inadequate assimilation of Indigenous and other traditional perspectives into scientific practices that disregards the holistic nature and values of TEK. The aim of this article is to develop a practice-based account of the epistemic relations between TEK and AEK that avoids both horns of the dilemma. While relations between TEK and AEK are often described in terms of the "holistic" nature of the former and the "mechanistic" character of the latter, we argue that a simple holism-mechanism divide misrepresents the epistemic resources of both TEK and AEK. Based on the literature on mechanistic explanations in philosophy of science, we argue that holders of TEK are perfectly capable of identifying mechanisms that underlie ecological phenomena while AEK often relies on non-mechanistic strategies of dealing with ecological complexity. Instead of generic characterizations of knowledge systems as either mechanistic or holistic, we propose to approach epistemic relations between knowledge systems by analyzing their (partly mechanistic and partly holistic) heuristics in practice."
pjt111 taylor

Cooperation and the Commons | Science/AAAS - 1 views

  •  
    Under what conditions do people sharing a common resource develop sustainable ways of cooperating? Vollan and Ostrom (Nobel eonomics prize winner) provide an overview of recent experiments with people involving the forests of Ethiopia. Many different factors affect the outcomes, e.g., group's distance to markets--do not expect a simple counter-picture to Hardin's simple model of the tragedy of the commons. P.S. You can get access to the full text by signing into Science magazine via the UMB library, but here's the summary of the article: Sustainably managing common natural resources, such as fisheries, water, and forests, is essential for our long-term survival. Many analysts have assumed, however, that people will maximize short-term self-benefits-for example, by cutting as much firewood as they can sell-and warned that this behavior will inevitably produce a "tragedy of the commons" (1), such as a stripped forest that no longer produces wood for anyone. But in laboratory simulations of such social dilemmas, the outcome is not always tragedy. Instead, a basic finding is that humans do not universally maximize short-term self-benefits, and can cooperate to produce shared, long-term benefits (2, 3). Similar findings have come from field studies of commonly managed resources (6-7). It has been challenging, however, to directly relate laboratory findings to resource conditions in the field, and identify the conditions that enhance cooperation. On page 961 of this issue, Rustagi et al. (8) help fill this gap. In an innovative study of Ethiopia's Oromo people, they use economic experiments and forest growth data to show that groups that had a higher proportion of "conditional cooperators" were more likely to invest in forest patrols aimed at enforcing firewood collection rules-and had more productive forests. They also show that other factors, including a group's distance to markets and the quality of its leadership, influenced the success of cooperati
pjt111 taylor

Cat bonds: Cashing in on catastrophe - Road to Paris - ICSU - 0 views

  • It is likely that the most vulnerable are least likely to be insured, or be able to pay an extortionate premium to be covered. Much like how private health insurers in the US refuse to insure those at high risk of cancer, the investors in catbonds are less likely to be able to provide coverage for those least developed countries most at risk of climate chaos, such as Bangladesh. Indeed, there are certain to be “uninsurable” regions, just as there are millions of Americans without health coverage. Rather than modelling climate insurance on a Scandinavian or Canadian socialised system, ensuring that everyone is equally covered, the catbond market replicates the broken healthcare system of the USA with its storied injustices. Here, due to increased premiums paid to already wealthy northern investors by southern governments least able to pay, there is a transfer of wealth not from north to south, but from south to north – a situation Swedish scholars have described as “particularly odious”.
  •  
    "the bond can be triggered in a number of different ways, including when an issuer's losses amount to a certain figure, or when certain parameters such as wind speed exceed a particular threshold. Thus modeling of these parameters by independent agents plays a crucial role in determining who gets paid and when."
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page