'The goal is to automate us': welcome to the age of surveillance capitalism | Technolog... - 0 views
Kayapo Courage - 0 views
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five officially demarcated tracts of contiguous land that in sum make up an area about the size of Kentucky. T
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9,000 indigenous people, most of whom can’t read or write and who still follow a largely subsistence way of life in 44 villages linked only by rivers and all-but-invisible trails.
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Kendjam,
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This year's El Nino will be the strongest in 18 years, WMO says - Technology & Science ... - 0 views
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The current El Nino weather phenomenon is expected to peak between October and January and could turn into one of the strongest on record, experts from the World Meteorological Organization said at a news conference on Tuesday.
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waters in the east-central Pacific Ocean are likely to be more than 2 degrees hotter than average,
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Arctic warming effect at work on the Atlantic jetstream current.
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Bold steps: Japan's remedy for a rapidly aging society - The Globe and Mail - 0 views
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Ms. Shimamura worked part-time in a hotel for years, and at the age of 65 began working full-time as a janitor – retiring only when she was 85.
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long-term-care insurance program
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Here, she has food, shelter, scheduled activities and the attentive care of a Filipino health care worker.
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'The goal is to automate us': welcome to the age of surveillance capitalism | Technolog... - 0 views
THE POLITICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE EXPLAINED - Lawrence Anthony Earth Organization - 0 views
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More than 150 nations signed it back in December 1997 at a meeting in Kyoto.
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eorge W. Bush was installed as President soon afterwards, and announced that he was pulling the US out of the deal altogether. Since the US is the source of a quarter of emissions of greenhouse gases that was a big blow, but the other nations decided to carry on and they finally reached agreement in Marrakech in November 2001.
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ndustrialised nations have committed themselves to a range of targets to reduce emissions between 1990
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Global M&A: Shifting the global chemical industry balance | KPMG | GLOBAL - 0 views
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This assessment certainly holds true for the chemical industry. Many chemical companies now have strong balance sheets as the result of increased sales in 2010 and lower overhead due to cost-cutting measures taken during the recession. With volumes still below 2008 levels, further sales growth is expected in 2011.
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In addition, political instability in the Middle East and North Africa have the potential of generating a significant and long-term impact on oil prices and hence the global economy. As a result, many chemical companies are adopting a wait-and-see attitude for deal making in the region.
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BICME countries (Brazil, India, China, Middle East) will increasingly dominate chemical industry M&A activity in the years ahead, supported by growth in end markets, government policies and access to funding. Already, M&A in BICME countries have increased from 5 percent of deal value and 17 percent of deal volume in 2007 to 30 percent of deal value and 28 percent of deal volume in 2010.
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Japan's Rare Earth Mining on Pacific Ocean Floor Puts Marine Ecosystems at Risk : TreeH... - 0 views
Learning from Fukushima | Issues in Science and Technology - 0 views
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Inadequate risk assessment models have been identified as another main culprit in the Fukushima disaster.
World's first ocean cleaning system to be deployed in 2016: The Ocean Cleanup, developi... - 0 views
Uncontacted tribes: Contact, respect and isolation - Survival International - 0 views
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Uncontacted tribes: Contact, respect and isolation
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Our mission was to bring out Jaboti and Makurap tribal people, enslaved in the rubber forests deep in the Amazon.
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During the 1970s, the military governments in Brazil started to develop a road network that would cut through the Amazon,
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Will globalisation take away your job? - BBC News - 0 views
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"Knowledge crossing borders in massive amounts [is the] big new disruptive thing."
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It's going to help people in Africa and Asia compete more effectively with people in the West, as communication advances mean workers in the developing world will be able to control robots to do jobs in Europe and the US at lower cost, he says.
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virtual migration
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