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Ian Gabrielson

Free Technology for Teachers: A History of Timelines & 5 Tools to Make Your Own - 0 views

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    allows users to create animated visualizations of development data. To use Better World Flux (no registration required) all you have to do is select a data set from the menu provided and select a country or countries from the menu provided. From there Better World Flux creates an animated data visualization for you. The visualization will change as the years on the timeline at the bottom of the visualization change. This way users can see growth and recession of a statistic over time.
Richard Allaway

geographyalltheway.com - AS / A2 / IB Geography - Causes of Migrations - 0 views

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    The aim of this lesson: To be able to evaluate internal (national) in terms of it's geographic (socio-economic, political and environmental) impacts at it's origins and destinations. To discuss the causes of voluntary, economic migration. To use China as a case-study of internal (national) migration. Updated July 2012
Charlotte Lemaitre

BBC News - US-Mexico immigration: Even oceans have borders - 3 views

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    The US government is erecting a fence in the ocean to divide California from Tijuana, Mexico. Immigration and environmental activists say it is a costly, dangeroUS endeavour that will do little to keep out unauthorised migrants.
James Mattiace

American Migration [Interactive Map] - Forbes - 2 views

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    Very interactive map of migration in the US 2005-2009,  Shows in and out migration.  If you needed a better demonstration of the Gravity Model or Ravenstein....this is it.
Matt Podbury

Boys' discussion groups help prevent sexual violence - YouTube - 2 views

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    Gender Inequalities (To be used in conjunction with previous video)
Matt Podbury

BBC News - Guide reveals Amazon's biological bounty - 2 views

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    Rainforest & Human uses
Paul Becker-Hounslow

China softens line on single child policy | World news | The Guardian - 0 views

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    Useful story of change and modernisation
Ewa Wink

The Irrawaddy News Magazine [Covering Burma and Southeast Asia] - 1 views

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    'Brown Clouds' Are World's Newest Environmental Threat By TINI TRAN AND JOHN HEILPRIN / AP WRITER Friday, November 14, 2008 BEIJING - A dirty brown haze sometimes more than a mile thick is darkening skies not only over vast areas of Asia, but also in the Middle East, southern Africa and the Amazon Basin, changing weather patterns and threatening health and food supplies, the UN reported. The huge smog-like plumes, caused mainly by the burning of fossil fuels and firewood, are known as "atmospheric brown clouds." Cars drive through thick smog on a street in Beijing in September 2008. Enormous brown clouds of pollution hanging over Asia are killing hundreds of thousands of people, melting glaciers, changing weather patterns and damaging crops, the United Nations said. (Photo: AFP) When mixed with emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases blamed for warming the earth's atmosphere like a greenhouse, they are the newest threat to the global environment, according to a report commissioned by the UN Environment Program and released Thursday. "All of these points to an even greater and urgent need to look at emissions across the planet," said Achim Steiner, head of Kenya-based UNEP, which funded the report with backing from Italy, Sweden and the United States. Brown clouds are caused by an unhealthy mix of particles, ozone and other chemicals that come from cars, coal-fired power plants, burning fields and wood-burning stoves. First identified by the report's lead researcher in 1990, the clouds were depicted Thursday as being more widespread and causing more environmental damage than previously known. Perhaps most widely recognized as the haze this past summer over Beijing's Olympics, the clouds have been found to be more than a mile (kilometer) thick around glaciers in the Himalaya and Hindu Kush mountain ranges. They hide the sun and absorb radiation, leading to new worries not only about global climate change but also about extreme weather conditions. "All t
Dominic Tilley

BBC News - The rise of the $1-a-day statistic - 2 views

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    Description of the origin and uses of 1$ a day as a measure of absolute povery
Matt Podbury

NationMaster - Compare two countries: France and Niger - 1 views

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    Compare one country to another using key development indicators. Quick access to information. 
Matt Podbury

Global Forest Change - 3 views

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    Global Forest Change - for use with environmental sustainability & biodiversity 
Richard Allaway

Beyond Peak Oil and World Geopolitical Implications - 3 views

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    This website is useful for examining the geopolitical and environmental consequences of changing oil trends. [Submitted by Danielle Morgan]
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