94 resultados para Land use ways
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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Monthly newsletter for people in Iowa that live on Acreages, produced by Iowa State University Copperative Extension.
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The Office of Transportation Data, in cooperation with the Federal Highway Administration, prepares this biennial traffic report. This report is used by federal, state, and local governmental agencies in determining highway needs, construction priorities, route location and environmental impact studies, and the application of appropriate design standards. The general public uses this information in determining the amount of traffic that passes a given area as they make their development plans and propose land use changes. The above reflects only a few of the many technical uses for this data.
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As worldwide consumer demand for high-quality products and for information about these products increases, labels and geographical indications (GIs) can serve to signal quality traits to consumers. However, GI systems among countries are not homogeneous and can be used as trade barriers against competition. Philosophical differences between the European Union and the United States about how GIs should be registered and protected led to the formation of a WTO dispute settlement panel. In this paper we discuss the issues behind the dispute, the World Trade Organization (WTO) panel decision, and the EU response to the panel decision leading to the new Regulation 510/2006. Given the potential for GI labels to supply consumer information, context is provided for the discussion using recent literature on product labeling. Implications are drawn regarding the importance of the panel decision and the EU response relative to GI issues yet to be negotiated under the Doha Round.
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This is the annual report of the State Planning Commission. It tells about the program that the state has finished work on and is still working on. Plus plans for progress of the capital areas and surrounding buildings.
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Landscape amenities can be scarce in places with large areas of open space. Intensely farmed areas with high levels of monocropping and livestock production are akin to developed open space areas and do not provide many services in terms of landscape amenities. Open space in the form of farmland is plentiful, but parks and their services are in short supply. This issue is of particular importance for public policy because it is closely linked to the impact of externalities caused by agricultural activities and to the indirect effects of land use dynamics. This study looks at the impact of landscape amenities on rural residential property values in five counties in North Central Iowa using a hedonic pricing model based on geographic information systems. The effect of cropland, pasture, forest, and developed land as land uses surrounding the property is considered, as well as the impact of proximity to recreational areas. The study also includes the effect of other disamenities, such as livestock facilities and quarries, which can be considered part of the developed open space and are a common feature of the Iowa landscape.