841 resultados para Agenda 21 local


Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Survey map of the Second Welland Canal created by the Welland Canal Company showing south Merritton along the boundary between the Grantham and Thorold Townships. Identified structures associated with the Canal include Locks 19, 20, 21, and 22, Lock Tenders House, and the towing path. The surveyors' measurements and notes can be seen in red and black ink and pencil. Local area landmarks are also identified and include streets and roads (ex. Pine Street and Macadamized Road), J. Brown Cement Mill, W. B. Hendershot Saw Mill, W. Parnall Spoke and Sash Factory, W. Beatty Saw Mill, W. Beatty Tannery, a number of structures (possibly houses) belonging to: Mrs. Aikins, J. Battle, and E. Keefer, and a foundry, smithy, and machine shop (all of which possible belonged to J. Dobbie). Properties and property owners of note are: Concession 10 Lots 9 and 10, W. C. Loan Company, P.H. Ball, and J. Keefer. Two small properties belonging to W. B. Hendershot and W. Beatty exist and are outlined in red. A half acre property reserved for a lock lot exists and is outlined in blue. An additional property reserved for a quarry is also identified, but not outlined.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Survey map of the Second Welland Canal created by the Welland Canal Company showing the areas in and around Port Colborne. Identified structures associated with the Canal include Lighthouse, Pier Light, Old Lock House, Collector's Office, Harbour Master's House, Canal Boundary, Back Ditch, Reserved Back Ditch, Basin, Light-Keeper's House and Ferry Recess. The surveyors' measurements and notes can be seen in red and black ink and pencil. Local area landmarks and businesses are also identified and include Gordon's Woodyard, Welland Rail Road, Welland Railway Elevator and Proposed Elevator, W.R.R. Flour Shed, Roman Catholic Church, School House, Sandhills, Lake Erie, and the High Water Mark. Streets running parallel to Canal include King St., West St., East St., Queen St., Hamilton St., and the Road Allowance are labelled. Streets running perpendicular to Canal include Kent St., Victoria St., Adelaide St., SugarLoaf St., George St., Alexandrina St., William St., Fort Erie St., Lake Rd., and New Road to Dutch Settlement are also labelled. Property owners and leasers as well as buildings on lots are also idenitified and noted as follows: Adams estate, J. Towhig, J.C. Kerr, Mrs. Hill, S. Cooke, Mrs. Yocum, W.T. Cooke, P. Wintermute, J. Shickluna, William Cooke, J. McChesney, John Beatty, W. Robertson, John Gordon, T. Armstrong, John Harper, George Keefer, Estate of James Black, Thomas Park, N. Higgins, S. Hopkins, and L.G. Cartier. Map of the Village of Port Colborne. Being Lot No. 27 and part of Lot No. 28 in the 1st Con. Township of HUMBERSTONE. Scale 2 Chs. per Inch. land shaded in RED Owned by DEPT. Do. Do. BLUE Sold to the COUNTY of WELLAND

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Ce rapport constitue une version augmentée d’un premier rapport datant d’août 2005. Les 21 fiches annotées peuvent aussi être consultées individuellement (en format HTML) à partir du « Portail des ressources pédagogiques et disciplinaires en sciences de l'information » accessible à l’adresse : http://www.ebsi.umontreal.ca/clip/

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Thèse numérisée par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Ce mémoire porte sur le mouvement de l’Association des Paysans de Vallue (APV), qui a vu le jour après la chute de la dictature des Duvalier en Haïti en 1986. La recherche vise à cerner les stratégies mises en œuvre par l’APV dans le développement local, la portée et les impacts de ses initiatives locales sur les conditions de vie des paysans et sur leur relation avec le territoire de Vallue. Elle vise également à identifier les modes de participation des paysans dans la dynamique de développement local qui est implantée par l’APV à Vallue. Après avoir présenté une brève revue de littérature sur le développement local en Haïti, nous évoquons les problèmes confrontés par les paysans et les stratégies qu’ils ont développées en vue de trouver des moyens de survie. Pour comprendre et étudier l’expérience de l’APV à Vallue, nous nous sommes inspirés des perspectives théoriques portant sur le développement local et sur les stratégies d’intervention. La recherche est de type qualitatif ; elle est articulée autour de dix-sept (17) entretiens réalisés avec les vingt-et-un (21) participants recrutés à Vallue. Les résultats de la recherche indiquent que l’APV a su orchestrer des stratégies variées pour réaliser un développement qui est ancré localement et qui répond aux besoins des paysans. En misant sur l’éducation, la sensibilisation, la négociation, la concertation, le partenariat et en mobilisant des ressources locales et externes, l’APV a su réaliser des interventions qui provoquent tout un changement de mentalité et une conscience collective chez les paysans qui développent de nouvelles manières de faire dans l’éducation de leurs enfants et dans la protection de l’environnement de la zone. La route construite par l’association rend Vallue accessible et ouverte, ce qui facilite le développement et permet l’organisation d’une activité comme la foire de la montagne qui met en valeur les produits locaux et la culture locale. L’APV a su apporter des éléments de solution aux problèmes confrontés par les paysans et ses interventions ont des impacts sur leurs conditions de vie et sur leur relation avec le territoire de Vallue. Ils s’identifient mieux au territoire et développent toute une fierté par rapport à leur espace. En outre, la participation des paysans tant dans les élections, la prise de décision et les projets, constitue un élément important. Toutefois, cette participation comporte certaines limites liées au niveau d’éducation des membres de certains groupes. Enfin, il importe de souligner qu’à travers le dernier chapitre de la recherche nous dégageons les points de convergence et de divergence entre la partie théorique et la partie empirique.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This research is a study about knowledge interface that aims to analyse knowledge discontinuities, the dynamic and emergent characters of struggles and interactions within gender system and ethnicity differences. The cacao boom phenomenon in Central Sulawesi is the main context for a changing of social relations of production, especially when the mode of production has shifted or is still underway from subsistence to petty commodity production. This agrarian change is not only about a change of relationship and practice, but, as my previous research has shown, also about the shift of knowledge domination, because knowledge construes social practice in a dialectical process. Agroecological knowledge is accumulated through interaction, practice and experience. At the same time the knowledge gained from new practices and experiences changes mode of interaction, so such processes provide the arena where an interface of knowledge is manifested. In the process of agro-ecological knowledge interface, gender and ethnic group interactions materialise in the decision-making of production and resource allocation at the household and community level. At this point, power/knowledge is interplayed to gain authority in decision-making. When authority dominates, power encounters resistance, whereas the dominant power and its resistance are aimed to ensure socio-economic security. Eventually, the process of struggle can be identified through the pattern of resource utilisation as a realisation of production decision-making. Such processes are varied from one community to another, and therefore, it shows uniqueness and commonalities, especially when it is placed in a context of shifting mode of production. The focus is placed on actors: men and women in their institutional and cultural setting, including the role of development agents. The inquiry is informed by 4 major questions: 1) How do women and men acquire, disseminate, and utilise their agro ecological knowledge, specifically in rice farming as a subsistence commodity, as well as in cacao farming as a petty commodity? How and why do such mechanisms construct different knowledge domains between two genders? How does the knowledge mechanism apply in different ethnics? What are the implications for gender and ethnicity based relation of production? ; 2) Using the concept of valued knowledge in a shifting mode of production context: is there any knowledge that dominates others? How does the process of domination occur and why? Is there any form of struggle, strategies, negotiation, and compromise over this domination? How do these processes take place at a household as well as community level? How does it relate to production decision-making? ; 3) Putting the previous questions in two communities with a different point of arrival on a path of agricultural commercialisation, how do the processes of struggle vary? What are the bases of the commonalities and peculiarities in both communities?; 4) How the decisions of production affect rice field - cacao plantation - forest utilisation in the two villages? How does that triangle of resource use reflect the constellation of local knowledge in those two communities? What is the implication of this knowledge constellation for the cacao-rice-forest agroecosystem in the forest margin area? Employing a qualitative approach as the main method of inquiry, indepth and dialogic interviews, participant observer role, and document review are used to gather information. A small survey and children’s writing competition are supplementary to this data collection method. The later two methods are aimed to give wider information on household decision making and perception toward the forest. It was found that local knowledge, particularly knowledge pertaining to rice-forest-cacao agroecology is divided according to gender and ethnicity. This constellation places a process of decision-making as ‘the arena of interface’ between feminine and masculine knowledge, as well as between dominant and less dominant ethnic groups. Transition from subsistence to a commercial mode of production is a context that frames a process where knowledge about cacao commodity is valued higher than rice. Market mechanism, as an external power, defines valued knowledge. Valued knowledge defines the dominant knowledge holder, and decision. Therefore, cacao cultivation becomes a dominant practice. Its existence sacrifices the presence of rice field and the forest. Knowledge about rice production and forest ecosystem exist, but is less valued. So it is unable to challenge the domination of cacao. Various forms of struggles - within gender an ethnicity context - to resist cacao domination are an expression of unequal knowledge possession. Knowledge inequality implies to unequal access to withdraw benefit from market valued crop. When unequal knowledge fails to construct a negotiated field or struggles fail to reveal ‘marginal’ decision, e.g. intensification instead of cacao expansion to the forest, interface only produces divergence. Gender and ethnicity divided knowledge is unabridged, since negotiation is unable to produce new knowledge that accommodates both interests. Rice is loaded by ecological interest to conserve the forest, while cacao is driven by economic interest to increase welfare status. The implication of this unmediated dominant knowledge of cacao production is the construction of access; access to the forest, mainly to withdraw its economic benefit by eliminating its ecological benefit. Then, access to cacao as the social relationship of production to acquire cacao knowledge; lastly, access to defend sustainable benefit from cacao by expansion. ‘Socio-economic Security’ is defined by Access. The convergence of rice and cacao knowledge, however, should be made possible across gender and ethnicity, not only for the sake of forest conservation as the insurance of ecological security, but also for community’s socio-economic security. The convergence might be found in a range of alternative ways to conduct cacao sustainable production, from agroforestry system to intensification.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This paper approaches the topic of urban/community gardening not through the lens of urban theory per se but in light of basic farming realities such as growing season and land availability. Food security comprises availability and affordability. In the context of North American and Western European societies, only food affordability normally merits public discourse. In practice, governments have little or no means to change food affordability, in view of prevailing capitalistic free-market structures. In the current wave of popular exuberance, civic politicians and others have promoted the belief that community gardening could be the pathway to produce affordable food. The formidable obstacles to this pursuit include the availability of (low-cost) land within the highly-densified city limit, insufficient ambient temperature and water supply during the growing season and the contemporary structure of society. Overcoming these fundamental hurdles carries significant negative environmental and economic consequences.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

A convergence of factors has made food security one of the most important global issues. It has been the core concept of the Milan Expo 2015, whose title, Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life, embodied the challenge to provide the world’s growing population with a sustainable, secure supply of safe, nutritious, and affordable high-quality food using less land with lower inputs. Meeting the food security agenda using current agricultural production techniques cannot be achieved without serious degradation to the environment, including soil degradation, loss of biodiversity and climate change. Organic farming is seen as a solution to the challenge of sustainable food production, as it provides more nutritious food, with less or no pesticide residues and lower use of inputs. A limit of organic farming is its restricted capability of producing food compared to conventional agriculture, thus being an inefficient approach to food production and to food security. The authors maintain, on the basis of a scientific literature review, that organic soils tend to retain the physical, chemical and biological properties over the long term, while maintaining stable levels of productivity and thereby ensuring long-term food production and safety. Furthermore, the productivity gap of organic crops may be worked out by further investment in research and in particular into diversification techniques. Moreover, strong scientific evidence indicates that organic agricultural systems deliver greater ecosystem services and social benefits.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Descripció d'un projecte de la Universidad Nacional de Cuyo sobre el cultiu de la figuera de moro com a entre la comunitat Huarpe de Guanacache, Argentina

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

La política exterior de Colombia se caracteriza por el compromiso firme con el multilateralismo, anuncia sin ambigüedad la estrategia de política exterior de Colombia para el periodo 2002-2006. A continuación ésta anticipa que nuestro país participará activamente en los foros internacionales, en especial aquellos en donde se debaten los temas de la agenda global más relevantes a la realidad colombiana, los cuales se identifican con: los derechos humanos, las drogas, el terrorismo, el medio ambiente, la cooperación internacional, entre otros.1 Todos ellos son temas inherentes a la labor de las Naciones Unidas en el mundo y en particular de la Asamblea General en donde tienen representación los 192 países del mundo.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Proyecto de aplicación teórico-práctica que consiste en la elaboración de una agenda que permita el encuentro, diálogo y formación de los agentes culturales, a fin de contar con herramientas de planeación y gestión; y así lograr articulación en la acción cultural municipal. La Agenda es una estrategia metodológica que integra tres grandes componentes que de manera simultánea, hacen posible el reconocimiento y el trabajo conjunto entre las organizaciones culturales formales e informales, el Estado local y el sector privado, para gestar colectivamente políticas y programas culturales con una perspectiva de largo plazo. La Agenda dinamizadora es una metodología compuesta por procesos, etapas e instrumentos que en su relación generan escenarios de encuentro, diálogo, construcción o continuidad de proyectos culturales que se gestan en el municipio. Con el objeto de comprobar la viabilidad del proyecto y obtener información relevante a la hora de implementar el modelo, se decidió desarrollar un piloto de los principales componentes de la Agenda. Para el piloto se seleccionó un municipio que cumpliera con los criterios establecidos del contexto municipal que se analiza: Zipaquirá, Cundinamarca, para este caso.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

El tema central de este documento es la incorporación de una aproximación teórica de análisis sobre la relación existente entre la realización y entramado de políticas públicas desde el ámbito de la agenda internacional sostenida por las organizaciones multilaterales a nivel mundial y sus influencias en los países miembros, en el ámbito de lo local.