992 resultados para Defense strategies
Resumo:
Este trabalho analisa questões relacionadas a interação entre ciência e os valores de acordo com o modelo de desenvolvimento científico apresentado por Hugh Lacey. É realizado um exame das principais questões relacionadas ao ideal de uma ciência livre de valores, que possui raízes na defesa da autonomia científica feita por Galileu Galilei; o lugar que estes valores (cognitivos e não-cognitivos) ocupam e seu grau de influência dentro da pesquisa científica. Uma comparação entre as noções de paradigma e estratégia propostas por Thomas Kuhn e Hugh Lacey, respectivamente, são apresentadas, bem como as posições de Helen Longino como representante de um fazer científico feminista. Esta dissertação também apresenta o estudo de caso acerca da implantação e uso das sementes transgênicas. Mais do que um simples exemplo, o estudo de caso apresentado por Lacey abre oportunidade para a pluralidade de estratégias na ciência como principal modo de alcançar o bem estar de todos.
Resumo:
This report is an account of a cross-country study that covered Vietnam, Indonesia and the Philippines. Covering four sites (one each in Indonesia and Vietnam) and two sites in the Philippines, the study documented the impacts of three climate hazards affecting coastal communities, namely typhoon/flooding, coastal erosion and saltwater intrusion. It also analyzed planned adaptation options, which communities and local governments can implement, as well as autonomous responses of households to protect and insure themselves from these hazards. It employed a variety of techniques, ranging from participatory based approaches such as community hazard mapping and Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) to regression techniques, to analyze the impact of climate change and the behavior of affected communities and households.
Resumo:
Climate change with its attendant geophysical hazards is well studied. A great deal of attention has gone into analyzing climate change impacts as well as searching out possible mitigating adaptive strategies. These matters are very real concerns, especially for coastal communities. Such communities are often the most vulnerable to climate change, since their citizens frequently live in abject poverty and have limited capacity to adapt to geophysical hazards. Their situation is further complicated by the prospect of dealing with a confluence of hazards in comparison with those in other ecosystems. Against this backdrop Worldfish and the Economy and Environment Program for Southeast Asia (EEPSEA) collaborated to implement the cross-country study “Climate Change Impacts, Vulnerability Assessments, Economic and Policy Analysis of Adaptation Strategies in Selected Coastal Areas in Indonesia, Philippines, and Vietnam”. As its title suggests the study covered selected sites in Vietnam, Indonesia and the Philippines. Employing a gamut of interdisciplinary methodologies -- ranging from community-based approaches such as community hazard mapping and focus group discussions (FGDs) to regression techniques -- the study documented the impacts from three climate hazards affecting coastal communities. These were typhoon/flooding, coastal erosion, and saltwater intrusion. The team also analyzed planned adaptation options suited to implementation by communities and local governments, augmenting autonomous responses of households to protect and insure themselves from these hazards.