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  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_BV046293872
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (XI, 430 Seiten) : , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten.
    ISBN: 978-981-132-327-0
    Series Statement: Ecological research monographs
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-981-132-326-3
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-981-132-328-7
    Language: English
    Subjects: Economics , Geography
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Nachhaltigkeit ; Umweltpolitik ; Nachhaltigkeit ; Wissens- und Technologietransfer
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 2
    UID:
    almafu_BV043479598
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (XXVI, 572 Seiten) : , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten.
    ISBN: 978-0-12-801353-3
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-0-12-801231-4
    Language: English
    Keywords: Rekultivierung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_9947420894402882
    Format: 1 online resource (600 p.)
    ISBN: 0-12-801353-2 , 0-12-801231-5
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Front Cover -- Land Restoration: Reclaiming Landscapes for a Sustainable Future -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Contributors -- Acknowledgments -- Foreword -- Governing Land Restoration: Four Hypotheses -- References -- Introduction -- Part 1: Social Contexts of Land Restoration -- Chapter 1.1: Land Degradation as a Security Threat Amplifier: The New Global Frontline -- 1.1.1. Introduction -- 1.1.2. The Human Security Lens -- 1.1.3. Land Degradation Can Make Things Worse -- 1.1.4. Global Threats to Human Security -- 1.1.5. Sustainable Land Management and Restoration -- 1.1.6. Land Degradation Neutrality -- 1.1.7. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 1.2: Land Degradation and its Impact on Security -- 1.2.1. Introduction -- 1.2.2. The Recognition of Land Degradation and Climate Change as Security Influences -- 1.2.3. Conflict Constellations -- 1.2.3.1. Water Scarcity -- 1.2.3.2. Loss of Land -- 1.2.3.3. Food Insecurity -- 1.2.4. Conflict Pathways -- 1.2.5. Hot Spots -- 1.2.5.1. Land Degradation in the Sahel -- 1.2.5.2. Droughts in the Middle East -- 1.2.5.3. Land Degradation and Water Scarcity in Central Asia -- 1.2.5.4. Tropical Cyclones in South Asia and Southeast Asia -- 1.2.6. Conclusions and Recommendations -- References -- Chapter 1.3: (EM)Powering People: Reconciling Energy Security and Land-Use Management in the Sudano-Sahelian Region -- 1.3.1. Introduction -- 1.3.2. Paradigm Shifts: Energy Security and Land Degradation -- 1.3.2.1. The Paradigm of Energy Security -- 1.3.2.2. The Paradigm of Land Degradation -- 1.3.3. Current Patterns of Energy Production and Consumption and the Links Between Energy Security and Land Degradation -- 1.3.3.1. Energy Indicators -- 1.3.3.2. Land Grabbing and Land Degradation -- 1.3.3.3. Linking Energy Security to Land Degradation in the Context of the Sudano-Sahelian Region. , Availability of Energy Resources -- Accessibility of Supplies -- Acceptability -- Affordability -- 1.3.4. Vulnerabilities, risks, and resilience of energy systems from a long term perspective -- 1.3.4.1. The IEAs New Policy Scenario -- 1.3.4.2. IRENA Scenario -- 1.3.5. Case Studies -- 1.3.5.1. Case Study1: Sudan and South Sudan -- Socioeconomic Context -- The Energy Landscape -- Land Degradation: Causes and Consequences -- 1.3.5.2. Case Study2: Mali -- Geographic and Socioeconomic Context -- The Energy Landscape -- Land degradation: Causes and Consequences -- Measures to Improve Energy Security and Mitigate Land Degradation -- 1.3.6. Policy Options for Mitigating Land Degradation and Improving Energy Security -- 1.3.6.1. Agroforestry Practices -- 1.3.6.2. Sustainable Cooking Fuels and Modern Cooking Technologies -- 1.3.6.3. Off-Grid and Minigrid Solutions -- 1.3.6.4. Renewable Energies for Power Generation -- 1.3.7. Conclusions and Recommendations -- 1.3.7.1. Technological Recommendations -- Policy, Institutional, and Regulatory Actions-Recommendations -- References -- Appendix. Development Indicators -- Chapter 1.4: Enabling Governance for Sustainable Land Management -- 1.4.1. Introduction -- 1.4.2. Land Degradation and Conflict -- 1.4.3. Governance: A Common Denominator -- 1.4.3.1. Restoring the Influence of Traditional Leadership -- 1.4.3.2. Recovering Ancestral Knowledge -- 1.4.3.3. Updating Traditional Systems -- 1.4.3.4. Empowering Women Through Governance -- 1.4.3.5. Enhancing Social Fabric and Grassroots Organizations -- 1.4.3.6. Legal Recognition of Local Rules and Regulations -- 1.4.3.7. Preserving Natural Infrastructure -- 1.4.4. Overall Lessons for Improved Governance and Conflict Management -- 1.4.5. Conclusion -- References -- Part 2: Concepts and Methodologies for Restoration and Maintenance. , Chapter 2.1: Tenets of Soil and Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.1. Introduction -- 2.1.2. Soil Erosion and Organic Carbon Dynamics -- 2.1.3. Strategies of Soil and Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.4. Implementation of Ecological Restoration -- 2.1.4.1. Implementation at the Landscape Level -- 2.1.4.2. Harmonizing the Ecological Effects with Current and Future Social Demographic Changes -- 2.1.4.3. Building upon Traditional Knowledge -- 2.1.4.4. Risk Assessment and Management -- 2.1.4.5. Multiple Benefits of Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.4.6. Ecological Engineering -- 2.1.5. Establishing Vegetation Cover -- 2.1.6. Water Management -- 2.1.7. Landscape Restoration and Ecosystem Services -- 2.1.8. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2.2: Stabilization of Sand Dunes: Do Ecology and Public Perception go Hand in Hand? -- 2.2.1. Introduction -- 2.2.2. Study Site -- 2.2.3. Methods -- 2.2.3.1. Dichotomous Choice -- 2.3.3.2. Survey Description and Administration -- 2.2.3.3. Ecological Measure -- 2.2.4. Results -- 2.2.4.1. Descriptive Statistics -- 2.2.4.2. Econometric Estimation -- 2.2.4.3. Estimation of the Benefits of the Various Sand Dune Types -- 2.2.4.4. Ecological Value Measured in Monetary Terms -- 2.2.5. Discussion -- 2.2.6. Summary and Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2.3: Trust Building and Mobile Pastoralism in Africa -- 2.3.1. Background: Mobile Pastoralism and Grasslands -- 2.3.2. A Context of Mistrust -- 2.3.3. Failed Interventions and an Inadequate Theoretical Framework -- 2.3.4. Darfur, Sudan-A Need for Good Governance -- 2.3.5. Kaduna State, Nigeria: Ethnoreligious Conflict and Socioeconomic Inclusivity -- 2.3.6. Baringo County, Kenya: An Example of Good Practice -- 2.3.7. Trust Building Successes -- References -- Chapter 2.4: Land Degradation From Military Toxics: Public Health Considerations and Possible Solution Paths. , 2.4.1. Military Activities -- 2.4.2. Chemical Weapons -- 2.4.3. Nuclear Contamination -- 2.4.4. Depleted Uranium -- 2.4.4.1. Confirmed Use of Depleted Uranium Weapons -- 2.4.4.2. Environmental and Health Considerations -- 2.4.4.3. UN Resolution on Depleted Uranium -- 2.4.5. Case Study: Landmines and Other Remnants of War -- 2.4.6. Case Study: Land Contamination at Shooting Ranges -- 2.4.7. Case Study: Land Contamination in Kuwait After the 1990-1991 Iraqi Invasion -- 2.4.8. Soil Remediation -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Chapter 2.5: Flood and Drought Prevention and Disaster Mitigation: Combating Land Degradation with an Integrated Natural S ... -- 2.5.1. Introduction -- 2.5.2. Soil Erosion: Causes and Consequences -- 2.5.3. Restoring Landscape Function Through Soil Formation and Water Harvesting -- 2.5.3.1. General Soil Restoration Techniques -- 2.5.4. Project Implementation -- 2.5.4.1. Training -- 2.5.4.2. Demonstration Sites -- 2.5.4.3. Monitoring and Establishing a Historic Database -- 2.5.4.4. Program Outline -- References -- Chapter 2.6: Environmental Security, Land Restoration, and the Military: A Case Study of the Ecological Task Forces in India -- 2.6.1. Introduction -- 2.6.2. Land Degradation as Part of the Environmental Security Spectrum -- 2.6.3. Military Dimensions of Environmental Security: Indian and Global Perspectives -- 2.6.4. The Role of the Military in Land Restoration in India -- 2.6.5. Bhatti Mines in the Capital: A Case Study -- 2.6.6. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 2.7: Releasing the Underground Forest: Case Studies and Preconditions for Human Movements that Restore Land with t ... -- 2.7.1. Introduction -- 2.7.2. FMNR: Birth and Spread of a Movement, Niger Republic -- 2.7.3. Adoption and Rapid Spread of FMNR, Ethiopia -- 2.7.4. FMNR in Ghana: from Despair to "Life and Joy. , 2.7.5. FMNR in Senegal: Appreciating the Environment -- 2.7.6. Benefits of FMNR -- 2.7.7. Preconditions for the Scale-up of FMNR -- 2.7.8. From the Grassroots to a Global Movement -- 2.7.9. Conclusions -- Part 3: Soil, Water, and Energy-The Relationship to Land Restoration -- Chapter 3.1: Computational Policy Support Systems for Understanding Land Degradation Effects on Water and Food Security fo ... -- 3.1.1. Land Degradation Policy Support -- 3.1.1.1. What Is Policy Support? -- 3.1.1.2. Which Policy Makers Are Involved? -- 3.1.1.3. Which Policies Should Be Used? -- 3.1.2. Information Needs for Land Restoration -- 3.1.2.1. Static Desertification Assessments Versus Dynamic PSS -- 3.1.2.2. Africa Subject to Recent Land Degradation -- 3.1.2.3. Africa at Risk of Future Degradation -- 3.1.2.4. Global Change Risk Factors -- 3.1.2.5. Deforestation Scenarios -- 3.1.2.6. Climate Change Scenarios -- 3.1.2.7. Integrating Pressures and Threats -- 3.1.2.8. Human Dependency -- 3.1.2.9. Supply Chain Teleconnections (All Commodities) -- 3.1.3. Restoring Africa -- 3.1.3.1. The Desertification Baseline for Gabon -- 3.1.4. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 3.2: The Value of Land Restoration as a Response to Climate Change -- 3.2.1. Ecosystems and Climate Change -- 3.2.2. Restoring Terrestrial Carbon Stocks -- 3.2.3. The Restoration Opportunity in Context -- 3.2.4. The Importance of Soil Carbon -- 3.2.5. Land and Climate Change Adaptation -- 3.2.6. Meeting the Rising Demands on Land -- 3.2.7. Conclusion -- References -- Part 4: Economics, Policy, and Governance of Land Restoration -- Chapter 4.1: The Importance of Land Restoration for Achieving a Land Degradation-Neutral World -- 4.1.1. Introduction -- 4.1.2. Definition and Accounting of Land Degradation Neutrality -- 4.1.2.1. Land Degradation -- 4.1.3. Land Restoration -- 4.1.3.1. Restoring Eroded Soil. , 4.1.3.2. Restoring Soil Quality. , English
    Language: English
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  • 4
    UID:
    b3kat_BV047934456
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (61 Seiten) , 21 x 29.7cm
    Series Statement: OECD/IEA Climate Change Expert Group Papers
    Content: Adaptation responses are needed to address the existing levels of climate variability and to prepare for future climate impacts. There is wide agreement that adaptation is an important issue and would benefit from being enhanced through more effective action and better planning. The prominence of adaptation in the UNFCCC negotiations has increased, in part as the scientific evidence has become clearer that climate change is occurring and its impacts are projected to grow in future. Efforts to enhance adaptation actions and increase resilience are thus expected to play a key role in the post-2020 climate agreement to be agreed at COP21 in December 2015. This paper explores how the 2015 agreement can help to foster enhanced policies and co-ordinate planning for greater resilience and adaptation capabilities at the national level. The paper considers the technical advantages and disadvantages of selected adaptation-related concepts that have been put forward in the negotiations. These include proposals for global or national goals; developing or improving adaptation institutions or planning; enhancing information availability; and facilitating or enhancing adaptation finance. Many of these proposals have the potential to improve sub-national, national and international planning about and responses to climate adaptation. However, the actual impact of these proposals is likely to vary significantly depending on how they are implemented on the ground
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_1747666637
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (61 p.) , 21 x 29.7cm.
    Series Statement: OECD/IEA Climate Change Expert Group Papers no.2015/01
    Content: Adaptation responses are needed to address the existing levels of climate variability and to prepare for future climate impacts. There is wide agreement that adaptation is an important issue and would benefit from being enhanced through more effective action and better planning. The prominence of adaptation in the UNFCCC negotiations has increased, in part as the scientific evidence has become clearer that climate change is occurring and its impacts are projected to grow in future. Efforts to enhance adaptation actions and increase resilience are thus expected to play a key role in the post-2020 climate agreement to be agreed at COP21 in December 2015. This paper explores how the 2015 agreement can help to foster enhanced policies and co-ordinate planning for greater resilience and adaptation capabilities at the national level. The paper considers the technical advantages and disadvantages of selected adaptation-related concepts that have been put forward in the negotiations. These include proposals for global or national goals; developing or improving adaptation institutions or planning; enhancing information availability; and facilitating or enhancing adaptation finance. Many of these proposals have the potential to improve sub-national, national and international planning about and responses to climate adaptation. However, the actual impact of these proposals is likely to vary significantly depending on how they are implemented on the ground.
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1747694665
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (53 p.) , 21 x 29.7cm.
    Series Statement: OECD/IEA Climate Change Expert Group Papers no.2015/03
    Content: Climate support will be an important element in reaching a post-2020 climate agreement at COP 21 in December 2015. To further increase and mobilise the levels of climate support post-2020, a number of proposals have been made in the negotiating text produced in the Geneva session of the Ad-hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in February 2015. This paper explores the advantages and disadvantages of several of these proposals, focusing on those that are clear and specific. The paper assesses proposals on mobilising climate finance using the following criteria: (i) the level of financial flows that they could generate; (ii) how much of this could be mobilised in the UNFCCC context; (iii) the ease of implementation of the proposal; (iv) if and how such increased mobilisation could be monitored; and (v) whether the proposal would fill a specific gap in the context of climate support within the UNFCCC. The paper undertakes a similar assessment for proposals in the Geneva text on enhancing the level of technology development and transfer, as well as capacity building. It discusses whether the proposals could potentially increase technology development and transfer, capacity building and development, as well as whether they are likely to do so in practice, based on current experience and ease of implementation. The proposals vary significantly in the amount of climate support they could mobilise (or enhance, in the case of technology and capacity building), for a range of reasons. These include the particular wording of the proposals, their sensitivity to national implementation, uncertainty in measuring progress towards objectives, and in some cases the limited role the UNFCCC plays as an institution in a given area of climate support.
    Language: English
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  • 7
    UID:
    edoccha_9958080359102883
    Format: 1 online resource (600 p.)
    ISBN: 0-12-801353-2 , 0-12-801231-5
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Front Cover -- Land Restoration: Reclaiming Landscapes for a Sustainable Future -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Contributors -- Acknowledgments -- Foreword -- Governing Land Restoration: Four Hypotheses -- References -- Introduction -- Part 1: Social Contexts of Land Restoration -- Chapter 1.1: Land Degradation as a Security Threat Amplifier: The New Global Frontline -- 1.1.1. Introduction -- 1.1.2. The Human Security Lens -- 1.1.3. Land Degradation Can Make Things Worse -- 1.1.4. Global Threats to Human Security -- 1.1.5. Sustainable Land Management and Restoration -- 1.1.6. Land Degradation Neutrality -- 1.1.7. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 1.2: Land Degradation and its Impact on Security -- 1.2.1. Introduction -- 1.2.2. The Recognition of Land Degradation and Climate Change as Security Influences -- 1.2.3. Conflict Constellations -- 1.2.3.1. Water Scarcity -- 1.2.3.2. Loss of Land -- 1.2.3.3. Food Insecurity -- 1.2.4. Conflict Pathways -- 1.2.5. Hot Spots -- 1.2.5.1. Land Degradation in the Sahel -- 1.2.5.2. Droughts in the Middle East -- 1.2.5.3. Land Degradation and Water Scarcity in Central Asia -- 1.2.5.4. Tropical Cyclones in South Asia and Southeast Asia -- 1.2.6. Conclusions and Recommendations -- References -- Chapter 1.3: (EM)Powering People: Reconciling Energy Security and Land-Use Management in the Sudano-Sahelian Region -- 1.3.1. Introduction -- 1.3.2. Paradigm Shifts: Energy Security and Land Degradation -- 1.3.2.1. The Paradigm of Energy Security -- 1.3.2.2. The Paradigm of Land Degradation -- 1.3.3. Current Patterns of Energy Production and Consumption and the Links Between Energy Security and Land Degradation -- 1.3.3.1. Energy Indicators -- 1.3.3.2. Land Grabbing and Land Degradation -- 1.3.3.3. Linking Energy Security to Land Degradation in the Context of the Sudano-Sahelian Region. , Availability of Energy Resources -- Accessibility of Supplies -- Acceptability -- Affordability -- 1.3.4. Vulnerabilities, risks, and resilience of energy systems from a long term perspective -- 1.3.4.1. The IEAs New Policy Scenario -- 1.3.4.2. IRENA Scenario -- 1.3.5. Case Studies -- 1.3.5.1. Case Study1: Sudan and South Sudan -- Socioeconomic Context -- The Energy Landscape -- Land Degradation: Causes and Consequences -- 1.3.5.2. Case Study2: Mali -- Geographic and Socioeconomic Context -- The Energy Landscape -- Land degradation: Causes and Consequences -- Measures to Improve Energy Security and Mitigate Land Degradation -- 1.3.6. Policy Options for Mitigating Land Degradation and Improving Energy Security -- 1.3.6.1. Agroforestry Practices -- 1.3.6.2. Sustainable Cooking Fuels and Modern Cooking Technologies -- 1.3.6.3. Off-Grid and Minigrid Solutions -- 1.3.6.4. Renewable Energies for Power Generation -- 1.3.7. Conclusions and Recommendations -- 1.3.7.1. Technological Recommendations -- Policy, Institutional, and Regulatory Actions-Recommendations -- References -- Appendix. Development Indicators -- Chapter 1.4: Enabling Governance for Sustainable Land Management -- 1.4.1. Introduction -- 1.4.2. Land Degradation and Conflict -- 1.4.3. Governance: A Common Denominator -- 1.4.3.1. Restoring the Influence of Traditional Leadership -- 1.4.3.2. Recovering Ancestral Knowledge -- 1.4.3.3. Updating Traditional Systems -- 1.4.3.4. Empowering Women Through Governance -- 1.4.3.5. Enhancing Social Fabric and Grassroots Organizations -- 1.4.3.6. Legal Recognition of Local Rules and Regulations -- 1.4.3.7. Preserving Natural Infrastructure -- 1.4.4. Overall Lessons for Improved Governance and Conflict Management -- 1.4.5. Conclusion -- References -- Part 2: Concepts and Methodologies for Restoration and Maintenance. , Chapter 2.1: Tenets of Soil and Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.1. Introduction -- 2.1.2. Soil Erosion and Organic Carbon Dynamics -- 2.1.3. Strategies of Soil and Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.4. Implementation of Ecological Restoration -- 2.1.4.1. Implementation at the Landscape Level -- 2.1.4.2. Harmonizing the Ecological Effects with Current and Future Social Demographic Changes -- 2.1.4.3. Building upon Traditional Knowledge -- 2.1.4.4. Risk Assessment and Management -- 2.1.4.5. Multiple Benefits of Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.4.6. Ecological Engineering -- 2.1.5. Establishing Vegetation Cover -- 2.1.6. Water Management -- 2.1.7. Landscape Restoration and Ecosystem Services -- 2.1.8. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2.2: Stabilization of Sand Dunes: Do Ecology and Public Perception go Hand in Hand? -- 2.2.1. Introduction -- 2.2.2. Study Site -- 2.2.3. Methods -- 2.2.3.1. Dichotomous Choice -- 2.3.3.2. Survey Description and Administration -- 2.2.3.3. Ecological Measure -- 2.2.4. Results -- 2.2.4.1. Descriptive Statistics -- 2.2.4.2. Econometric Estimation -- 2.2.4.3. Estimation of the Benefits of the Various Sand Dune Types -- 2.2.4.4. Ecological Value Measured in Monetary Terms -- 2.2.5. Discussion -- 2.2.6. Summary and Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2.3: Trust Building and Mobile Pastoralism in Africa -- 2.3.1. Background: Mobile Pastoralism and Grasslands -- 2.3.2. A Context of Mistrust -- 2.3.3. Failed Interventions and an Inadequate Theoretical Framework -- 2.3.4. Darfur, Sudan-A Need for Good Governance -- 2.3.5. Kaduna State, Nigeria: Ethnoreligious Conflict and Socioeconomic Inclusivity -- 2.3.6. Baringo County, Kenya: An Example of Good Practice -- 2.3.7. Trust Building Successes -- References -- Chapter 2.4: Land Degradation From Military Toxics: Public Health Considerations and Possible Solution Paths. , 2.4.1. Military Activities -- 2.4.2. Chemical Weapons -- 2.4.3. Nuclear Contamination -- 2.4.4. Depleted Uranium -- 2.4.4.1. Confirmed Use of Depleted Uranium Weapons -- 2.4.4.2. Environmental and Health Considerations -- 2.4.4.3. UN Resolution on Depleted Uranium -- 2.4.5. Case Study: Landmines and Other Remnants of War -- 2.4.6. Case Study: Land Contamination at Shooting Ranges -- 2.4.7. Case Study: Land Contamination in Kuwait After the 1990-1991 Iraqi Invasion -- 2.4.8. Soil Remediation -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Chapter 2.5: Flood and Drought Prevention and Disaster Mitigation: Combating Land Degradation with an Integrated Natural S ... -- 2.5.1. Introduction -- 2.5.2. Soil Erosion: Causes and Consequences -- 2.5.3. Restoring Landscape Function Through Soil Formation and Water Harvesting -- 2.5.3.1. General Soil Restoration Techniques -- 2.5.4. Project Implementation -- 2.5.4.1. Training -- 2.5.4.2. Demonstration Sites -- 2.5.4.3. Monitoring and Establishing a Historic Database -- 2.5.4.4. Program Outline -- References -- Chapter 2.6: Environmental Security, Land Restoration, and the Military: A Case Study of the Ecological Task Forces in India -- 2.6.1. Introduction -- 2.6.2. Land Degradation as Part of the Environmental Security Spectrum -- 2.6.3. Military Dimensions of Environmental Security: Indian and Global Perspectives -- 2.6.4. The Role of the Military in Land Restoration in India -- 2.6.5. Bhatti Mines in the Capital: A Case Study -- 2.6.6. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 2.7: Releasing the Underground Forest: Case Studies and Preconditions for Human Movements that Restore Land with t ... -- 2.7.1. Introduction -- 2.7.2. FMNR: Birth and Spread of a Movement, Niger Republic -- 2.7.3. Adoption and Rapid Spread of FMNR, Ethiopia -- 2.7.4. FMNR in Ghana: from Despair to "Life and Joy. , 2.7.5. FMNR in Senegal: Appreciating the Environment -- 2.7.6. Benefits of FMNR -- 2.7.7. Preconditions for the Scale-up of FMNR -- 2.7.8. From the Grassroots to a Global Movement -- 2.7.9. Conclusions -- Part 3: Soil, Water, and Energy-The Relationship to Land Restoration -- Chapter 3.1: Computational Policy Support Systems for Understanding Land Degradation Effects on Water and Food Security fo ... -- 3.1.1. Land Degradation Policy Support -- 3.1.1.1. What Is Policy Support? -- 3.1.1.2. Which Policy Makers Are Involved? -- 3.1.1.3. Which Policies Should Be Used? -- 3.1.2. Information Needs for Land Restoration -- 3.1.2.1. Static Desertification Assessments Versus Dynamic PSS -- 3.1.2.2. Africa Subject to Recent Land Degradation -- 3.1.2.3. Africa at Risk of Future Degradation -- 3.1.2.4. Global Change Risk Factors -- 3.1.2.5. Deforestation Scenarios -- 3.1.2.6. Climate Change Scenarios -- 3.1.2.7. Integrating Pressures and Threats -- 3.1.2.8. Human Dependency -- 3.1.2.9. Supply Chain Teleconnections (All Commodities) -- 3.1.3. Restoring Africa -- 3.1.3.1. The Desertification Baseline for Gabon -- 3.1.4. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 3.2: The Value of Land Restoration as a Response to Climate Change -- 3.2.1. Ecosystems and Climate Change -- 3.2.2. Restoring Terrestrial Carbon Stocks -- 3.2.3. The Restoration Opportunity in Context -- 3.2.4. The Importance of Soil Carbon -- 3.2.5. Land and Climate Change Adaptation -- 3.2.6. Meeting the Rising Demands on Land -- 3.2.7. Conclusion -- References -- Part 4: Economics, Policy, and Governance of Land Restoration -- Chapter 4.1: The Importance of Land Restoration for Achieving a Land Degradation-Neutral World -- 4.1.1. Introduction -- 4.1.2. Definition and Accounting of Land Degradation Neutrality -- 4.1.2.1. Land Degradation -- 4.1.3. Land Restoration -- 4.1.3.1. Restoring Eroded Soil. , 4.1.3.2. Restoring Soil Quality. , English
    Language: English
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  • 8
    UID:
    edocfu_9958080359102883
    Format: 1 online resource (600 p.)
    ISBN: 0-12-801353-2 , 0-12-801231-5
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Front Cover -- Land Restoration: Reclaiming Landscapes for a Sustainable Future -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Contributors -- Acknowledgments -- Foreword -- Governing Land Restoration: Four Hypotheses -- References -- Introduction -- Part 1: Social Contexts of Land Restoration -- Chapter 1.1: Land Degradation as a Security Threat Amplifier: The New Global Frontline -- 1.1.1. Introduction -- 1.1.2. The Human Security Lens -- 1.1.3. Land Degradation Can Make Things Worse -- 1.1.4. Global Threats to Human Security -- 1.1.5. Sustainable Land Management and Restoration -- 1.1.6. Land Degradation Neutrality -- 1.1.7. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 1.2: Land Degradation and its Impact on Security -- 1.2.1. Introduction -- 1.2.2. The Recognition of Land Degradation and Climate Change as Security Influences -- 1.2.3. Conflict Constellations -- 1.2.3.1. Water Scarcity -- 1.2.3.2. Loss of Land -- 1.2.3.3. Food Insecurity -- 1.2.4. Conflict Pathways -- 1.2.5. Hot Spots -- 1.2.5.1. Land Degradation in the Sahel -- 1.2.5.2. Droughts in the Middle East -- 1.2.5.3. Land Degradation and Water Scarcity in Central Asia -- 1.2.5.4. Tropical Cyclones in South Asia and Southeast Asia -- 1.2.6. Conclusions and Recommendations -- References -- Chapter 1.3: (EM)Powering People: Reconciling Energy Security and Land-Use Management in the Sudano-Sahelian Region -- 1.3.1. Introduction -- 1.3.2. Paradigm Shifts: Energy Security and Land Degradation -- 1.3.2.1. The Paradigm of Energy Security -- 1.3.2.2. The Paradigm of Land Degradation -- 1.3.3. Current Patterns of Energy Production and Consumption and the Links Between Energy Security and Land Degradation -- 1.3.3.1. Energy Indicators -- 1.3.3.2. Land Grabbing and Land Degradation -- 1.3.3.3. Linking Energy Security to Land Degradation in the Context of the Sudano-Sahelian Region. , Availability of Energy Resources -- Accessibility of Supplies -- Acceptability -- Affordability -- 1.3.4. Vulnerabilities, risks, and resilience of energy systems from a long term perspective -- 1.3.4.1. The IEAs New Policy Scenario -- 1.3.4.2. IRENA Scenario -- 1.3.5. Case Studies -- 1.3.5.1. Case Study1: Sudan and South Sudan -- Socioeconomic Context -- The Energy Landscape -- Land Degradation: Causes and Consequences -- 1.3.5.2. Case Study2: Mali -- Geographic and Socioeconomic Context -- The Energy Landscape -- Land degradation: Causes and Consequences -- Measures to Improve Energy Security and Mitigate Land Degradation -- 1.3.6. Policy Options for Mitigating Land Degradation and Improving Energy Security -- 1.3.6.1. Agroforestry Practices -- 1.3.6.2. Sustainable Cooking Fuels and Modern Cooking Technologies -- 1.3.6.3. Off-Grid and Minigrid Solutions -- 1.3.6.4. Renewable Energies for Power Generation -- 1.3.7. Conclusions and Recommendations -- 1.3.7.1. Technological Recommendations -- Policy, Institutional, and Regulatory Actions-Recommendations -- References -- Appendix. Development Indicators -- Chapter 1.4: Enabling Governance for Sustainable Land Management -- 1.4.1. Introduction -- 1.4.2. Land Degradation and Conflict -- 1.4.3. Governance: A Common Denominator -- 1.4.3.1. Restoring the Influence of Traditional Leadership -- 1.4.3.2. Recovering Ancestral Knowledge -- 1.4.3.3. Updating Traditional Systems -- 1.4.3.4. Empowering Women Through Governance -- 1.4.3.5. Enhancing Social Fabric and Grassroots Organizations -- 1.4.3.6. Legal Recognition of Local Rules and Regulations -- 1.4.3.7. Preserving Natural Infrastructure -- 1.4.4. Overall Lessons for Improved Governance and Conflict Management -- 1.4.5. Conclusion -- References -- Part 2: Concepts and Methodologies for Restoration and Maintenance. , Chapter 2.1: Tenets of Soil and Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.1. Introduction -- 2.1.2. Soil Erosion and Organic Carbon Dynamics -- 2.1.3. Strategies of Soil and Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.4. Implementation of Ecological Restoration -- 2.1.4.1. Implementation at the Landscape Level -- 2.1.4.2. Harmonizing the Ecological Effects with Current and Future Social Demographic Changes -- 2.1.4.3. Building upon Traditional Knowledge -- 2.1.4.4. Risk Assessment and Management -- 2.1.4.5. Multiple Benefits of Landscape Restoration -- 2.1.4.6. Ecological Engineering -- 2.1.5. Establishing Vegetation Cover -- 2.1.6. Water Management -- 2.1.7. Landscape Restoration and Ecosystem Services -- 2.1.8. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2.2: Stabilization of Sand Dunes: Do Ecology and Public Perception go Hand in Hand? -- 2.2.1. Introduction -- 2.2.2. Study Site -- 2.2.3. Methods -- 2.2.3.1. Dichotomous Choice -- 2.3.3.2. Survey Description and Administration -- 2.2.3.3. Ecological Measure -- 2.2.4. Results -- 2.2.4.1. Descriptive Statistics -- 2.2.4.2. Econometric Estimation -- 2.2.4.3. Estimation of the Benefits of the Various Sand Dune Types -- 2.2.4.4. Ecological Value Measured in Monetary Terms -- 2.2.5. Discussion -- 2.2.6. Summary and Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2.3: Trust Building and Mobile Pastoralism in Africa -- 2.3.1. Background: Mobile Pastoralism and Grasslands -- 2.3.2. A Context of Mistrust -- 2.3.3. Failed Interventions and an Inadequate Theoretical Framework -- 2.3.4. Darfur, Sudan-A Need for Good Governance -- 2.3.5. Kaduna State, Nigeria: Ethnoreligious Conflict and Socioeconomic Inclusivity -- 2.3.6. Baringo County, Kenya: An Example of Good Practice -- 2.3.7. Trust Building Successes -- References -- Chapter 2.4: Land Degradation From Military Toxics: Public Health Considerations and Possible Solution Paths. , 2.4.1. Military Activities -- 2.4.2. Chemical Weapons -- 2.4.3. Nuclear Contamination -- 2.4.4. Depleted Uranium -- 2.4.4.1. Confirmed Use of Depleted Uranium Weapons -- 2.4.4.2. Environmental and Health Considerations -- 2.4.4.3. UN Resolution on Depleted Uranium -- 2.4.5. Case Study: Landmines and Other Remnants of War -- 2.4.6. Case Study: Land Contamination at Shooting Ranges -- 2.4.7. Case Study: Land Contamination in Kuwait After the 1990-1991 Iraqi Invasion -- 2.4.8. Soil Remediation -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Chapter 2.5: Flood and Drought Prevention and Disaster Mitigation: Combating Land Degradation with an Integrated Natural S ... -- 2.5.1. Introduction -- 2.5.2. Soil Erosion: Causes and Consequences -- 2.5.3. Restoring Landscape Function Through Soil Formation and Water Harvesting -- 2.5.3.1. General Soil Restoration Techniques -- 2.5.4. Project Implementation -- 2.5.4.1. Training -- 2.5.4.2. Demonstration Sites -- 2.5.4.3. Monitoring and Establishing a Historic Database -- 2.5.4.4. Program Outline -- References -- Chapter 2.6: Environmental Security, Land Restoration, and the Military: A Case Study of the Ecological Task Forces in India -- 2.6.1. Introduction -- 2.6.2. Land Degradation as Part of the Environmental Security Spectrum -- 2.6.3. Military Dimensions of Environmental Security: Indian and Global Perspectives -- 2.6.4. The Role of the Military in Land Restoration in India -- 2.6.5. Bhatti Mines in the Capital: A Case Study -- 2.6.6. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 2.7: Releasing the Underground Forest: Case Studies and Preconditions for Human Movements that Restore Land with t ... -- 2.7.1. Introduction -- 2.7.2. FMNR: Birth and Spread of a Movement, Niger Republic -- 2.7.3. Adoption and Rapid Spread of FMNR, Ethiopia -- 2.7.4. FMNR in Ghana: from Despair to "Life and Joy. , 2.7.5. FMNR in Senegal: Appreciating the Environment -- 2.7.6. Benefits of FMNR -- 2.7.7. Preconditions for the Scale-up of FMNR -- 2.7.8. From the Grassroots to a Global Movement -- 2.7.9. Conclusions -- Part 3: Soil, Water, and Energy-The Relationship to Land Restoration -- Chapter 3.1: Computational Policy Support Systems for Understanding Land Degradation Effects on Water and Food Security fo ... -- 3.1.1. Land Degradation Policy Support -- 3.1.1.1. What Is Policy Support? -- 3.1.1.2. Which Policy Makers Are Involved? -- 3.1.1.3. Which Policies Should Be Used? -- 3.1.2. Information Needs for Land Restoration -- 3.1.2.1. Static Desertification Assessments Versus Dynamic PSS -- 3.1.2.2. Africa Subject to Recent Land Degradation -- 3.1.2.3. Africa at Risk of Future Degradation -- 3.1.2.4. Global Change Risk Factors -- 3.1.2.5. Deforestation Scenarios -- 3.1.2.6. Climate Change Scenarios -- 3.1.2.7. Integrating Pressures and Threats -- 3.1.2.8. Human Dependency -- 3.1.2.9. Supply Chain Teleconnections (All Commodities) -- 3.1.3. Restoring Africa -- 3.1.3.1. The Desertification Baseline for Gabon -- 3.1.4. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 3.2: The Value of Land Restoration as a Response to Climate Change -- 3.2.1. Ecosystems and Climate Change -- 3.2.2. Restoring Terrestrial Carbon Stocks -- 3.2.3. The Restoration Opportunity in Context -- 3.2.4. The Importance of Soil Carbon -- 3.2.5. Land and Climate Change Adaptation -- 3.2.6. Meeting the Rising Demands on Land -- 3.2.7. Conclusion -- References -- Part 4: Economics, Policy, and Governance of Land Restoration -- Chapter 4.1: The Importance of Land Restoration for Achieving a Land Degradation-Neutral World -- 4.1.1. Introduction -- 4.1.2. Definition and Accounting of Land Degradation Neutrality -- 4.1.2.1. Land Degradation -- 4.1.3. Land Restoration -- 4.1.3.1. Restoring Eroded Soil. , 4.1.3.2. Restoring Soil Quality. , English
    Language: English
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    edocfu_BV043479598
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (XXVI, 572 Seiten) : , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten.
    ISBN: 978-0-12-801353-3
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-0-12-801231-4
    Language: English
    Keywords: Rekultivierung ; Aufsatzsammlung
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    UID:
    edoccha_BV043479598
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (XXVI, 572 Seiten) : , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten.
    ISBN: 978-0-12-801353-3
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-0-12-801231-4
    Language: English
    Keywords: Rekultivierung ; Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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