Adaptive co-management; collaboration, learning, and multi-level governance.9780774813907 Adaptive co-management; collaboration, learning, and multi-level governance Multi-level governance is a public administration theory that is gaining more and more popularity. The theory originated from studies on European integration. The authors Liesbet Hooghe and Gary Marks were the first the develop the concept of multi-level governance in the early . Ed. by Derek Armitage et al. U. of British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography Press 2007 344 pages $38.95 Paperback Sustainability and the environment SH329 Armitage (geography and environmental studies, Wilfrid Laurier U., Canada) et al. assemble 15 essays drawn from a symposium, "Moving Beyond the Critiques of Co-Management: Theory and Practice of Adaptive Co-Management," held in Waterloo, Canada, in February 2005, as well as follow-up meetings in Ottawa in 2005, including sessions during the Ocean Management Research Network Conference. Essays are by researchers and practitioners from Canada, the US, the Caribbean, and Europe who work in diverse fields such as zoology zoology, branch of biology concerned with the study of animal life. From earliest times animals have been vitally important to man; cave art demonstrates the practical and mystical significance animals held for prehistoric man. , biology, and maritime anthropology. They discuss the co-management of natural resources, issues and challenges, and tools to facilitate its development, also providing case studies of sea urchin sea urchin, spherical-shaped echinoderm with movable spines covering the body. The body wall is a firm, globose shell, or test, made of fused skeletal plates and marked by regularly arranged tubercles to which the movable spines are attached. harvesting in Barbados, a fishery in Grenada, and marine protected areas in Belize, for example. The book is intended for researchers, environmental practitioners, policy makers, and students. Distributed by UTP UTP (uridine triphosphate): see uracil. (Unshielded Twisted Pair) See twisted pair. UTP - unshielded twisted pair Distribution. ([c]20082005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR) |
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