The concept of ‘therapeutic landscapes’ has been used as a way to critically understand how health and wellbeing are related to place.This paper offers a critical understanding of the role of non-human animals as agents in co-creating the therapeutic landscapes of rural care farms.
The focus for the project
was an exploration of the social impacts
arising from the Cod Recovery Plan. The
work provided input to the evaluation of
multi-annual plans for Cod in the Irish Sea,
Kattegat, North Sea, Eastern Channel,
and West of Scotland being undertaken
by the Scientific, Technical and Economic
Committee for Fisheries (STECF).
This document outlines an evaluation of the Water and Integrated Local Delivery (WILD) project in the Cotswolds and Swindon area of the UK. The WILD project aims to improve river ecosystems through partnerships between farmers, local communities, and agencies. It is led by the Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group and evaluates the impact of integrated local delivery on enhancing ecosystem resilience. The evaluation found evidence that the project engaged stakeholders, improved communication and knowledge, and helped tackle multi-layer challenges at the local level. However, it also found that facilitators and government agencies need to give local partners more independence. The project implications include the need for government agencies to better integrate issues like water, flooding, and biodiversity, as well
Dr. Frances Harris from Centre for Earth and Environmental Sciences Research, School of Geography, Geology and the Environment at Kingston University - with areview of approaches to knowledge co-production focused on food, water, energy and environment.
The document outlines regulations and procedures for tree felling and obtaining permission in Gloucestershire. It discusses Forestry Commission woodland officers, felling regulations under the Forestry Act 1967 which require licenses, and exemptions. It also describes the Countryside Stewardship grants including the Woodland Management Plan Grant (PA3) and Woodland Improvement Grant (WD2) which provide funding for woodland improvement plans and activities.
The document discusses involving communities in natural flood management through volunteer groups. It provides examples of the Bodenham Flood Protection Group, made up of over 30 volunteers averaging 70 years old who regularly clear debris. It also describes the Northamptonshire County Council Pathfinder Project that worked with 15 communities at high risk of surface water flooding. This project provided resources to communities and trained over 30 volunteer flood wardens. The goal is to work with communities to manage flooding through education and preparedness.
The concept of ‘therapeutic landscapes’ has been used as a way to critically understand how health and wellbeing are related to place.This paper offers a critical understanding of the role of non-human animals as agents in co-creating the therapeutic landscapes of rural care farms.
The focus for the project
was an exploration of the social impacts
arising from the Cod Recovery Plan. The
work provided input to the evaluation of
multi-annual plans for Cod in the Irish Sea,
Kattegat, North Sea, Eastern Channel,
and West of Scotland being undertaken
by the Scientific, Technical and Economic
Committee for Fisheries (STECF).
This document outlines an evaluation of the Water and Integrated Local Delivery (WILD) project in the Cotswolds and Swindon area of the UK. The WILD project aims to improve river ecosystems through partnerships between farmers, local communities, and agencies. It is led by the Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group and evaluates the impact of integrated local delivery on enhancing ecosystem resilience. The evaluation found evidence that the project engaged stakeholders, improved communication and knowledge, and helped tackle multi-layer challenges at the local level. However, it also found that facilitators and government agencies need to give local partners more independence. The project implications include the need for government agencies to better integrate issues like water, flooding, and biodiversity, as well
Dr. Frances Harris from Centre for Earth and Environmental Sciences Research, School of Geography, Geology and the Environment at Kingston University - with areview of approaches to knowledge co-production focused on food, water, energy and environment.
The document outlines regulations and procedures for tree felling and obtaining permission in Gloucestershire. It discusses Forestry Commission woodland officers, felling regulations under the Forestry Act 1967 which require licenses, and exemptions. It also describes the Countryside Stewardship grants including the Woodland Management Plan Grant (PA3) and Woodland Improvement Grant (WD2) which provide funding for woodland improvement plans and activities.
The document discusses involving communities in natural flood management through volunteer groups. It provides examples of the Bodenham Flood Protection Group, made up of over 30 volunteers averaging 70 years old who regularly clear debris. It also describes the Northamptonshire County Council Pathfinder Project that worked with 15 communities at high risk of surface water flooding. This project provided resources to communities and trained over 30 volunteer flood wardens. The goal is to work with communities to manage flooding through education and preparedness.
This document provides an outline for an assignment on film study conventions. It lists the required sections of the assignment which include an exploration of films, choosing a film and justifying the choice, analyzing the genre and subgenres, discussing various film theories, and examining semantics, syntax, iconography, and conventions. It then provides details on the film Half Nelson, including reasoning for choosing it, its genres of drama and various subgenres. The document analyzes conventions of the genre in relation to the film and provides comparisons to other films. It examines dominant ideologies presented in the film and theories on why certain audiences would be attracted to watching it.
This short document expresses gratitude to an unspecified person for choosing or selecting something. It states that this person is "the reason" but does not provide any additional context about what choice was made or what it refers to. The document is only two short sentences expressing thanks without further details.
Presentation given by James Kirwan http://www.ccri.ac.uk/kirwan/ at EXPO – Milan, 'Feeding the Planet: Energy for Life' event. The presentation draws upon work conducted as part of an EU-funded project with the acronym GLAMUR (further details of the project are available from http://glamur.eu);
A presentation given by Dan Keech at East Devon AONB, covering alternative approches to orchard conservation management - with examples from England and Germany.
This document is a summary of a webinar on 2013 individual tax laws and their implications for philanthropy. It discusses changes to income tax rates including an increase in the top individual rate to 39.6% and the capital gains rate to 20%. A 3.8% healthcare tax also applies to investment income over $200,000. The estate and gift tax exemption increased to $5.25 million and is portable between spouses. Direct charitable contributions from IRAs are allowed for those over 701/2. Planning should focus more on income than estate taxes due to high exemptions and fewer subject to the estate tax.
Dan Keech's presentation at a meeting of the Bath and North East Somerset Local Food Partnership. This is the multi-stakeholder network which oversees the implementation of the council's Local Food Strategy. The strategy combines work on public health, food and agriculture sector development and the environmental footprint of the food chain. More information about Dan can be found at: http://www.ccri.ac.uk/keech/
This document discusses a trial to address high levels of the pesticide metaldehyde found in local water sources. Metaldehyde concentrations exceed legal limits, requiring expensive treatment. The trial aims to investigate how different land management practices impact metaldehyde use and concentrations. Farmers' participation and feedback is sought to help monitor practices and pesticide application, in order to better understand solutions to prevent metaldehyde from contaminating drinking water supplies. Next steps include finalizing sampling locations and frequency to evaluate the effectiveness of various catchment management approaches.
Dr Damian Maye presented a paper at the International M.bovis conference in Cardiff about farmer confidence in badger vaccination to control the spread of bTB from badgers to cattle
An overview of ethical research practices by Malcolm MacLean, Chair of UoG Research Ethics Committee.
Reader in the Culture & History of Sport, Faculty of Applied Sciences
Le Leggi dell’Abbondanza
www.ipoteridelsubconscio.com/subconscio.html
2012
Di seguito spiegate le Leggi dell’Abbondanza che Stuart Wilde ha espresso e divulgato nel suo libro.Per un approfondimento miglore ed un percorso di cambiamento duraturo ed eccellente visita il sito: www.ipoteridelsubconscio.co.cc/positivdiary.html dove troverai spunti per un cambiamento sereno e duraturo nella tua vita. Potete diffondere questo report in modo gratuito e libero. Vietata la vendita. I POTERI DEL SUBCONSCIO
www.ipoteridelsubconscio.com/
Presentation given by Mauro Vigani at the recent ICAE conference in Milan.
The aim of the work is to provide a comprehensive analysis on the impact of maize technologies at household level in Tanzania, disentangling the effect of improved maize seeds and inorganic fertilizers on each of the four dimensions of food security
This document summarizes a study on how the adaptive reuse of traditional rural buildings can generate local economic benefits. The researcher conducted interviews with 30 building projects in England to calculate their local economic multipliers using the LM3 model. Key findings include animal housing and listed buildings having higher multipliers for conversion works, while businesses under 5 years old and over £75k in turnover performed better for building use. The study aims to provide guidance to organizations like the National Trust on maximizing local economic impacts through adaptive reuse projects.
Some reflections and future directions for research’ and arguements that we need to reposition short food chain activities beyond the ‘rural local’/value-added market-based model that they are more commonly associated with.
1. Local and global settings for open spaces are important for making positive changes to attitudes.
2. Commons and common land make significant contributions to rural economies and provide national benefits to landscape, biodiversity, access, and heritage.
3. Commons are central to many communities' culture, both past and present, and ensuring their viable future is important for supporting the next generation.
This document provides an outline for an assignment on film study conventions. It lists the required sections of the assignment which include an exploration of films, choosing a film and justifying the choice, analyzing the genre and subgenres, discussing various film theories, and examining semantics, syntax, iconography, and conventions. It then provides details on the film Half Nelson, including reasoning for choosing it, its genres of drama and various subgenres. The document analyzes conventions of the genre in relation to the film and provides comparisons to other films. It examines dominant ideologies presented in the film and theories on why certain audiences would be attracted to watching it.
This short document expresses gratitude to an unspecified person for choosing or selecting something. It states that this person is "the reason" but does not provide any additional context about what choice was made or what it refers to. The document is only two short sentences expressing thanks without further details.
Presentation given by James Kirwan http://www.ccri.ac.uk/kirwan/ at EXPO – Milan, 'Feeding the Planet: Energy for Life' event. The presentation draws upon work conducted as part of an EU-funded project with the acronym GLAMUR (further details of the project are available from http://glamur.eu);
A presentation given by Dan Keech at East Devon AONB, covering alternative approches to orchard conservation management - with examples from England and Germany.
This document is a summary of a webinar on 2013 individual tax laws and their implications for philanthropy. It discusses changes to income tax rates including an increase in the top individual rate to 39.6% and the capital gains rate to 20%. A 3.8% healthcare tax also applies to investment income over $200,000. The estate and gift tax exemption increased to $5.25 million and is portable between spouses. Direct charitable contributions from IRAs are allowed for those over 701/2. Planning should focus more on income than estate taxes due to high exemptions and fewer subject to the estate tax.
Dan Keech's presentation at a meeting of the Bath and North East Somerset Local Food Partnership. This is the multi-stakeholder network which oversees the implementation of the council's Local Food Strategy. The strategy combines work on public health, food and agriculture sector development and the environmental footprint of the food chain. More information about Dan can be found at: http://www.ccri.ac.uk/keech/
This document discusses a trial to address high levels of the pesticide metaldehyde found in local water sources. Metaldehyde concentrations exceed legal limits, requiring expensive treatment. The trial aims to investigate how different land management practices impact metaldehyde use and concentrations. Farmers' participation and feedback is sought to help monitor practices and pesticide application, in order to better understand solutions to prevent metaldehyde from contaminating drinking water supplies. Next steps include finalizing sampling locations and frequency to evaluate the effectiveness of various catchment management approaches.
Dr Damian Maye presented a paper at the International M.bovis conference in Cardiff about farmer confidence in badger vaccination to control the spread of bTB from badgers to cattle
An overview of ethical research practices by Malcolm MacLean, Chair of UoG Research Ethics Committee.
Reader in the Culture & History of Sport, Faculty of Applied Sciences
Le Leggi dell’Abbondanza
www.ipoteridelsubconscio.com/subconscio.html
2012
Di seguito spiegate le Leggi dell’Abbondanza che Stuart Wilde ha espresso e divulgato nel suo libro.Per un approfondimento miglore ed un percorso di cambiamento duraturo ed eccellente visita il sito: www.ipoteridelsubconscio.co.cc/positivdiary.html dove troverai spunti per un cambiamento sereno e duraturo nella tua vita. Potete diffondere questo report in modo gratuito e libero. Vietata la vendita. I POTERI DEL SUBCONSCIO
www.ipoteridelsubconscio.com/
Presentation given by Mauro Vigani at the recent ICAE conference in Milan.
The aim of the work is to provide a comprehensive analysis on the impact of maize technologies at household level in Tanzania, disentangling the effect of improved maize seeds and inorganic fertilizers on each of the four dimensions of food security
This document summarizes a study on how the adaptive reuse of traditional rural buildings can generate local economic benefits. The researcher conducted interviews with 30 building projects in England to calculate their local economic multipliers using the LM3 model. Key findings include animal housing and listed buildings having higher multipliers for conversion works, while businesses under 5 years old and over £75k in turnover performed better for building use. The study aims to provide guidance to organizations like the National Trust on maximizing local economic impacts through adaptive reuse projects.
Some reflections and future directions for research’ and arguements that we need to reposition short food chain activities beyond the ‘rural local’/value-added market-based model that they are more commonly associated with.
1. Local and global settings for open spaces are important for making positive changes to attitudes.
2. Commons and common land make significant contributions to rural economies and provide national benefits to landscape, biodiversity, access, and heritage.
3. Commons are central to many communities' culture, both past and present, and ensuring their viable future is important for supporting the next generation.