Direitos das Mulheres à Terra e aos Recursos Florestaisrightsandclimate
O documento discute os direitos das mulheres à terra e recursos florestais na Amazônia, traçando uma linha do tempo dos avanços legais desde a Constituição de 1988 e das marchas das margaridas. Apesar dos avanços, observa-se que as leis nem sempre se refletem na prática devido à sociedade patriarcal. O documento também destaca a experiência das quebradeiras de coco babaçu e suas leis de proteção.
The document outlines goals and actions around UNFCCC negotiations and REDD/avoided deforestation programs. It calls for inserting text into UNFCCC agreements to underline the rights of indigenous peoples and respect other international obligations. It also advocates for multi-stakeholder national committees to develop national REDD plans and ensuring indigenous and local community representation in decision-making structures for all REDD schemes.
The document discusses key issues related to monitoring, permanence, and indigenous peoples in the context of reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD). It notes the different definitions of "forest" and challenges of determining what constitutes natural forest versus semi-natural or naturally regenerated land. It also outlines minimum standards for independent forest monitoring and specific monitoring needs for REDD programs. The document questions which carbon standards should be used and raises concerns that indigenous peoples displaced by forest protection efforts can negatively impact forest ecosystems.
International agreements and independent advisory groupsrightsandclimate
The document discusses experiments with establishing independent advisory groups to provide civil society perspectives and expertise to international agreements and organizations related to forests and climate change. It provides examples of the Civil Society Advisory Group to the International Tropical Timber Council and the External Advisory Group to the World Bank's forest strategy. These groups have helped improve agreements, safeguards, and programming and provided more responsive and legitimate mechanisms. The document recommends establishing similar advisory groups to guide and monitor climate investments and ensure social dimensions of climate change are adequately addressed.
Issues of effectiveness, efficiency and equity in REDD implementationrightsandclimate
(1) The document discusses the importance of rights in REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) programs in order to ensure their effectiveness, efficiency, and equity. (2) If rights are not adequately addressed, REDD risks worsening rights violations and benefiting only large forest owners. (3) To properly address rights, prior forest tenure reform, procedural safeguards, and enabling policies are necessary steps in REDD.
The value of multi-stakeholder consultation at the national levelrightsandclimate
Ghana's VPA process aimed to reform the country's forest sector governance through multi-stakeholder engagement. Over 150 years, Ghana's elite had expropriated communal forest resources, leading to environmental devastation, rural poverty, and corruption. The VPA process formally focused on illegal logging but served as a vehicle for pro-community forces to engage with powerful economic interests. Through the process, civil society participation in forest policy discussions increased substantially. The VPA process also raised public awareness of Ghana's forest crisis and the importance of community rights. Lessons from Ghana's experience show that political will can be strengthened by organized civil society groups engaging strategically with clear objectives to leverage pressure on governments.
1. The document discusses research and development for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) carbon capture and storage approaches at the community landscape level in Oaxaca, Mexico.
2. It involves working with various organizations across forest, agroforestry, and agricultural landscapes including community forests, shade coffee producing units, forest ejidos, indigenous groups, and coffee cooperatives.
3. The approach involves translating technical concepts like carbon dioxide and capture and storage into concrete, locally relevant terms, as well as evaluating costs, responsibilities, and benefits for participating communities.
1. Recognizing community tenure rights over forest lands is a low-cost way to promote better forest management and reduce deforestation, with costs ranging from $0.05 to $9 per hectare on average.
2. Securing these tenure rights is important for REDD+ programs to work effectively by giving local communities incentives to conserve forests, yet the full costs of REDD+ programs are still unknown.
3. Recognizing tenure rights is a complex political process but methodologies exist, and it is feasible and important to scale up recognition of community rights over the 350 million hectares of forest lands they already own or manage.
Direitos das Mulheres à Terra e aos Recursos Florestaisrightsandclimate
O documento discute os direitos das mulheres à terra e recursos florestais na Amazônia, traçando uma linha do tempo dos avanços legais desde a Constituição de 1988 e das marchas das margaridas. Apesar dos avanços, observa-se que as leis nem sempre se refletem na prática devido à sociedade patriarcal. O documento também destaca a experiência das quebradeiras de coco babaçu e suas leis de proteção.
The document outlines goals and actions around UNFCCC negotiations and REDD/avoided deforestation programs. It calls for inserting text into UNFCCC agreements to underline the rights of indigenous peoples and respect other international obligations. It also advocates for multi-stakeholder national committees to develop national REDD plans and ensuring indigenous and local community representation in decision-making structures for all REDD schemes.
The document discusses key issues related to monitoring, permanence, and indigenous peoples in the context of reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD). It notes the different definitions of "forest" and challenges of determining what constitutes natural forest versus semi-natural or naturally regenerated land. It also outlines minimum standards for independent forest monitoring and specific monitoring needs for REDD programs. The document questions which carbon standards should be used and raises concerns that indigenous peoples displaced by forest protection efforts can negatively impact forest ecosystems.
International agreements and independent advisory groupsrightsandclimate
The document discusses experiments with establishing independent advisory groups to provide civil society perspectives and expertise to international agreements and organizations related to forests and climate change. It provides examples of the Civil Society Advisory Group to the International Tropical Timber Council and the External Advisory Group to the World Bank's forest strategy. These groups have helped improve agreements, safeguards, and programming and provided more responsive and legitimate mechanisms. The document recommends establishing similar advisory groups to guide and monitor climate investments and ensure social dimensions of climate change are adequately addressed.
Issues of effectiveness, efficiency and equity in REDD implementationrightsandclimate
(1) The document discusses the importance of rights in REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) programs in order to ensure their effectiveness, efficiency, and equity. (2) If rights are not adequately addressed, REDD risks worsening rights violations and benefiting only large forest owners. (3) To properly address rights, prior forest tenure reform, procedural safeguards, and enabling policies are necessary steps in REDD.
The value of multi-stakeholder consultation at the national levelrightsandclimate
Ghana's VPA process aimed to reform the country's forest sector governance through multi-stakeholder engagement. Over 150 years, Ghana's elite had expropriated communal forest resources, leading to environmental devastation, rural poverty, and corruption. The VPA process formally focused on illegal logging but served as a vehicle for pro-community forces to engage with powerful economic interests. Through the process, civil society participation in forest policy discussions increased substantially. The VPA process also raised public awareness of Ghana's forest crisis and the importance of community rights. Lessons from Ghana's experience show that political will can be strengthened by organized civil society groups engaging strategically with clear objectives to leverage pressure on governments.
1. The document discusses research and development for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) carbon capture and storage approaches at the community landscape level in Oaxaca, Mexico.
2. It involves working with various organizations across forest, agroforestry, and agricultural landscapes including community forests, shade coffee producing units, forest ejidos, indigenous groups, and coffee cooperatives.
3. The approach involves translating technical concepts like carbon dioxide and capture and storage into concrete, locally relevant terms, as well as evaluating costs, responsibilities, and benefits for participating communities.
1. Recognizing community tenure rights over forest lands is a low-cost way to promote better forest management and reduce deforestation, with costs ranging from $0.05 to $9 per hectare on average.
2. Securing these tenure rights is important for REDD+ programs to work effectively by giving local communities incentives to conserve forests, yet the full costs of REDD+ programs are still unknown.
3. Recognizing tenure rights is a complex political process but methodologies exist, and it is feasible and important to scale up recognition of community rights over the 350 million hectares of forest lands they already own or manage.
Indigenous territories and the protection of forests in the Brazilian Amazonrightsandclimate
The Brazilian Constitution of 1988 established strong collective indigenous land rights and criteria for demarcation based on traditional occupation and use. However, indigenous territories still face threats including state colonization policies, infrastructure projects, legislative proposals to reduce rights, and a Supreme Court ruling on the Raposa Serra do Sol land. As of 2008, indigenous lands and protected areas covered over 21% of the Brazilian Amazon, helping to conserve forests but also experiencing deforestation pressures.
1. The document discusses lessons learned from participatory land delimitation processes in Mozambique to secure customary land tenure rights.
2. It describes Mozambique's land policy and legal framework which recognizes customary land rights and a participatory methodology for spatially defining and registering these rights at a community level.
3. Key challenges discussed include integrating customary systems into national law, reforming land administration services, ensuring adequate community representation and governance post-delimitation, and balancing tenure security with sustainable resource management.
Avoided deforestation, community forestry and options for channeling payments...rightsandclimate
The document discusses community-based forest management (CBFM) and joint forest management (JFM) approaches in Tanzania. It provides context on Tanzania's forest coverage and definitions of CBFM and JFM. It then summarizes the potential impacts of CBFM on livelihoods, the current status of participatory forest management in Tanzania, and some challenges. The document concludes by discussing opportunities for REDD+ carbon financing and considerations around ownership, benefit-sharing, and payment mechanisms.
This document summarizes Panama's efforts to reduce deforestation through REDD initiatives. It provides historical deforestation rates in Panama and goals to reduce the rate. Key drivers of deforestation are identified. The implementation strategy involves various national plans and programs. Objectives are to provide incentives to communities and sustainable development while conserving biodiversity and mitigating climate change. Steps are outlined to strengthen capacities for REDD monitoring, management and participation of indigenous groups.
The document summarizes the key challenges and opportunities for Ghana related to mitigating forest-related climate change through REDD+ initiatives. It outlines Ghana's ongoing policy approaches, weaknesses in addressing climate change, next operational steps, and a proposed roadmap. Key challenges include deforestation from fuelwood harvesting and agriculture. Weaknesses include issues with land tenure systems. Next steps include developing a REDD+ readiness plan, monitoring systems, and building capacity and institutional arrangements. Opportunities include linking REDD+ with the Ghana-EU partnership agreement and potential carbon market benefits.
El documento describe la situación de la deforestación en Paraguay. Paraguay ha perdido cerca del 92% de su cobertura boscosa original, principalmente debido a la agricultura extensiva y el cultivo de soja. Para abordar este problema, Paraguay ha implementado una ley de deforestación cero, un sistema de monitoreo de bosques y planes de uso de la tierra, y una ley de servicios ambientales. Estas iniciativas podrían servir como base para una línea de referencia de emisiones y un mecanismo nacional de REDD.
1) Climate change is significantly impacted by deforestation, which could lead to $1 trillion in annual damages by 2100 if left unaddressed.
2) Reducing deforestation would help protect the livelihoods of millions of people who depend on forests and lower the costs of tackling climate change.
3) A new global deal is needed that includes reducing deforestation emissions and provides financing to developing countries through carbon markets and other mechanisms, with a goal of halving deforestation by 2020 and making forests carbon neutral by 2030.
The document discusses the emergence and development of REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) approaches within the UNFCCC. It notes that REDD was first proposed in 2005 and was further developed through COP13 in 2007 to recognize the needs of local communities and include degradation as well as deforestation. Key issues discussed include the importance of governance, effective targets based on country circumstances, capacity building, and addressing the drivers of deforestation beyond just financial incentives.
Forest Carbon Partnership Facility and Climate Investment Fundrightsandclimate
The Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) is a global partnership focused on reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, and forest carbon stock conservation, sustainable management of forests, and enhancement of forest carbon stocks in developing countries (REDD+). The FCPF provides funding to help developing countries prepare for REDD+ and tests ways to implement REDD+ programs. It has two mechanisms - the Readiness Fund to help countries develop REDD+ strategies and policies, and the Carbon Fund to compensate countries for verified emission reductions. The FCPF has engaged with indigenous peoples and local communities to address their concerns about participation, benefits, and safeguards related to REDD+ programs.
Rights, climate change and multilateral organizationsrightsandclimate
The document discusses several key multilateral organizations and their stances on indigenous and local community rights in relation to climate change and forest negotiations. The UNFCCC, CBD, and UN REDD recognize the importance of addressing the needs of local communities and indigenous peoples. However, the World Bank's climate investment funds and forest carbon initiatives have been criticized for not adequately involving these communities or ensuring their rights are upheld in REDD programs.
The document summarizes research on the impacts of forest carbon markets on local livelihoods in China, Mozambique, and Afghanistan. In Mozambique, poorer and less educated households benefited less from carbon contracts. The shareholding system developed in Guangxi, China helped villages organize effectively, but disputes over land ownership and benefit-sharing hampered some projects. Ensuring social capital like trust between groups and adapting contracts to local conditions are key for successful forest carbon projects.
Compensation and incentives for the maintenance of ecosystem servicesrightsandclimate
The document reviews current knowledge on compensation and incentives for ecosystem services. It finds that while the drivers of land use change are known, payments for ecosystem services programs are still largely unproven. Resolving rights is necessary but not sufficient for managing forests and woodlands. The review examines land use change and lessons from payments programs in Amazon, Congo, Miombo Woodlands and Southeast Asia, finding that effectiveness and additionality are still unclear. It recommends Norway's REDD program start pilot initiatives and improve monitoring, legal frameworks, and governance.
The document discusses climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies within agriculture. It outlines roles for community-based approaches in areas like weather monitoring, natural resource management, developing drought and pest resistant crops, local safety nets, and disaster management. It also discusses adaptation strategies outside of agriculture like occupational diversification and migration. The document concludes that institutional diversity increases resilience and that a range of local organizational forms and property rights regimes are needed. Both local and higher-level institutions are critical, with policies and mandates establishing standards and supporting a variety of strategies.
The document discusses frameworks for analyzing climate vulnerability and adaptation, using Senegal's charcoal market as a case study. It analyzes the actors in the charcoal market, including urban populations, retailers, wholesalers, transporters, woodcutters, and more. It examines profit margins and average annual profits across these actors. The distribution of profits is uneven, with retailers, wholesalers, and merchants capturing most of the gains. The document proposes mapping vulnerabilities, their underlying causes, and potential adaptive actions or solutions to address prevalent and treatable vulnerabilities.
Kanel National Adaptation Plan Role Of Land Rights Keshav Kanel Oct 2008rightsandclimate
Nepal has proposed several adaptation strategies including focusing on agriculture, water resources, forests, biodiversity, health, and integrating sectors. Some ways to strengthen adaptation discussed are handing over national forests to communities, land reform, improving natural resource governance, enhancing community capacity, and increasing resiliency. Over 35% of national forests have been handed over to about 40% of households, and communities now have access, use, and management rights over forests. Devolving more control to communities over natural resources is seen as a way to increase resiliency.
Navigating the world of forex trading can be challenging, especially for beginners. To help you make an informed decision, we have comprehensively compared the best forex brokers in India for 2024. This article, reviewed by Top Forex Brokers Review, will cover featured award winners, the best forex brokers, featured offers, the best copy trading platforms, the best forex brokers for beginners, the best MetaTrader brokers, and recently updated reviews. We will focus on FP Markets, Black Bull, EightCap, IC Markets, and Octa.
Indigenous territories and the protection of forests in the Brazilian Amazonrightsandclimate
The Brazilian Constitution of 1988 established strong collective indigenous land rights and criteria for demarcation based on traditional occupation and use. However, indigenous territories still face threats including state colonization policies, infrastructure projects, legislative proposals to reduce rights, and a Supreme Court ruling on the Raposa Serra do Sol land. As of 2008, indigenous lands and protected areas covered over 21% of the Brazilian Amazon, helping to conserve forests but also experiencing deforestation pressures.
1. The document discusses lessons learned from participatory land delimitation processes in Mozambique to secure customary land tenure rights.
2. It describes Mozambique's land policy and legal framework which recognizes customary land rights and a participatory methodology for spatially defining and registering these rights at a community level.
3. Key challenges discussed include integrating customary systems into national law, reforming land administration services, ensuring adequate community representation and governance post-delimitation, and balancing tenure security with sustainable resource management.
Avoided deforestation, community forestry and options for channeling payments...rightsandclimate
The document discusses community-based forest management (CBFM) and joint forest management (JFM) approaches in Tanzania. It provides context on Tanzania's forest coverage and definitions of CBFM and JFM. It then summarizes the potential impacts of CBFM on livelihoods, the current status of participatory forest management in Tanzania, and some challenges. The document concludes by discussing opportunities for REDD+ carbon financing and considerations around ownership, benefit-sharing, and payment mechanisms.
This document summarizes Panama's efforts to reduce deforestation through REDD initiatives. It provides historical deforestation rates in Panama and goals to reduce the rate. Key drivers of deforestation are identified. The implementation strategy involves various national plans and programs. Objectives are to provide incentives to communities and sustainable development while conserving biodiversity and mitigating climate change. Steps are outlined to strengthen capacities for REDD monitoring, management and participation of indigenous groups.
The document summarizes the key challenges and opportunities for Ghana related to mitigating forest-related climate change through REDD+ initiatives. It outlines Ghana's ongoing policy approaches, weaknesses in addressing climate change, next operational steps, and a proposed roadmap. Key challenges include deforestation from fuelwood harvesting and agriculture. Weaknesses include issues with land tenure systems. Next steps include developing a REDD+ readiness plan, monitoring systems, and building capacity and institutional arrangements. Opportunities include linking REDD+ with the Ghana-EU partnership agreement and potential carbon market benefits.
El documento describe la situación de la deforestación en Paraguay. Paraguay ha perdido cerca del 92% de su cobertura boscosa original, principalmente debido a la agricultura extensiva y el cultivo de soja. Para abordar este problema, Paraguay ha implementado una ley de deforestación cero, un sistema de monitoreo de bosques y planes de uso de la tierra, y una ley de servicios ambientales. Estas iniciativas podrían servir como base para una línea de referencia de emisiones y un mecanismo nacional de REDD.
1) Climate change is significantly impacted by deforestation, which could lead to $1 trillion in annual damages by 2100 if left unaddressed.
2) Reducing deforestation would help protect the livelihoods of millions of people who depend on forests and lower the costs of tackling climate change.
3) A new global deal is needed that includes reducing deforestation emissions and provides financing to developing countries through carbon markets and other mechanisms, with a goal of halving deforestation by 2020 and making forests carbon neutral by 2030.
The document discusses the emergence and development of REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) approaches within the UNFCCC. It notes that REDD was first proposed in 2005 and was further developed through COP13 in 2007 to recognize the needs of local communities and include degradation as well as deforestation. Key issues discussed include the importance of governance, effective targets based on country circumstances, capacity building, and addressing the drivers of deforestation beyond just financial incentives.
Forest Carbon Partnership Facility and Climate Investment Fundrightsandclimate
The Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) is a global partnership focused on reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, and forest carbon stock conservation, sustainable management of forests, and enhancement of forest carbon stocks in developing countries (REDD+). The FCPF provides funding to help developing countries prepare for REDD+ and tests ways to implement REDD+ programs. It has two mechanisms - the Readiness Fund to help countries develop REDD+ strategies and policies, and the Carbon Fund to compensate countries for verified emission reductions. The FCPF has engaged with indigenous peoples and local communities to address their concerns about participation, benefits, and safeguards related to REDD+ programs.
Rights, climate change and multilateral organizationsrightsandclimate
The document discusses several key multilateral organizations and their stances on indigenous and local community rights in relation to climate change and forest negotiations. The UNFCCC, CBD, and UN REDD recognize the importance of addressing the needs of local communities and indigenous peoples. However, the World Bank's climate investment funds and forest carbon initiatives have been criticized for not adequately involving these communities or ensuring their rights are upheld in REDD programs.
The document summarizes research on the impacts of forest carbon markets on local livelihoods in China, Mozambique, and Afghanistan. In Mozambique, poorer and less educated households benefited less from carbon contracts. The shareholding system developed in Guangxi, China helped villages organize effectively, but disputes over land ownership and benefit-sharing hampered some projects. Ensuring social capital like trust between groups and adapting contracts to local conditions are key for successful forest carbon projects.
Compensation and incentives for the maintenance of ecosystem servicesrightsandclimate
The document reviews current knowledge on compensation and incentives for ecosystem services. It finds that while the drivers of land use change are known, payments for ecosystem services programs are still largely unproven. Resolving rights is necessary but not sufficient for managing forests and woodlands. The review examines land use change and lessons from payments programs in Amazon, Congo, Miombo Woodlands and Southeast Asia, finding that effectiveness and additionality are still unclear. It recommends Norway's REDD program start pilot initiatives and improve monitoring, legal frameworks, and governance.
The document discusses climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies within agriculture. It outlines roles for community-based approaches in areas like weather monitoring, natural resource management, developing drought and pest resistant crops, local safety nets, and disaster management. It also discusses adaptation strategies outside of agriculture like occupational diversification and migration. The document concludes that institutional diversity increases resilience and that a range of local organizational forms and property rights regimes are needed. Both local and higher-level institutions are critical, with policies and mandates establishing standards and supporting a variety of strategies.
The document discusses frameworks for analyzing climate vulnerability and adaptation, using Senegal's charcoal market as a case study. It analyzes the actors in the charcoal market, including urban populations, retailers, wholesalers, transporters, woodcutters, and more. It examines profit margins and average annual profits across these actors. The distribution of profits is uneven, with retailers, wholesalers, and merchants capturing most of the gains. The document proposes mapping vulnerabilities, their underlying causes, and potential adaptive actions or solutions to address prevalent and treatable vulnerabilities.
Kanel National Adaptation Plan Role Of Land Rights Keshav Kanel Oct 2008rightsandclimate
Nepal has proposed several adaptation strategies including focusing on agriculture, water resources, forests, biodiversity, health, and integrating sectors. Some ways to strengthen adaptation discussed are handing over national forests to communities, land reform, improving natural resource governance, enhancing community capacity, and increasing resiliency. Over 35% of national forests have been handed over to about 40% of households, and communities now have access, use, and management rights over forests. Devolving more control to communities over natural resources is seen as a way to increase resiliency.
Navigating the world of forex trading can be challenging, especially for beginners. To help you make an informed decision, we have comprehensively compared the best forex brokers in India for 2024. This article, reviewed by Top Forex Brokers Review, will cover featured award winners, the best forex brokers, featured offers, the best copy trading platforms, the best forex brokers for beginners, the best MetaTrader brokers, and recently updated reviews. We will focus on FP Markets, Black Bull, EightCap, IC Markets, and Octa.
[To download this presentation, visit:
https://www.oeconsulting.com.sg/training-presentations]
This PowerPoint compilation offers a comprehensive overview of 20 leading innovation management frameworks and methodologies, selected for their broad applicability across various industries and organizational contexts. These frameworks are valuable resources for a wide range of users, including business professionals, educators, and consultants.
Each framework is presented with visually engaging diagrams and templates, ensuring the content is both informative and appealing. While this compilation is thorough, please note that the slides are intended as supplementary resources and may not be sufficient for standalone instructional purposes.
This compilation is ideal for anyone looking to enhance their understanding of innovation management and drive meaningful change within their organization. Whether you aim to improve product development processes, enhance customer experiences, or drive digital transformation, these frameworks offer valuable insights and tools to help you achieve your goals.
INCLUDED FRAMEWORKS/MODELS:
1. Stanford’s Design Thinking
2. IDEO’s Human-Centered Design
3. Strategyzer’s Business Model Innovation
4. Lean Startup Methodology
5. Agile Innovation Framework
6. Doblin’s Ten Types of Innovation
7. McKinsey’s Three Horizons of Growth
8. Customer Journey Map
9. Christensen’s Disruptive Innovation Theory
10. Blue Ocean Strategy
11. Strategyn’s Jobs-To-Be-Done (JTBD) Framework with Job Map
12. Design Sprint Framework
13. The Double Diamond
14. Lean Six Sigma DMAIC
15. TRIZ Problem-Solving Framework
16. Edward de Bono’s Six Thinking Hats
17. Stage-Gate Model
18. Toyota’s Six Steps of Kaizen
19. Microsoft’s Digital Transformation Framework
20. Design for Six Sigma (DFSS)
To download this presentation, visit:
https://www.oeconsulting.com.sg/training-presentations
Garments ERP Software in Bangladesh _ Pridesys IT Ltd.pdfPridesys IT Ltd.
Pridesys Garments ERP is one of the leading ERP solution provider, especially for Garments industries which is integrated with
different modules that cover all the aspects of your Garments Business. This solution supports multi-currency and multi-location
based operations. It aims at keeping track of all the activities including receiving an order from buyer, costing of order, resource
planning, procurement of raw materials, production management, inventory management, import-export process, order
reconciliation process etc. It’s also integrated with other modules of Pridesys ERP including finance, accounts, HR, supply-chain etc.
With this automated solution you can easily track your business activities and entire operations of your garments manufacturing
proces
How are Lilac French Bulldogs Beauty Charming the World and Capturing Hearts....Lacey Max
“After being the most listed dog breed in the United States for 31
years in a row, the Labrador Retriever has dropped to second place
in the American Kennel Club's annual survey of the country's most
popular canines. The French Bulldog is the new top dog in the
United States as of 2022. The stylish puppy has ascended the
rankings in rapid time despite having health concerns and limited
color choices.”
Discover innovative uses of Revit in urban planning and design, enhancing city landscapes with advanced architectural solutions. Understand how architectural firms are using Revit to transform how processes and outcomes within urban planning and design fields look. They are supplementing work and putting in value through speed and imagination that the architects and planners are placing into composing progressive urban areas that are not only colorful but also pragmatic.
NIMA2024 | De toegevoegde waarde van DEI en ESG in campagnes | Nathalie Lam |...BBPMedia1
Nathalie zal delen hoe DEI en ESG een fundamentele rol kunnen spelen in je merkstrategie en je de juiste aansluiting kan creëren met je doelgroep. Door middel van voorbeelden en simpele handvatten toont ze hoe dit in jouw organisatie toegepast kan worden.
The APCO Geopolitical Radar - Q3 2024 The Global Operating Environment for Bu...APCO
The Radar reflects input from APCO’s teams located around the world. It distils a host of interconnected events and trends into insights to inform operational and strategic decisions. Issues covered in this edition include:
Brian Fitzsimmons on the Business Strategy and Content Flywheel of Barstool S...Neil Horowitz
On episode 272 of the Digital and Social Media Sports Podcast, Neil chatted with Brian Fitzsimmons, Director of Licensing and Business Development for Barstool Sports.
What follows is a collection of snippets from the podcast. To hear the full interview and more, check out the podcast on all podcast platforms and at www.dsmsports.net
Dive into this presentation and learn about the ways in which you can buy an engagement ring. This guide will help you choose the perfect engagement rings for women.
The Most Inspiring Entrepreneurs to Follow in 2024.pdfthesiliconleaders
In a world where the potential of youth innovation remains vastly untouched, there emerges a guiding light in the form of Norm Goldstein, the Founder and CEO of EduNetwork Partners. His dedication to this cause has earned him recognition as a Congressional Leadership Award recipient.
4 Benefits of Partnering with an OnlyFans Agency for Content Creators.pdfonlyfansmanagedau
In the competitive world of content creation, standing out and maximising revenue on platforms like OnlyFans can be challenging. This is where partnering with an OnlyFans agency can make a significant difference. Here are five key benefits for content creators considering this option:
Profiles of Iconic Fashion Personalities.pdfTTop Threads
The fashion industry is dynamic and ever-changing, continuously sculpted by trailblazing visionaries who challenge norms and redefine beauty. This document delves into the profiles of some of the most iconic fashion personalities whose impact has left a lasting impression on the industry. From timeless designers to modern-day influencers, each individual has uniquely woven their thread into the rich fabric of fashion history, contributing to its ongoing evolution.