"Different Perspectives on Cross-Compliance"
In his article, Stefan Mann presents different perspectives on cross-compliance.
In his article, Stefan Mann presents different perspectives on cross-compliance.
In this article Marc D. Davidson argues that governments are justified in addressing the potential for human induced climate damages on the basis of future generations’ rights to bodily integrity and personal property.
A cultural and historical analysis of the recent past of the Nile Valley shows how interpretations and perceptions of territory, space, and nature are not necessarily indisputably “true” and definitive principles. On the contrary, they are constructed and, therefore, changeable.
Latin America’s first national park derived from private and public ideas and became a template for regional conservation.
In this Arcadia article, Claudia Leal shows how the early history of Colombia’s Tayrona National Park reveals the extent to which it has been shaped by state policies: evictions, restrictions to land use, and a fierce battle against tourism interests.
This film examines how farmers in Mali are resisting the loss of their land to corporate farming initiatives.
This film examines the pros and cons of the financialization of nature, an approach which some believe can make up for failed political solutions.
Eriksson and Arnell address the ecological and cultural effects of the Swedish infield system in Scandinavia. Their essay sheds light on how the human construction and management of infields maintained a spatial continuity that greatly altered, and continues to impact, how humans and other organisms have developed.
In this article, Ranjini Murali, Ajay Bijoor, and Charudutt Mishra highlight the role of women in the governance of the commons and point to the nuanced and variable roles found within this gender group.
A book by Darrel Moellendorfs on climate change and poverty as two global phenomena that call for political action and radical hope.