20 results on '"Marini Govigli V."'
Search Results
2. Quantifying the conservation value of Sacred Natural Sites
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Avtzis, D.N., Stara, K., Sgardeli, V., Betsis, A., Diamandis, S., Healey, J.R., Kapsalis, E., Kati, V., Korakis, G., Marini Govigli, V., Monokrousos, N., Muggia, L., Nitsiakos, V., Papadatou, E., Papaioannou, H., Rohrer, A., Τsiakiris, R., Van Houtan, K.S., Vokou, D., Wong, J.L.G., and Halley, J.M.
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. INCREDIBLE Project publication 'Knowledge in practice', Deliverable 4.3
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Marini Govigli, V., Briers S., Adams, S., Martinez De Arano, I., Bonet, J.A. Andriguetto, N., Giacomoni, J., Baudriller, H., Chapelet, B., Brenko, A., Bursic, D., Calvo, J., Cristóbal, R., Hardillier, C., Maltoni, S., Mutke, S., Paulo, J.A., Santos-Silva, C., Stara, K., Markos, N., Taghouti, I., Tomé, M., Vidale, E., Redondo, C.
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Non-Wood Forest Products, Forest, Mediterranean basin, Mediterranean forest, European project, European Commission, Horizon 2020, Interregional Innovation Networks, Cork, Resins, Aromatic and Medicinal Plants, Mushrooms and Truffles, Wild Nuts and Berries, Science to practice - Abstract
This deliverableD4.3 presents the knowledge transfer activities to targeted stakeholders that INCREDIBLE partners performed over the duration of the project. It lists articles in sectorial and practitioners’ magazines and journals, as well as articles targeted at broader audiences (e.g,. blogs or web stories), published at both national and international levels. The dissemination items are subdivided per thematic iNets (Aromatic and medicinal plants; Cork; Mushrooms and truffles; Resins; Wild nuts and berries), and inter-iNets activities. This deliverable details how key project outcomes, processes, and lessons learned from the iterative multi-actor processes have been disseminated to target audiences outside the project, as to increase the project impact and outreach.
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- 2021
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- View/download PDF
4. INCREDIBLE iNET Manual, Deliverable D1.1
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Martinez De Arano, I., Marini Govigli, V., Tripodi, G., Andrighetto, N., Libbrecht, S., Mutke, S., Paulo, J., Rubio, R.
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15. Life on land ,Non-Wood Forest Products, Forest, Mediterranean basin, European project, Horizon 2020, Interregional Innovation Networks, Cork, Resins, Aromatic and Medicinal Plants, Mushrooms and Truffles, Wild Nuts and Berries, Science to practice - Abstract
INCREDIBLE aims to address the existing research and innovation knowledge divide in Non-Wood Forest Products (NWFPs) across the Mediterranean basin. To achieve this, the project will develop a series of Innovation NETworks (iNets), which will gather best practices (both practical and science-based) related to NWFP production, transformation and trade channels. This report sets out the process and procedures for the establishment and the operation of the iNets and will therefore act as a guiding manual for all actors involved in the life of the iNets.
5. INCREDIBLE iNET Manual, Deliverable D1.1
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Martinez de Arano, I., Marini Govigli, V., Tripodi, G., Andrighetto, N., Libbrecht, S., Mutke, S., Paulo, J., Rubio, R.
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15. Life on land ,Non-Wood Forest Products, Forest, Mediterranean basin, European project, Horizon 2020, Interregional Innovation Networks, Cork, Resins, Aromatic and Medicinal Plants, Mushrooms and Truffles, Wild Nuts and Berries, Science to practice - Abstract
INCREDIBLE aims to address the existing research and innovation knowledge divide in Non-Wood Forest Products (NWFPs) across the Mediterranean basin. To achieve this, the project will develop a series of Innovation NETworks (iNets), which will gather best practices (both practical and science-based) related to NWFP production, transformation and trade channels. This report sets out the process and procedures for the establishment and the operation of the iNets and will therefore act as a guiding manual for all actors involved in the life of the iNets.
6. Quantifying the conservation value of Sacred Natural Sites
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John M. Halley, E. Kapsalis, E. Papadatou, Lucia Muggia, A. Rohrer, Jennifer L. G. Wong, V. Nitsiakos, Dimitrios N. Avtzis, Vasiliki Sgardeli, Haritakis Papaioannou, S. Diamandis, V. Marini Govigli, John R. Healey, Giorgos Korakis, Nikolaos Monokrousos, K.S. Van Houtan, Kalliopi Stara, R. Τsiakiris, A. Betsis, Despoina Vokou, Vassiliki Kati, Avtzis D.N., Stara K., Sgardeli V., Betsis A., Diamandis S., Healey J.R., Kapsalis E., Kati V., Korakis G., Marini Govigli V., Monokrousos N., Muggia L., Nitsiakos V., Papadatou E., Papaioannou H., Rohrer A., Tausiakiris R., Van Houtan K.S., Vokou D., Wong J.L.G., Halley J.M., Avtzis, D. N., Stara, K., Sgardeli, V., Betsis, A., Diamandis, S., Healey, J. R., Kapsalis, E., Kati, V., Korakis, G., Marini Govigli, V., Monokrousos, N., Muggia, L., Nitsiakos, V., Papadatou, E., Papaioannou, H., Rohrer, A., Tausiakiris, R., Van Houtan, K. S., Vokou, D., Wong, J. L. G., and Halley, J. M.
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0106 biological sciences ,Beta diversity ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Biodiversity ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Extinction debt ,biology.animal ,Vegetation type ,Lichen ,Sacred Natural Sites ,Conservation value ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,biology ,Ecology ,Passerine ,Geography ,Taxon ,Woody plant - Abstract
Many have asserted that Sacred Natural Sites (SNS) play an important role in nature protection but few have assessed their conservation effectiveness for different taxa. We studied sacred groves in Epirus, NW Greece, where a large number of such SNS have been identified. Based on historical, ethnographic and ecological criteria, we selected eight of these groves and matching control sites and in them we studied fungi, lichens, herbaceous plants, woody plants, nematodes, insects, bats and passerine birds. Our results reveal that the contribution of SNS to species conservation is nuanced by taxon, vegetation type and management history. We found that the sacred groves have a small conservation advantage over the corresponding control sites. More specifically, there are more distinct sets of organisms amongst sacred groves than amongst control sites, and overall biodiversity, diversity per taxonomic group, and numbers of species from the European SCI list (Species of Community Interest) are all marginally higher in them. Conservationists regard the often small size of SNS as a factor limiting their conservation value. The sizes of SNS around the globe vary greatly, from a few square meters to millions of hectares. Given that those surveyed by us (ranging from 5 to 116 ha) are at the lower end of this spectrum, the small conservation advantage that we testified becomes important. Our results provide clear evidence that even small-size SNS have considerable conservation relevance; they would contribute most to species conservation if incorporated in networks.
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- 2018
7. When nature meets the divine: effect of prohibition regimes on the structure and tree species composition of sacred forests in northern Greece
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John M. Halley, John R. Healey, Jennifer L. G. Wong, Rigas Tsiakiris, Kalliopi Stara, Valentino Marini Govigli, Marini Govigli V., Healey J.R., Wong J.L.G., Stara K., Tsiakiris R., and Halley J.M.
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0106 biological sciences ,Canopy ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,lcsh:QH1-199.5 ,Forest management ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,lcsh:QH1-278.5 ,environmental history ,lcsh:General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,Sacred grove ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Floristics ,Natural (archaeology) ,lcsh:Microbiology ,lcsh:Physiology ,lcsh:Oceanography ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,lcsh:Botany ,lcsh:Zoology ,lcsh:GC1-1581 ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,lcsh:Human ecology. Anthropogeography ,lcsh:Science ,Relative species abundance ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,structural composition ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,biodiversity ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,Ecology ,lcsh:QP1-981 ,Cultural landscape ,lcsh:Natural history (General) ,greece ,Understory ,lcsh:QK1-989 ,Geography ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:Q ,lcsh:Ecology ,lcsh:GF1-900 ,Woody plant - Abstract
Sacred forests are an integral component of the mountainous cultural landscape of northern Greece, hypothesized to be the result of both ecological processes and site-specific forest management regimes through strict religious prohibition. These practices acted as constraints on natural forest development by suppressing understory growth, while prohibition of woodcutting has preserved large trees. The aim of this study was to investigate the relative effects of physical site environment and management regimes on the structure and composition of woody plant groups in six such forests. Species rank–abundance curves, dissimilarity indices and cluster analyses were used to assess variation within and amongst the woody plant groups of the sites. Species abundance was found to be highly variable amongst the sites, with notable variation between canopy and understory layers indicating dynamic change in floristics and structure. Cluster analysis revealed four main woody plant groups statistically associated with environmental variables (aspect) and forest management (different forest prohibition regimes, and presence or absence of infrastructure). Our results indicate that tree composition is significantly associated with different prohibition regimes linked to the forests' sacred status, as well as the inherent environmental variation amongst sites. Exploring further the role of traditional management systems in shaping sacred forest structure is a relevant research path for designing effective conservation practices tailored to sacred natural sites facing cultural abandonment.
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- 2020
8. Social innovation for developing sustainable solutions in a fisheries sector
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Ebun Akinsete, Achilleas Vassilopoulos, Laura Secco, Elena Pisani, Maria Nijnik, Valentino Marini‐Govigli, Phoebe Koundouri, Alkis Kafetzis, Akinsete, E., Vassilopoulos, A., Secco, L., Pisani, E., Nijnik, M., Marini Govigli, V., Koundouri, P., and Kafetzis, A.
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natural assets ,evaluation framework ,Greece ,innovative governance ,evaluation framework, Greece, innovative governance, Mediterranean region, natural assets, rural development ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Mediterranean region ,rural development - Abstract
In this paper, we explore how social innovation can provide a range of ecosystem services to local people while supporting public policies and private sector initiatives in delivering successful and innovative food distribution channels. In the Mediterranean basin, the status of commercial fish stocks is critical. In this sense, small-scale, lowimpact fishing is a way to sustainably utilise socially innovative practices in the use of natural assets and to provide support to rural livelihoods while having minimal impacts on the marine environment. We use an innovative evaluation method, based on the integration of qualitative information with quantitative indicators, to assess social innovation initiatives and their impacts. The use of the methodology is demonstrated on the example of the project A Box of Sea, Greece. The results obtained show that this social initiative provides a novel food consumption and distribution model aiming at making low impact fishing more economically viable, and therefore achieving a triple sustainability for the sector (environmental, social, and economic). We identify third sector social innovation schemes as key tools to develop novel distribution systems supporting local communities (providing employment, fostering new networks and collaborations across fishers), while improving governance practices of the current fishing sector by creating a fairer market that protects the marine environment. Our findings provide a foundation upon which future evaluations of similar projects can build and compare. Such comparisons are crucial in determining patterns related to the innovation transfer processes.
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- 2022
9. The carbon footprint of a knowledge organization and emission scenarios for a post-COVID-19 world
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Stefan Baumeister, Sami El Geneidy, Venla Wallius, Valentino Marini Govigli, Timokleia Orfanidou, University of Jyväskylä, University of Bologna, School common, CHEM, Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems, Aalto-yliopisto, Aalto University, El Geneidy S., Baumeister S., Marini Govigli V., Orfanidou T., and Wallius V.
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Mitigation ,Knowledge organization ,Geography, Planning and Development ,organisaatiot ,COVID-19 pandemic ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,ilmastovaikutukset ,tietoyritykset ,Indirect emission ,Travel ,kestävä kehitys ,Ecology ,Scope (project management) ,hiilijalanjälki ,COVID-19 ,Business travel ,Environmental economics ,Carbon footprint ,kompensointi ,Indirect emissions ,Multinational corporation ,Business ,Carbon offsetting - Abstract
Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The looming climate crisis requires an immediate response, in which organizations, as major contributors, should play a central role. However, these organizations need appropriate tools to measure and mitigate their climate impacts. One commonly applied method is carbon footprint analysis. Carbon footprint analyses have been conducted for various types of organizations, but knowledge organizations, such as universities and research institutes, have received far less attention, because their carbon footprint is often less visible and can be easily underestimated. This study is based on the carbon footprint analysis of one multinational knowledge organization. This analysis then helped identify the major sources of climate impacts in other such knowledge organizations. These are mainly indirect emissions (Scope 3) and to a large extent (79%) travel-related emissions. Based on these findings, three scenarios for a post-COVID-19 world were developed and analyzed. The results from the first two scenarios showed that despite a reduction in business travel and employees working from home, Scope 3 and travel-related emissions would remain the largest contributor. Only in the unlikely case of the third, non-recovery scenario did the share of travel-related emissions drop, turning heating into the largest contributor. In addition to measuring the carbon footprint, the study discusses potential mitigation strategies knowledge organizations could apply to reduce their carbon footprint. The focus is on how to avoid and reduce emissions, but new forms of carbon offsetting are also addressed. Based on the findings, a mitigation policy framework and recommendations for further research are proposed.
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- 2021
10. Climate data for the European forestry sector: From end-user needs to opportunities for climate resilience
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Jorge Paz Jiménez, Valentino Marini Govigli, Inazio Martínez de Arano, Nieves Peña Cerezo, María Inés Romero, Siebe Briers, Marcus Lindner, Cecilia Fraccaroli, Fraccaroli C., Marini Govigli V., Briers S., Pena Cerezo N., Paz Jimenez J., Romero M., Lindner M., and Martinez de Arano I.
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Service (business) ,Climate services ,H1-99 ,Atmospheric Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,End user ,Climate change ,Forestry ,SWOT ,User requirements document ,Climate resilience ,Forest risk management ,Europe ,Social sciences (General) ,User-driven requirements ,Work (electrical) ,Meteorology. Climatology ,Climate service ,Copernicu ,Business ,QC851-999 ,SWOT analysis ,Strengths and weaknesses ,Copernicus - Abstract
The aim of this study is to assess the potential of Earth Observation and climate data for the forestry sector focusing on the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S). Although forestry researchers recognize the importance of Earth Observation and climate data, forestry practitioners currently work mainly with land cover information, largely neglecting climate data. Understanding its potential for the forestry sector becomes thus important, as to align the vast offer of climate services in Europe to different forestry users and stakeholders’ necessities. Interviews, surveys, and dedicated workshops were used to collect a series of forestry end-users’ needs and requirements regarding climate data. End-user’s requirements were categorized through a SWOT analysis, which allowed to identify perceived internal strengths and weaknesses, external opportunities and threats to the increased use of the C3S. Results indicate that improved climate services for the forestry sector based on C3S data would benefit from enhanced training on the use of climate data, improved provision of services integrating climate with non-climate data, the provision of new variables and indicators, and the integration of machine learning techniques for developing data and information in support of the deployment of climate services. These findings are relevant to close the gap between demand and supply of climate services for the forestry sector and provide a basis for further exploring the value of climate data in serving a wide array of forestry stakeholders. Going forward, increased knowledge on user requirements from both forest practitioners and policy-makers can be beneficial to develop accessible tailored services.
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- 2021
11. The challenges of coordinating forest owners for joint management
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Elena Górriz-Mifsud, Eduardo Montero Eseverri, Valentino Marini Govigli, Luis Olza Donazar, Gorriz-Mifsud E., Olza Donazar L., Montero Eseverri E., and Marini Govigli V.
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Economics and Econometrics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Transparency (market) ,Adjacency externalitie ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Social capital ,Technical management ,Adjacency externalities ,Legitimacy ,040101 forestry ,Transaction cost ,Landscape-scale management ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Joint Forest Management ,Internal communications ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Forestry ,Forest owner association ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Environmental economics ,Spain ,Sustainability ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Business ,Joint forest management - Abstract
In a context of highly fragmented woodlands' ownership, joint forest management implies a reduction of transaction costs for its members and improves the coherence of forestry actions at the landscape scale. Increasing the size of the management unit improves market positioning, permits a more technical management, and improves environmental sustainability in aspects that require spatial coordination. A review of relevant literature on forest owners' groupings and the lessons learned from case studies in Navarra (Spain) have been analysed from a social capital perspective. Twelve challenges are identified, for which technical recommendations are offered. We navigate through decision-making procedures, geographical cohesion, legitimacy and trust building, transparency and internal communication, trade-offs in efficiency and equity, local idiosyncrasy, management committee dynamics, risk aversion vs. flexibility, legal aspects, joint motivations and long-term vision, and intermediary's efficiency. Existing policy tools help in overcoming some of the economic and technical aspects. However, internal governance challenges require a concerted effort from participating forest owners.
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- 2019
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12. Can Social Innovation Make a Change in European and Mediterranean Marginalized Areas? Social Innovation Impact Assessment in Agriculture, Fisheries, Forestry, and Rural Development
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Antonio Baselice, Elisa Ravazzoli, Carla Barlagne, Mariana Melnykovych, Elena Górriz-Mifsud, Laura Secco, Antonio Lopolito, Phoebe Koundouri, Arbia Labidi, Valentino Marini Govigli, Maria Nijnik, Elena Pisani, Thomas Streifeneder, David Miller, Marijke Dijskhoorn-Dekker, Nico Polman, Cristina Dalla Torre, Bengoumi M, Achilleas Vassilopoulos, Simo Sarkki, Riccardo Da Re, Manfred Perlik, Ravazzoli E., Dalla Torre C., Da Re R., Marini Govigli V., Secco L., Gorriz-Mifsud E., Pisani E., Barlagne C., Baselice A., Bengoumi M., Dijskhoorn-Dekker M., Labidi A., Lopolito A., Melnykovych M., Perlik M., Polman N., Sarkki S., Vassilopoulos A., Koundouri P., Miller D., Streifeneder T., and Nijnik M.
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Mediterranean climate ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,WASS ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Socio-economic impact ,Renewable energy sources ,social innovation ,Environmental impact ,societal well-being ,11. Sustainability ,GE1-350 ,Empirical evidence ,Green Economy and Landuse ,European societal challenges ,Environmental effects of industries and plants ,Corporate governance ,1. No poverty ,021107 urban & regional planning ,environmental impacts ,Institutional impact ,330 Economics ,Groene Economie en Ruimte ,Capital (economics) ,Social innovation ,socio-economic impacts ,European societal challenge ,Institutional impacts ,institutional impacts ,sustainability challenges ,TJ807-830 ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,TD194-195 ,12. Responsible consumption ,Socio-economic impacts ,Political science ,320 Political science ,local level ,Sustainability challenges ,Marginalization ,Local level ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Impact assessment ,business.industry ,Forestry ,marginalization ,15. Life on land ,Environmental impacts ,Fishery ,Environmental sciences ,13. Climate action ,Agriculture ,Societal well-being ,Rural area ,business - Abstract
Social innovation (SI) impacts are long-term changes that affect different dimensions of territorial capital (i.e., economy, society, environment, governance) for the territory in which SI occurs. Yet, systematic empirical evidence and theoretically sound assessments of the impacts of SI are scarce. This paper aims to fill the gap and assess the different aspects of SI���s impacts in European and Mediterranean areas that are characterized by marginalization processes. To assess the impacts of SI in marginalized areas, we use the evaluation framework developed within the Social Innovation in Marginalized Rural Areas (SIMRA) Horizon 2020 project and apply it to nine SI initiatives related to the fields of agriculture, fisheries, forestry, and rural development. Our findings show that SI produces cross-sectoral (societal, economic, environmental, and governmental) and multi-level impacts (on individuals, community, and society), which have improved the societal well-being, and contributed to the reduction of certain forms of marginality, mainly inside the territory in which SI occurred. View Full-Text Keywords: social innovation; socio-economic impacts; institutional impacts; environmental impacts; societal well-being; European societal challenges; marginalization; sustainability challenges; local level
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- 2021
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13. Application of a Comprehensive Methodology for the Evaluation of Social Innovations in Rural Communities
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Valentino Marini Govigli, Maurizio Prosperi, Antonio Baselice, Antonio Lopolito, Baselice A., Prosperi M., Marini Govigli V., and Lopolito A.
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Value (ethics) ,Civil society ,Knowledge management ,rural hub ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Psychological intervention ,TJ807-830 ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,TD194-195 ,01 natural sciences ,social innovation ,Renewable energy sources ,Political science ,Relevance (law) ,Civic engagement ,GE1-350 ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,evaluation ,Reeis indicator ,Environmental effects of industries and plants ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Environmental sciences ,Sustainability ,Rural area ,business ,Strengths and weaknesses ,rural development ,REEIS indicators - Abstract
Despite the growing interest in social innovation (SI) in agriculture, the literature lacks validated tools for evaluating such initiatives. This paper provides an empirical application of the evaluation approach developed within the H2020 SIMRA project to a pilot experience conducted in a rural area of Southern Italy. The value added by this case study is the application of the five types of criteria used by the OECD for the evaluation of development programs, which are commonly referred to as REEIS: relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, impact, and sustainability. This experiment demonstrates the adequacy of the evaluation framework in identifying strengths and weaknesses of the initiative, according to a multifaceted perspective. The overall evaluation proves that most indicators fall under the high (48%) and medium categories (36%), and only few indicators are low (16%). The usefulness of the evaluation results is manifold. First, this evaluation highlights relevant arguments to support the communication strategy addressed at civil society, therefore reinforcing the civic engagement of the initiative, which is the distinctive feature of SI. Second, it supports project managers in addressing interventions to face emerging weaknesses. Finally, the evaluation provides factual evidence to policy makers to perform cost-effective analysis of rural development policies.
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- 2021
14. From religion to conservation: unfolding 300 years of collective action in a Greek sacred forest
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Valentino Marini Govigli, Kalliopi Stara, Anthoula Efthymiou, Marini Govigli V., Efthymiou A., and Stara K.
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Economics and Econometrics ,Ostrom framework ,Sociology and Political Science ,Land use ,Corporate governance ,Adaptive policie ,Common pool resource ,Socio-ecological systems ,Forestry ,Environmental ethics ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Modernization theory ,Collective action ,Local community ,Politics ,Forest common ,Political science ,Sustainability ,Sacred natural site ,Commons - Abstract
Sacred Natural Sites are integrated-coupled systems with mutual social and natural interactions, and they exist within a variety of local cultures and regions of the world. In Europe and especially in the Mediterranean basin, changing land use patterns and population decline since World War II have had a dramatic impact on the socio-ecological structure and management practices of many of such sites. At the same time, old beliefs and taboos are often neglected due to modernization, rural depopulation, and change in community's structure, norms, and codes. Understanding how social, ecological, and policy processes changed through time becomes thus relevant to identify the main criteria for effective collective action and sustainability of the studied systems. In this paper, we applied Ostrom's social–ecological systems framework to model the main socio-ecological processes acting upon a sacred forest in Epirus (Greece) over a 300 years' period. The multidisciplinary approach included collection of archival and ecological data and ethnographic research (semi-structured interviews). Results indicate that significant changes have occurred in social, economic, political, and institutional terms since the creation of the settlement (17th century). However, the sacred grove has been of major importance to the adjacent local community that acts as its custodian guardian even nowadays. Collective action for the preservation of the forest has been achieved under various governance regimes that transformed through time traditional religious taboos into modern conservation approaches. This analysis revealed that local traditional management practices of commons can serve as successful socio-ecological conservation examples.
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- 2021
15. Testing a Framework to Co-Construct Social Innovation Actions: Insights from Seven Marginalized Rural Areas
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Sfeir P, Carla Barlagne, Mari Bjerck, Valentino Marini Govigli, Sophie Alkhaled, Carmen Rodríguez Fernandez-Blanco, Mariana Melnykovych, Catie Burlando, Tor Arnesen, Elena Górriz-Mifsud, Marini Govigli V., Alkhaled S., Arnesen T., Barlagne C., Bjerck M., Burlando C., Melnykovych M., Fernandez-Blanco C.R., Sfeir P., and Gorriz-Mifsud E.
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multi-actor approach ,Knowledge management ,Process (engineering) ,Geography, Planning and Development ,lcsh:TJ807-830 ,Innovation management ,lcsh:Renewable energy sources ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Grassroots ,0502 economics and business ,11. Sustainability ,Participatory approache ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,agriculture ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,Strategic thinking ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,lcsh:Environmental effects of industries and plants ,05 social sciences ,feasibility assessment ,1. No poverty ,forestry ,lcsh:TD194-195 ,Action (philosophy) ,participatory approaches ,knowledge co-construction ,Rural area ,business ,Construct (philosophy) ,050203 business & management ,rural development ,innovation management - Abstract
Innovation actions within European Horizon 2020 (H2020) projects aim at testing research results in practice. When supporting social innovations in rural areas, such testing requires the alignment of several rural actors in order to entail behavioral changes beyond the individual level. Recently, social innovation has been recognized as an important tool for rural areas, developing new solutions to respond to wicked problems for improving local living conditions at the grassroots level. In this study, we analyzed the use of an operational framework to support the early governance of social innovation actions. This framework was applied to co-construct seven innovation actions across Europe and the Mediterranean basin applied to forestry, agriculture, and rural development. Our results showed that supporting social innovators and local actors at the early stage of social innovation processes is key for efficiently addressing and tackling challenges and opportunities. Additionally, we showed that the process of defining a social innovation is complex and requires recursive engagement, which might lead to evolution through time, especially in the first phases of the process. Lastly, conducting the feasibility assessment enabled strategic thinking on crucial dimensions for designing a promising social innovation action, such as social networks management, financial sustainability, and know-how. Such findings helped us to draw general lessons for the development and governance of social innovation actions in rural areas, potentially applicable to any rural sector.
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- 2020
16. What to do with mushroom pickers in my forest? Policy tools from the landowners’ perspective
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Valentino Marini Govigli, José Antonio Bonet, Elena Górriz-Mifsud, Gorriz-Mifsud E., Marini Govigli V., and Bonet J.A.
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecosystem service ,Non-industrial private forest owner ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Forest management ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Non-wood forest product ,Property right ,Economics ,Revenue ,Asset (economics) ,Marketing ,Land tenure ,Recreation ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Forestry ,Harm ,Economy ,Property rights ,Primary sector of the economy ,Wild products ,Policy instrument - Abstract
Wild mushroom picking is a growing recreational and commercial activity. In Spain, wild mushrooms legally belong to the landowner, who seldom benefits from trade in mushrooms or from their recreational value. Cultural aspects (tradition, picker-related harms) and economic aspects (costly forestry works, income opportunities) constitute elements of the debate on how to deal with mushroom picking. Through a survey of private forest owners in Catalonia (north-eastern Spain), this paper examines their experiences with mushroom pickers, the factors shaping their related policy preferences and their willingness to engage in mushroom reserves. The results show broad support for introducing mushroom picking norms. A regulation would allow outsider pickers to enter private land, but only under certain conditions, i.e. to comply with socio-ecological rules of the area. Among respondents who support the regulation, active land owners who report instances of picker-related harm (both tangible and intangible) tend to support the establishment of a fee system which could be reinvested into forest management. That is also the position of the respondents who perceive mushrooms as a private right, i.e. they believe to have a legitimate right to exclude outsider pickers and, eventually, to raise revenues from that asset. On the contrary, forest owners who conceive mushroom picking as a free-access activity prefer neither to regulate it nor to charge fees. The option to establish a mushroom picking reserve depends on the landholder being a fee-supporter and perceiving instances of harm. Harm, instead, is mainly determined by the perception of congestion of pickers, which in turn is determined by the mushroom productivity of their forest, their level of privacy protection and their involvement to the primary sector. These findings help policymakers to better understand the logic and sensitivities of forest owners in view of designing mushroom picking policies that can effectively solve picker-landowner conflicts.
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- 2017
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17. Assessing and modelling socio-ecological interactions of sacred forests in northwestern Greece
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Valentino Marini Govigli and Marini Govigli, V
- Subjects
Cellular automata ,Dendrochronology ,Sacred forest ,Sacred natural site ,Socio-ecological system ,Forest boundarie ,Forest inventory - Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to disentangle the relative influence of ecological and social processes in the composition, spatial patterning and temporal extent of Sacred Natural Sites (SNS). SNSs are natural places with spiritual and religious significance for local communities. They are peculiar coupled socio-ecological systems arising from long-lasting interactions between ecological processes and anthropogenic influences. SNSs have been recently recognized as providers of crucial nonmaterial benefits related to human-nature relationships. However, how different ecological and social processes interact in time and space influencing their formation remains a largely unexplored topic. This is especially relevant, as SNSs face increasing risks of degradation due the cultural and demographic changes occurred in the past decades (e.g. depopulation of rural areas, knowledge loss of traditional management practices). We use ecological and social data, collected on a sample of sacred forests in Northwestern Greece, to: (i) understand the main socio-ecological processes that led to the sacred forests establishment, (ii) identify spatial (i.e. forests extent and boundaries) and temporal (i.e. forests’ establishments) patterns across sacred forests; (iii) model the spatial extent of sacred forests over time to quantify how social processes impact the forest expansion. We do this through an interdisciplinary methodology, which combines diverse set of data stemming from different sources (data on forest structure and vegetation, tree rings data, ethnographic data) integrated and analysed in the thesis using both quantitative and qualitative techniques (statistical analysis, spatial analysis, environmental modelling). According to the findings of this thesis, we conclude that it is possible to disentangle the relative influence of ecological and social processes in the composition, spatial patterning and temporal extent of SNS. In the context of sacred forests in northwestern Greece, results suggest that traditional management practices and social beliefs are main drivers in defining the spatial structure of sacred forests, and in preserving them as time passes. Unfolding the role of these processes is fundamental for understanding how the historical change in cultural practices related to management of sacred sites has determined the trajectory of their vegetation composition and function. This analysis provides the first multidisciplinary assessment of SNSs role in a changing society, giving clearer perspectives on how to design conservation practices tailored to SNSs facing cultural abandonment.
- Published
- 2020
18. Civil society engaged in wildfires: Mediterranean forest fire volunteer groupings
- Author
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Valentino Marini Govigli, Matthew Burns, Elena Górriz-Mifsud, Gorriz-Mifsud E., Burns M., and Marini Govigli V.
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Civil society ,Sociology and Political Science ,Fire prevention ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Social capital ,Political science ,11. Sustainability ,Fire protection ,Human resources ,Environmental planning ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,business.industry ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Forestry ,Welfare state ,Social innovation ,15. Life on land ,Collaboration ,Cooperation ,Community preparedne ,13. Climate action ,Preparedness ,Damages ,business ,Fire suppression - Abstract
In fire-prone areas such the Mediterranean basin, wildfire risk means a societal challenge. Governments inmodern welfare states have generally addressed it through a “zero fire policy”, focusing on suppression andprofessionalization. Such approach provides security to local populations, who in turn may detach from thesocio-ecologic phenomenon of wildfire and become passive actors. In the face of increasingly virulent wildfires,local communities are often not prepared with consequent damages and casualties.Yet, some regions show pro-active locals organizing their efforts to tackle wildfires. These fire volunteergroups suppose a social innovation in rural communities that help in their adaptation to climate change. Going beyond homeowners' preparedness, the actions of volunteers range from supporting firefighters' efforts, firstattack and/or year-round prevention. The investigation of these communities is in its infancy despite its practitionerand policy interest. In this study, we shed light on this civil society engagement across different Mediterranean forest settings,namely from predominantly public forest ownership in Greece, to predominantly private in Catalonia (Spain)and virtually entirely private in Portugal. Collecting data through a survey, the type of activities of these volunteergroups, their relations with fire and local actors (i.e. social capital) and trajectory have been analysed tofind possible trends.Statistical results show that their portfolio of activities relates to their group size (i.e. available human resources)and their structural and relational social capital. Preliminary insights show an improvement in trustwith fire and forest actors owing to the fire volunteer group establishment. No evidence has been found of forestarea covered by fire volunteers, recent fire experience or variety in members' profile to affect the type of activities.The results are discussed in the frame of social capital theory and suggestions for further research are putforward.
- Published
- 2019
19. Zonal travel cost approaches to assess recreational wild mushroom picking value: Trade-offs between online and onsite data collection strategies
- Author
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Elena Górriz-Mifsud, Valentino Marini Govigli, Elsa Varela, Marini Govigli V., Gorriz-Mifsud E., Varela E., and Economia Agroalimentària
- Subjects
Wild mushroom ,379.8 ,Economics and Econometrics ,Data collection ,Sociology and Political Science ,Operations research ,Computer science ,Ecosystem service ,Trade offs ,Forestry ,Travel cost ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental valuation ,Ecosystem services ,Policy ,Non-wood forest product ,Non-wood forest products ,Demand curve ,Spain ,Recreation ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
Mushroom picking is a growing recreational activity in Europe. Since the institutional environment moves towards regulating mycological resources, estimating the value of this ecosystem service becomes a key tool for policy-makers and rural entrepreneurs. This paper applies the Travel Cost (TC) method to estimate the value of mushroom picking in three forest areas in the region of Catalonia, Spain. In particular, the main objective is to contrast different sampling strategies (online vs. onsite data collection) when used to build zonal Travel Cost models. This intends to guide practitioners towards choosing the best sampling strategy according to existing time, monetary and accuracy constraints. Eight TC models were derived using as regressors the zonal travel cost and selected picking and socio-economic variables. The resulting demand curves produce an estimate of the average site value per trip that ranges from 9 to 22€/visit considering the onsite data, and from 21 to 47 €/visit for zonal TC implemented on the online data. These results reveal estimate differences across the approaches, and especially evident for one picking ground (Els Ports). Our results point out that onsite surveys would be better suited when exploring the sample for an initial set up of permit fees, to set the permit boundaries and initial applications. On the other hand, the online data collection presents the problem of self-selection and self-reporting bias. We recommend practitioners to always perform a proper assessment of the effects of the context, chosen sampling strategy, and validity of assumptions when adopting valuation estimates for establishing a recreational price of ecosystem services. info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
- Published
- 2019
20. The economics of green transition strategies for cities: Can low carbon,energy efficient development approaches be adapted to demand side urban water efficiency?
- Author
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Corrado Topi, Edoardo Esposto, Valentino Marini Govigli, Topi C., Esposto E., and Marini Govigli V.
- Subjects
Payback period ,020209 energy ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Green development ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Robustness (computer science) ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Economics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nexus ,Green economy transition ,Demand side ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Nexu ,Environmental economics ,Water efficiency ,Demand-side water management ,Italy ,Sustainability ,Urban resilience ,business ,Efficient energy use - Abstract
Cities are major contributors to global emissions, producers of waste and consumers of resources such as energy, water and food: implementing green development strategies is hence a core challenge of modern city-planning. The attention of research has been focusing on the development of energy efficient, low carbon strategies, yet city decision-makers need truly integrated approaches, as the one proposed by the water-energy-food Nexus. The purpose of our paper is to investigate whether it is possible to take one step in this direction by extending existing approaches to energy efficiency strategies to progressively include other priority resources, in particular water. To test this hypothesis we have taken a robust and well accepted methodology, the ELCC (Economics of Low Carbon development strategies for Cities) developed by SEI and CCCEP, and we have extended it to the case of demand side water efficiency strategies for cities. We have then applied the adapted ELCC framework to the case study of the domestic sector of the city of Bologna (Italy), identifying and prioritizing several efficiency measures. Measures were evaluated through their capital investment, annual values of savings, payback period and reduction in consumption, and then aggregated in different scenarios in order to highlight potential urban investments and to showcase a possible approach to the prioritization of demand side water efficiency measures. The results show that, with an upfront investment of € 17 million, a feasible subset of Bologna’s households could be equipped with five selected cost-effective measures, generating annual savings of € 10.2 million and reducing the total domestic water consumption of 34% by 2020 compared to the 2012 initial value. With additional € 28.5 million, households could be equipped with more costly appliances reaching an overall water reduction of 37% by 2020. Our findings confirm that it is possible to successfully extend current approaches to urban energy efficiency strategies to include demand side water efficiency, adding an important building block to the construction of an integrated Nexus-based approach to green development strategies at the city-level. We encourage further tests to confirm the robustness of the methodology.
- Published
- 2016
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