10 results on '"Wendy Miles"'
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2. Brexit and Energy Disputes
- Author
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Ana Stanič and Wendy Miles
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Pacific Island Perspectives on Invasive Species and Climate Change
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Laura Brewington, Bradley Eichelberger, Nicole Read, Elliott Parsons, Heather Kerkering, Christy Martin, Wendy Miles, Jacques Idechong, and Jeff Burgett
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Climate Change in American Sāmoa: Indicators and Considerations for Key Sectors
- Author
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Victoria Keener, Zena Grecni, Kelley Anderson Tagarino, Christopher Shuler, and Wendy Miles
- Subjects
Pacific Islands, American Samoa, assessment, climate change, climate observations, future climate projections, climate adaptation, decision-making, climate policy - Abstract
Human health risks, stronger cyclones, coral reef death, and coastal flooding are among the major challenges detailed in a new report on climate change in American Sāmoa. Threatened resources include high-value coastal infrastructure and the millions of dollars that ocean ecosystems add to American Sāmoa's economy annually, according to the report by the Pacific Islands Regional Climate Assessment (PIRCA), a consortium of several government, NGO, and research entities. Climate Change in American Sāmoa: Indicators and Considerations for Key Sectors is one in a series of new PIRCA reports aimed at assessing the state of knowledge about climate change indicators, impacts, and adaptive capacity of the US-Affiliated Pacific Islands and the Hawaiian archipelago. Authors from the University of Hawai‘i and the East-West Center—along with 25 technical contributors from local governments, NGOs, researchers, and community groups—collaboratively developed the American Sāmoa PIRCA report. Climate change is expected to disrupt many aspects of life in American Sāmoa. Those who are already vulnerable—including children, the elderly, low-income families, and individuals with disabilities—are at greater risk from extreme weather and climate events. Climate Change in American Sāmoa: Indicators and Considerations for Key Sectors provides guidance for decision-makers seeking to better understand the implications of climate variability and change for American Sāmoa and its communities. This assessment also identifies the additional information and research needed to support responses that enhance resilience and help American Sāmoa to withstand the changes to come., A Samoan language summary is available for download at https://www.eastwestcenter.org/PIRCA-AmericanSamoa. To request a printed copy of the report or summary, please contact info@PacificRISA.org.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Broad threat to humanity from cumulative climate hazards intensified by greenhouse gas emissions
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Leo V. Louis, Michael B. Kantar, Erik C. Franklin, Keith Bettinger, John F. Colburn Ix, Jonathan A. Patz, Christopher M. Little, Daniele Spirandelli, Evan W. Barba, Charlotte Z. Smith, Wendy Miles, Camilo Mora, Kerry Emanuel, Wolfgang Knorr, Justin Sheffield, Cynthia L. Hunter, Yukiko Hirabayashi, John Lynham, Abby G. Frazier, Kelle C. Freel, Jade Moy, Naota Hanasaki, and Ed Hawkins
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Population ,Climate change ,Storm ,Land cover ,010501 environmental sciences ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,01 natural sciences ,Human health ,Environmental protection ,Greenhouse gas ,Humanity ,Environmental science ,Precipitation ,education ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The ongoing emission of greenhouse gases (GHGs) is triggering changes in many climate hazards that can impact humanity. We found traceable evidence for 467 pathways by which human health, water, food, economy, infrastructure and security have been recently impacted by climate hazards such as warming, heatwaves, precipitation, drought, floods, fires, storms, sea-level rise and changes in natural land cover and ocean chemistry. By 2100, the world’s population will be exposed concurrently to the equivalent of the largest magnitude in one of these hazards if emmisions are aggressively reduced, or three if they are not, with some tropical coastal areas facing up to six simultaneous hazards. These findings highlight the fact that GHG emissions pose a broad threat to humanity by intensifying multiple hazards to which humanity is vulnerable.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Arbitral Institutions and the Enforcement of Climate Change Obligations for the Benefit of all Stakeholders: The Role of ICSID
- Author
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Merryl Lawry-White and Wendy Miles
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Climate change ,Business ,Public administration ,Enforcement ,Law ,Finance - Abstract
In 2015, States concluded the landmark Paris Agreement, which committed to a long-term goal of “holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels”. The Paris Agreement galvanises all signatory nations in a common cause — combating climate change and adapting to and investigating its effects, and with enhanced support to assist developing countries to do so. As such, it charts a new course in the global climate effort. The goals of the Paris Agreement will only be achieved through massive investment in pursuit of a common objective. According to the International Finance Corporation, an estimated US$90 trillion investment is required to implement the Paris Agreement. The current regime of international investment agreements (IIAs) provides an invaluable opportunity to promote the investment required to achieve the Paris Agreement objectives, including mitigation, adaptation and transition from fossil fuels. However, users must take care to ensure that investment is, in fact, protected and encouraged, and to maintain critical progress in promoting international climate change policy. ICSID is one of the five arms of the World Bank Group, which recognises that “[c]limate change is a threat to the core mission of the World Bank Group”. The ICSID Convention is also designed to promote international private investment. As such, ICSID sits at an important nexus in this discussion. This article: (i) provides an overview of several influential arbitration decisions relating to international environmental disputes, and the way in which the existing climate change regime uses arbitration as a dispute resolution mechanism; (ii) examines the evolution of investment treaties, prior decisions, especially in the field of renewable energy, and the tools available within IIAs for tribunals to promote the Paris Agreement objectives; (iii) discusses what arbitral institutions have done to date, in terms of tools, procedures, rules and other mechanisms, to promote climate change expertise and facilitate the resolution of disputes in a way that is consistent with climate change concerns; and (iv) considers ICSID's position as an arm of the World Bank, particularly in light of the WBG Climate Change Action Plan commitment to scaling up climate action and aligning internal processes with intentionally agreed climate change goals.
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- 2019
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7. The Art of Contestation and Legitimacy: Environment, Customary Communities, and Activism in Indonesia
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Wendy Miles, Micah R. Fisher, and Keith Bettinger
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Grassroots ,Politics ,Political science ,Political economy ,Central government ,Development economics ,Environmentalism ,Authoritarianism ,Indigenous rights ,Legitimacy ,Indigenous - Abstract
Indonesia is one of the world’s “megadiverse” countries, providing ecosystem services that accrue at the global scale. However, control over access to and use of natural resources has historically been a source of tension between the central government and local communities, with the latter usually being marginalized by the former. Since the fall of the authoritarian Suharto regime in 1998, however, a grassroots movement supports the revitalization of customary communities and their traditional systems of social organization (adat). A major part of this quest for legitimacy is the portrayal of indigenous people as environmentally benign. This chapter describes how indigenous systems have been influenced by political processes over time. We then describe how the changing political–administrative landscape has given rise to a national indigenous rights movement. We also analyze international factors that have contributed to the emergence of the indigenous movement before discussing potential challenges facing the movement in the future. This chapter seeks to get beyond the simplistic conflation of indigenous peoples and environmentalism by understanding the strategic articulation of indigeneity and environmentalism.
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- 2014
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8. Adjudication Of Intrastate Disputes: A Review Of Possible Mechanisms
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Wendy Miles
- Subjects
Law ,Political science ,Adjudication - Published
- 2007
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9. The Influence of Tamarind Tree Quality and Quantity on Lemur catta Behavior
- Author
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Hantanirina Rasamimanana, Anne S. Mertl-Millhollen, Wendy Miles, Lisa Gray, George Williams, Hajarimanitra Rambeloarivony, Veronica A. Kaiser, and Loretta T. Dorn
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Leaf water content ,Tree (data structure) ,Home range ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Gallery forest ,Quality (business) ,Forestry ,Biology ,Lemur catta ,biology.organism_classification ,media_common - Published
- 2006
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10. The Chattahoochee Review, Volume 19.3
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Daugharty, Janice; Lopez, Robert; Horne, Delta B.; Baker, Lisa; Schorb, E.M.; Rash, Ron; Bishop, Wendy; Miles, Wendy; Gale, Kate; Baggott, Julianna; Warwick, John; Wood, Karenne; Bell, Madison Smartt; Crawford, Carol; Drake, Robert; Chappell, Fred; Hetrick, Lawrence; Martin, Van Jones; Brown, Ashley; Weber, Myles; Conner, William Charles, Georgia Perimeter College, Daugharty, Janice; Lopez, Robert; Horne, Delta B.; Baker, Lisa; Schorb, E.M.; Rash, Ron; Bishop, Wendy; Miles, Wendy; Gale, Kate; Baggott, Julianna; Warwick, John; Wood, Karenne; Bell, Madison Smartt; Crawford, Carol; Drake, Robert; Chappell, Fred; Hetrick, Lawrence; Martin, Van Jones; Brown, Ashley; Weber, Myles; Conner, William Charles, and Georgia Perimeter College
- Abstract
The Chattohoochee Review was a literary journal that published new works of fiction, non-fiction, poetry and visual arts. This volume features the following entries: "Little Big Girl", "Today, Tomorrow, Summer, Christmas", "The Shape of Things to Come", "Mixed Up", "The Liar", "Cold Harbor", "Air and Angels", "Where the River Was", "Crow Fantasy", "Big Deal in Yellow", "Twilight in Peru", "When We Didn't Talk About at Fifteen", "The Beginning", "Flesh", "The Voyagers", "The Raccoon", "First Light, Mattox Creek", "A Writer's View of Cormac McCarthy", "Respects", "Every Friday Afternoon", "Public and Private: The Double Nature of Poetry", "About the Photographs", "A Georgia Odyssey-from Alpharetta to Omega: Second Series", "Barbara, 1972", "Robert W. Woodruff", "St. Simons", "Elberton", "Clarke County", "Lowndes County", "Ed Dodd", "Clayton", "Chester Davis, Hay House, Macon", "Lumber City", "The South from Afar: Jan Nordby Gretlund's Frames of Southern Mind", "Three Authors and Their Novellas: David Leavitt, Rick Bass, and Richard Ford", "The Fault, Dear Brutus: Donald Windham's The Dog Star".
- Published
- 1999
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