Vanishing Rice Fields

Vanishing Rice Fields
Author: Angelica Laura Lucia Wehrli
Publisher: LIT Verlag Münster
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2021-06-17
Genre:
ISBN: 3643803680

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The book delineates how the quest for wealth and belief manifests itself in contemporary Vietnam. Based on multi-local and longitudinal ethnographic research, the author examines how wealth is pursued by household members and entrepreneurs. The quest for belief is brought into relief through inquiry into how norms and values have been re-evaluated, altered, subverted or restored. Focusing on the taboo topic of female feticide, The study elucidates why some parents ultimately decide to commit feticide, and why others, especially entrepreneurs, refrain from it. The case of the entrepreneurs shows a possible way out of the "vicious circle" that leads to female feticide and perpetuates gender inequality.

Vanishing Rice Fields

Vanishing Rice Fields
Author: Angelica Laura Lucia Wehrli
Publisher:
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2021-01-25
Genre:
ISBN: 9783643912923

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Vanishing Borders

Vanishing Borders
Author: Hilary French
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2019-06-17
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1134198825

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The world is shrinking faster than ever. Goods, money, microbes, pollution, people and ideas are crossing boundaries ever more frequently. The implications for our future and for the health of the planet are profound. Vanishing Borders outlines the ecological challenges posed and then goes on to define the necessary strategies for tackling them. Presently, national governments are singularly ill-equipped for tackling transitional environmental problems-from ozone depletion to soaring trade in commodities such as timbre- problems which are climbing ever higher on the international political agenda. Industrial and developing countries are on a collision course over climate change, and water shortages are creating tensions in several parts of the world. The author argues that only a worldwide commitment to strengthening treaties and institutions needed to integrate ecological considerations into the rules of global commerce holds out hope. Over 200 international environmental treaties exist but most need more stringent conditions and enforcement, and continuing support from NGO and business communities. Significantly, the digital revolution, integral in itself to processes to globalization, offers channels through which powerful coalitions can effect change. The book provides a compelling and accessible analysis and a clear plan of action in pursuit of environmental stability. Originally published in 2000

Vanishing Paradise

Vanishing Paradise
Author: Kemp, John R.
Publisher: Pelican Publishing
Total Pages: 161
Release:
Genre:
ISBN: 1455613525

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Tales of a Vanishing River

Tales of a Vanishing River
Author: Earl Howell Reed
Publisher:
Total Pages: 310
Release: 1920
Genre: Illinois
ISBN:

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The Vanishing Island and Other Stories

The Vanishing Island and Other Stories
Author: Alex M. Castillo
Publisher: Ukiyoto Publishing
Total Pages: 141
Release:
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 936494674X

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This is a work of fiction based on my childhood memories growing up in a farming village in Capul Island in Northern Samar, Philippines. Most of the stories are based on my own experiences and of the people I grew up with. So if the reader could identify themselves in these pages, I may have been inspired by them. I have long wanted to document the colourful traditions of my hometown as I have written them in my journals. I believe I have written a collective experience of my people in these stories that took me several years to print.

The Book of Vanishing Species

The Book of Vanishing Species
Author: Beatrice Forshall
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2022-10-13
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 152662365X

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__________________ Our Earth is more beautiful and more diverse than we can possibly conceive of. The Book of Vanishing Species is a stunning homage to the planet's most mysterious, bizarre and wondrous creatures and plants. Their stories are captivating, from the eyeless and tiny dragonlike olm to the hawksbill turtle, whose gender will be determined by the temperature of the sand it is born in. These species may have survived for hundreds of thousands of years by cleverly adapting to their environments, but their future remains far from certain. The book brings to life red cranes as they dance and bow for the sheer joy of movement, trees that breathe out a haze of misty atmosphere for insects that only feast on one kind of flower, a deep-ocean snail quietly building its shell from iron... and each one of them is illuminated with an exquisite illustration. As you turn the pages, there emerges a network of life that stretches across and around the planet in a dazzling web of existence. This is both a love letter to life on Earth, and an urgent summons to protect what is precious and lovely in this world.

American Forestry

American Forestry
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 830
Release: 1926
Genre: Forests and forestry
ISBN:

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Our Vanishing Wild Life

Our Vanishing Wild Life
Author: William Temple Hornaday
Publisher:
Total Pages: 436
Release: 1913
Genre: Law
ISBN:

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William Temple Hornaday was the Director of the New York Zoological Society and the nation's leading advocate of wildlife conservation in this era. This unsparing manifesto was written to accompany Hornaday's launching of the Permanent Wildlife Protection Fund; it is thus (in the words of the historian Stephen Fox) both "a campaign tract" and "one of the first books wholly devoted to endangered wild animals" (John Muir and His Legacy: The American Conservation Movement [Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1981], p. 149). It is also a landmark of conservation history which had a profound effect on the thought of Aldo Leopold, among others. The book surveys the history and causes of wildlife destruction in America and elsewhere, and sets forth a lengthy program to ensure the protection of remaining wildlife for the future, often in militant and moralistic terms. The work also throws light on some of the complexities inherent in the conservation movement at this time: for example, Hornaday accepts the classification of certain bird and mammalian predators as "noxious" or "vermin" and appropriate for destruction (pp. 77-81); there is no criticism here of the massive campaign for the extermination of wolves and coyotes being sponsored at the time by the Bureau of Biological Survey. On a more general level, Hornaday's fulminations against Italian immigrants as incorrigible bird-killers suggest a connection between nativism and conservationism, while his excoriations of market hunters set forth a deeply-rooted class bias shared by many leading conservationists.

No Certain Rest

No Certain Rest
Author: Jim Lehrer
Publisher: Random House
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2002-08-20
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1588362639

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BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Jim Lehrer's Tension City. On a ridge overlooking Burnside Bridge—the focus of the Battle of Antietam—souvenir hunters find the unmarked grave of an unknown Union officer. Don Spaniel, an archeologist in the National Park Service, is called in to examine the remains. He soon discovers that the officer was murdered and that his identification disk could not possibly belong to him, since its rightful owner is buried elsewhere. So who was this officer? Where did he come from? And why was he killed? Spaniel’ s obsessive investigation leads not only to his reliving the horrible carnage that occurred at Burnside Bridge over a century before, but to the true identity of the Union officer and the reason why another body resides in his grave in a small New England town. In a swift narrative deftly combining the past with the present, Jim Lehrer has created an engrossing story that will appeal to a wide variety of readers.