Results 91 to 100 of about 5,503 (280)
ABSTRACT Understanding collegiate norms and practices that promote sense of belonging among students who have traditionally been raced, gendered, stigmatized, and excluded as the ‘other’ in predominantly white institutions (PWI) is of paramount importance today as these efforts face increasingly antagonistic legislation, state policies, and ...
Nkenji K. Clarke +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Green swans and blue skies: Climate change and insolvency risk for financial institutions
Abstract This lecture in honour of the late Gabriel Moss QC and Ian Fletcher QC examines the challenge of climate‐related financial risk. Prudential regulators and central banks recognize that the systemic nature of climate‐related financial risk makes it an emerging vulnerability relevant to cross‐border insolvency resolution.
Janis Sarra
wiley +1 more source
In recent years, increasing attention has been directed to “natural climate solutions” to mitigate climate change through the protection, restoration, and improved management of carbon-storing ecosystems.
Lara Powell +4 more
doaj +1 more source
Survey, Understanding, and Ethical Stewardship of Indigenous Collections: A Case Study
The Aboriginal and Torres Islander Protocols for Libraries, Archives, and Information Sources, the Protocols for Native American Archival Materials, and other directives provide invaluable direction for professionals concerned with ethical stewardship of
Reyes-Escudero, Verónica +1 more
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Nature‐Based and Community‐Level Responses to Climate Distress in Young People: A Systematic Review
ABSTRACT Introduction Climate change is both an environmental crisis and a growing source of psychological distress for young people, calling for responses that nurture emotional resilience and collective engagement. The emerging response to climate distress has mainly focused on formal psychological and individual‐level interventions.
Meghana Bhupati +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Sustainable tourism development and Indigenous protected and conserved areas in sub-arctic Canada
Rural and northern Indigenous communities across Canada are pursuing new Indigenous-led conservation partnerships with Crown governments as critical alternatives to Western conservation and extractive industries regimes.
Emalee A. Vandermale, Courtney W. Mason
doaj +1 more source
Long-term ecological and climate changes through Amazonian Indigenous oral histories
This chapter highlights how the collective oral histories of two Amazonian Indigenous peoples reproduce, regenerate, and transmit the social memory of local biocultural landscapes, reflecting ecological changes.
Fernandez-Llamazares, Alvaro +2 more
core +1 more source
Membership‐Making in Diverse Societies: Revisiting the Idea of Society as a Common Possession
ABSTRACT The traditional aim of Western social democracy has been to create a society that is a ‘common possession’ of its members (in T.H. Marshall's words). Social democratic politics has therefore been both society‐making and membership‐making, orienting people to a shared society as an object of attachment and loyalty, and nurturing membership ...
Will Kymlicka
wiley +1 more source
Of Molluscs and Middens: Historical Ecology of Indigenous Shoreline Stewardship along the Central Coast of California [PDF]
This dissertation presents three cases studies on the archaeology and Historical Ecology of Indigenous shoreline management practices on the Central Coast of California.
Grone, Michael
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Society as Reality and Construction: Decolonial Citizenship‐Making
ABSTRACT Kymlicka asks whether the Marshallian vision of society‐ and membership‐making remains relevant when thinking about possible Indigenous futures. In this article, I first respond to this question. Given the meticulousness of Kymlicka's analysis, my response should be read as complementary, offering additional considerations that I think warrant
Rauna Kuokkanen
wiley +1 more source

