Results 21 to 30 of about 1,026 (68)
Our study highlights that when acclimatisation periods are too short, the substantial economic and logistical investment in soft‐release protocols may fail to deliver the expected conservation gains. Therefore, defining evidence‐based acclimatisation periods that are long enough to promote settlement, yet compatible with logistical constraints, may ...
Pablo Cisneros‐Araujo +14 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract In Colombia's northeastern borderlands, agrarian economies shape how disease risk and stigma are understood and managed. As shown in ethnographic fieldwork in and around the Catatumbo region, cutaneous leishmaniasis—a sandfly‐transmitted disease that produces chronic skin lesions—appears in two radically different guises across adjacent ...
Javier Lezaun, Lina Pinto‐García
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Introduction Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) positions adolescents as co‐researchers to investigate and address social issues affecting their lives. While YPAR has gained global prominence, comparative research examining how it is conceptualized and practiced across regional contexts remains limited.
John Diaz +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Measuring area‐based conservation outcomes in tropical forests is challenging due to cryptic human disturbances (e.g., hunting). As a result, comparative studies of management strategies providing quantitative outcomes remain scarce, especially in the Neotropics.
Lucy Perera‐Romero +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This article examines the transnational history of the Alliance Against Women's Oppression (AAWO), a multiracial and Marxist US women's organisation founded in California in 1979. By focusing on the political connection between the AAWO, the so‐called ‘Third World’ and other international organisations such as the Women International ...
Bruno Walter Renato Toscano
wiley +1 more source
Summary According to the enemy release hypothesis (ERH), the fitness of exotic plants and their capacity to become invasive in their area of introduction may partly be attributable to the loss of their natural enemies. Invasive species may also benefit from modifying soil attributes and thereby creating a positive soil–plant feedback.
Lynda S. C. Guerrero +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Presidential Approval Ratings and Stock Market Performance in Latin America
ABSTRACT This paper examines the time‐varying causality between presidential approval (PAR) and stock market performance, measured by stock returns and realised volatility, focussing on four prominent Latin American countries: Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Mexico, from 1990M01 to 2016M05.
Yuvana Jaichand +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The Tb2(DPA)2(HDPA)2 compound confirmed thermal stability, with potential to be a green emitting phosphor (CIE 1931, x = 0.33, y = 0.56) and usage as an on/off temperature indicator. ABSTRACT Lanthanide‐based coordination compounds are attractive materials for developing light‐emitting systems and optical sensors due to their sharp emissions and long ...
Ch. J. Salas‐Juárez +9 more
wiley +1 more source
Popularizing Autogestión: Punk, Zapatismo, and Anarchist Ethics in Mexico City
ABSTRACT Autogestión (self‐management), has been a popular articulation of radical politics since its emergence in the 1960s. This article examines how Mexico City's anarcho‐punk scene transformed autogestión in the 1990s from an anarcho‐syndicalist principle into a unique ethical practice detached from industrial material production.
Livia K. Stone
wiley +1 more source
Botulinum toxin treatment in a resource-limited setting: Experiences from a public institution in a developing country [PDF]
Panesso GA +7 more
europepmc +1 more source

