Results 241 to 250 of about 149,654 (313)
Unreachable, Inescapable: Sustainable Development as Normative Camouflage in EU–MERCOSUR Trade
Abstract This article examines how sustainable development functions as a mechanism of stabilising asymmetry in North–South trade governance, using the European Union (EU)–Southern Common Market (MERCOSUR) agreement as a case study. Whilst sustainability is often framed as a normative good or institutional advance, the article shows instead how it ...
Asha Herten‐Crabb
wiley +1 more source
Past, present and future of the two-spotted stink bug (Perillus bioculatus) in Europe revealed by citizen science. [PDF]
Kóbor P, Brhane D.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Invasive species pose a serious threat to biodiversity and result in significant economic costs. Although much effort is devoted to understanding invasive processes, some aspects are poorly understood, such as the early stages of invasions and the reasons for invasion failure.
Francisco Valera +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Invasive alien species (IAS) pose a significant threat to biodiversity, particularly when endowed with high ecological and reproductive plasticity. The African catfish, Clarias gariepinus, is one such species, widely recognized for its ability to colonize and establish in diverse tropical ecosystems.
Michelle Torres Dumith +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Seahorse Dads: Theorizing Gender and Parenting Beyond the Binary
ABSTRACT This paper expands existing family theories to better account for the experiences of transgender and gender nonconforming (TGNC) people who become parents through pregnancy, often referred to as seahorse dads. Although queer family scholarship has challenged binary understandings of gender within families, existing theories have yet to focus ...
Pond Ezra, Samuel H. Allen
wiley +1 more source
Ecological similarity governs non-native fish establishment while human pressure and native diversity shape invasion richness. [PDF]
Xu M +18 more
europepmc +1 more source
Vernacularizing the Best Interests of the Child: Comparative Insights From Three Legal Systems
ABSTRACT The study investigates how the Best Interests of the Child principle in the UN Children's Rights Convention (Article 3) has been adapted in custody disputes in Egypt, Sweden, and Uzbekistan. Although the Convention on the Rights of the Child offers a common normative benchmark, divergent legal cultures shape its domestic meaning: Egypt is ...
Anna Lundberg +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Doing Parenting: Critical Approaches to the Study of Mothering and Fathering
ABSTRACT Parenting researchers have historically theorized mothering and fathering as gendered, with a focus on mothers as primary parents. Increasingly, scholars recognize the need to understand parenting beyond the binary of heteronormative and gendered parenting. To expand upon theoretical approaches that attend to processes, contextual factors, and
Sonia Molloy
wiley +1 more source
Local Elites in Chile's Pisco Valley: Dispossession, Legal Mobilisation and Intertwined Citizenship
ABSTRACT In countries in the Global South, citizenship is often closely tied to access to water and land ownership. In Latin America, the literature has primarily explored social mobilisation and identity reconfiguration in response to development‐driven processes of land and water dispossession affecting peasants, rural and Indigenous communities ...
Chloé Nicolas‐Artero
wiley +1 more source

