Results 161 to 170 of about 398,074 (278)
COVID‐19 and Farm Management in India: Evidence From the Rural–Urban Interface of Bangalore
ABSTRACT We examine farm management decisions of smallholder farmers during the first wave of COVID‐19 infections in India between June 2020 and March 2021. We use panel data from 256 farm households in the rural–urban interface of Bangalore from a pre‐COVID‐19 face‐to‐face survey and a phone survey at the end of the first COVID‐19 wave.
Verena Preusse, Meike Wollni
wiley +1 more source
Everyday geographies of uneven water infrastructures and practices in China
This research unpacks the disparate distribution of centralised water supply at both household and community scales in Changsha and explores how alternative, heterogeneous water supply modalities contribute to filling everyday service gaps, but also produce and exacerbate additional layers of inequality.
Dongyang Mi +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Consumer Segments in Urban and Suburban Farmers Markets [PDF]
cluster analysis, consumer segments, farmers markets, Community/Rural/Urban Development, Consumer/Household Economics, Crop Production/Industries,
Elepu, Gabriel, Mazzocco, Michael A.
core +1 more source
Examining Atopic Dermatitis Through the One Health Concept Lens
ABSTRACT This paper explores the application of the One Health framework to atopic dermatitis (AD), a complex, chronic skin disease, emphasizing interdisciplinary approaches to prevention and management. One Health integrates human, animal, environmental, and plant health, addressing challenges such as antimicrobial resistance, infectious diseases, and
Dijana Minić‐Pantić +10 more
wiley +1 more source
Reputation in International Trade: Evidence From the Fukushima Nuclear Disaster
ABSTRACT A country's reputation may be an important determinant of its ability to export, but the effect is difficult to isolate from underlying product attributes. We consider the trade impact of the Fukushima nuclear disaster and ask whether damage to the Japanese reputation for food safety played a role in its impact. The disaster led to a large and
Christian Abele, Kentaro Asai
wiley +1 more source
Abstract More than half of the Dutch older population feels lonely, meaning their social relationships do not meet their needs. As people are predominantly ageing in place (AIP) instead of in care homes, their everyday experiences become more localised and neighbourhood spaces gain traction as important spaces of encounter.
Rianne van Melik, Daniëlle van der Lee
wiley +1 more source
Shopping malls becoming more and more popular today and differing a lot from the malls of previous decades in terms of both quality and quantity, is closely related with the practice of neoliberal policies. Shoping malls that created their own publicity and made it possible for the individual to taste a different social environment as well as meet ...
openaire +1 more source

