Mind the costs: rescaling and multi-level environmental governance in Venice lagoon. (1/112)

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Clinical transformation: the key to green nephrology. (2/112)

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Policies for reduced deforestation and their impact on agricultural production. (3/112)

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Si se puede: using participatory research to promote environmental justice in a Latino community in San Diego, California. (4/112)

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Science-policy interactions in MPA site selection in the Dutch part of the North Sea. (5/112)

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Global climate change and children's health: threats and strategies for prevention. (6/112)

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Dose imprecision and resistance: free-choice medicated feeds in industrial food animal production in the United States. (7/112)

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Remembering the ultimate goal of environmental protection: including protection of impoverished citizens in China's environmental policy. (8/112)

The life of impoverished people can be damaged by adverse environmental conditions, but these people can also be harmed by environmental conservation programs, particularly when the guiding policy ignores their needs. To improve the social and economic effectiveness of environmental protection, governments must understand that the ultimate goal of environmental protection is to improve human livelihoods, not just restore vegetation. The elimination of poverty by the development of sustainable, long-term enterprises is a precondition for successful ecological restoration.  (+info)