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Showing 1–8 of 8 results
Advanced filters: Author: Eduardo Brondizio Clear advanced filters
  • Coastal river delta regions are particularly impacted by the effects of climate change, yet though these regions are densely inhabited, robust estimates of population are lacking. Here the authors use global datasets to predict the number of people and regions most threatened by flooding and extreme weather.

    • Douglas A. Edmonds
    • Rebecca L. Caldwell
    • Sacha M. O. Siani
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-8
  • Community-based conservation efforts for ecosystems can have manifold effects beyond the direct areas being managed. This study finds that, deep in the Amazon, communities effectively protected an area 36 times larger than the area they were guarding, but also had to bear all of the costs.

    • Ana Carla Rodrigues
    • Hugo C. M. Costa
    • João Vitor Campos-Silva
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 8, P: 1304-1313
  • Land management and ownership by Indigenous Peoples are critical components of conservation strategies, but information on these has previously never been aggregated. Here, global data is compiled to show that Indigenous Peoples have tenure rights or manage a quarter of the world’s land area and 40% of all protected areas and intact ecosystems.

    • Stephen T. Garnett
    • Neil D. Burgess
    • Ian Leiper
    Research
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 1, P: 369-374
  • Socio-bioeconomies are essential to sustainable use and restoration of ecosystems and to justice and livelihoods for Indigenous and local people. This Perspective details the transformative changes that are needed across multifaceted existing barriers to enable socio-bioeconomies to be scaled out and up across the Amazon.

    • Rachael Garrett
    • Joice Ferreira
    • Mariana Varese
    Reviews
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    Volume: 8, P: 1815-1825
  • Most of the sustainability challenges and opportunities associated with urbanization are found in the global south. This Perspective shows the extent to which urban issues differ between the developed and developing worlds and identifies steps to re-focus the urban research system globally in view of allowing a more prominent role of urban scholarship from the global south.

    • Harini Nagendra
    • Xuemei Bai
    • Shuaib Lwasa
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 1, P: 341-349