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Showing 1–10 of 10 results
Advanced filters: Author: Harini Nagendra Clear advanced filters
  • Urban blue spaces, such as lakes and rivers, play growing roles in cities but are historically vital for providing food. Focusing on four Indian cities, this study finds diverse blue foraging practices most practiced by elderly women, especially among the most disadvantaged groups.

    • Sukanya Basu
    • Brenda Maria Zoderer
    • Tobias Plieninger
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Cities
    Volume: 2, P: 1128-1139
  • Responses to the pandemic in India’s slums, Brazil’s favelas and Africa’s marketplaces show that networks play a crucial part in making cities more resilient. Let’s enhance and empower them.

    • Xuemei Bai
    • Harini Nagendra
    • Haiyan Liu
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 584, P: 517-520
  • 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
  • Research addressing sustainability issues is more effective if ‘co-produced’ by academics and non-academics, but definitions of co-production vary. This Perspective presents four knowledge co-production principles for sustainability research and guides on how to engage in co-productive practices.

    • Albert V. Norström
    • Christopher Cvitanovic
    • Henrik Österblom
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 3, P: 182-190
  • Designing restoration projects requires integrating socio-economic and cultural needs of local stakeholders for enduring and just outcomes. Using India as a case study, we demonstrate a people-centric approach to help policymakers translate global restoration prioritization studies for application to a country-specific context and to identify different socio-environmental conditions restoration programs could consider when siting projects. Focusing, in particular, on poverty quantified by living standards and land tenure, we find that of the 579 districts considered here, 116 of the poorest districts have high biophysical restoration potential (upper 50th percentile of both factors). In most districts, the predominant land tenure is private, indicating an opportunity to focus on agri-pastoral restoration over carbon and forest-based restoration projects.

    • Pooja Choksi
    • Arun Agrawal
    • Ruth DeFries
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    npj Biodiversity
    Volume: 2, P: 1-5