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Rural-Urban Linkages

Posts in this category are about Rural-Urban Linkages. Productive Rural Areas need to establish long-term, stable market links with nearby cities and towns enabling them to receive improved prices and long-term contracts for products and services. Some examples of Rural-Urban Linkages are: Community Supported Agriculture (CSA), farmer’s markets, and restaurants specializing in regional, seasonal, and organic ingredients. Rural-Urban Linkages help rural producers get better prices for their goods and services and improve their financial stability. They also connect urban consumers with pressing issues and concerns of nearby rural areas.

(Adapted from ConservationEconomy.net)

Metro mapping system allows on-line lookup of urban and rural reserves

Source: OregonLive.com Environment - Posted: July 27, 2010 15:06
A Metro mapping program lets property owners determine if they are in an area slated for future development.
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EDUCATION-URUGUAY: Gardens of Knowledge

Source: Inter Press Service Environment - Posted: March 11, 2010 09:19
MONTEVIDEO, Mar 10 (IPS) - "Nature is wise, and if we take the time to observe it, we can learn so much" is the underlying philosophy of a number of innovative programmes being carried out in Uruguayan schools that are using gardens as a teaching resource, explained Edith Moraes, director of the national Primary Education Board.
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Public Values for River Restoration Options on the Middle Rio Grande

Source: Environmental Valuation and Cost Benefit News - Posted: January 23, 2010 20:39

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/120749424/abstract

Abstract: River restoration is a widespread phenomenon. This reflects strong public values for conservation, though missing are studies explicitly justifying restoration expenditures. Public restoration benefits are not well quantified, nor are public preferences among diverse activities falling into the broad category "restoration." Our study estimates public values for restoration on the Middle Rio Grande, New Mexico. Stakeholder meetings and public focus groups guided development of a restoration survey mailed to Albuquerque area households. Four restoration categories were defined: fish and wildlife; vegetation density; tree type; and natural river processes. Survey responses supplied data for both choice experiment (CE) and contingent valuation (CV) analyses, two established environmental economics techniques for quantifying public benefits of conservation policies. Full restoration benefits are estimated at over $150 per household per year via the CE and at nearly $50 per household per year via CV. The CE allows value disaggregation among different restoration categories. The most highly valued category was tree type, meaning reestablishing native tree dominance for such species as Cottonwood (Populus deltoides) and eradicating non-native trees such as Saltcedar (Tamarix ramosissma). The high public values we have found for restoration offer economic justification for intensive riparian management, particularly native plant-based restoration in the Southwest.

by Matthew A Weber and Steven Stewart; both of Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, SAHRA, Marshall Building 5th Floor, PO Box 210158-B, Tucson, AZ 85721-0158, U.S.A.; email: maweber@hwr.arizona.edu
Restoration Ecology via Wiley InterScience www3.interscience.wiley.com
November, 2009; Volume 17, Issue 6; pages 762


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