Report

Report
Author: Maryland Geological Survey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 592
Release: 1897
Genre: Geology
ISBN:

CONTENTS.--Vol. I (1897)--Vol. II (1898)--Vol. III (1899)--Vol. IV (1902)--Vol. V (1905)--Vol. VI (1906)--Vol. VII (1908)--Vol. VIII (1909)--Vol. IX (1911)--Vol. X (1918)--Vol. XI (1922)--Vol. XII (1928)--Vol. XIII (1937)--Vol. XIV (1941)

Community Resources for Older Adults

Community Resources for Older Adults
Author: Robbyn R. Wacker
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Total Pages: 584
Release: 2018-06-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1506383955

Community Resources for Older Adults provides comprehensive, up-to-date information on programs, services, and policies pertaining to older adults. Authors Robbyn R. Wacker and Karen A. Roberto build reader awareness of programs and discuss how to better understand help-seeking behavior, as well as explain ways to take advantage of the resources available to older adults. The substantially revised Fifth Edition includes new topics and updated research, tables, and figures to help answer key questions about the evolution and utilization of programs for older adults and the challenges that service providers face.

Annual Report

Annual Report
Author: Maryland Geological Survey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 586
Release: 1897
Genre: Geology
ISBN:

Bulletin

Bulletin
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 210
Release: 1920
Genre: Geology
ISBN:

Global Perspectives on Long Term Community Resource Management

Global Perspectives on Long Term Community Resource Management
Author: Ludomir R. Lozny
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2019-06-21
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 3030158004

Communal-level resource management successes and failures comprise complex interactions that involve local, regional, and (increasingly) global scale political, economic, and environmental changes, shown to have recurring patterns and trajectories. The human past provides examples of long-term millennial and century-scale successes followed by undesired transitions (“collapse”), and rapid failure of collaborative management cooperation on the decadal scale. Management of scarce resources and common properties presents a critical challenge for planners attempting to avoid the "tragedy of the commons" in this century. Here, anthropologists, human ecologists, archaeologists, and environmental scientists discuss strategies for social well-being in the context of diminishing resources and increasing competition. The contributors in this volume revisit “tragedy of the commons” (also referred to as “drama” or “comedy” of the commons) and examine new data and theories to mitigate pressures and devise models for sustainable communal welfare and development. They present twelve archaeological, historic, and ethnographic cases of user-managed resources to demonstrate that very basic community-level participatory governance can be a successful strategy to manage short-term risk and benefits. The book connects past-present-future by presenting geographically and chronologically spaced out examples of communal-level governance strategies, and overviews of the current cutting-edge research. The lesson we learn from studying past responses to various ecological stresses is that we must not wait for a disaster to happen to react, but must react to mitigate conditions for emerging disasters.