Search
Searching with a thematic focus on Environment, Environmental impact assessment, Norway
Showing 1-10 of 11 results
Pages
- Document
Deciding over nature: corruption and environmental impact assessments
U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre, 2016Environmental impact assessments (EIAs) are a core aspect of environmental decision-making in most countries. Despite massive potential for public harms resulting from corrupt decision-making linked to EIAs, research on this topic is still very limited.DocumentBenefit transfer: the quick, the dirty, and the ugly?
Choices Magazine, 2005The term benefit transfer refers to the case where information on the value of environmental goods and services generated in one context is used to value similar goods and services in a different context.DocumentCounting on the environment: forest incomes and the rural poor
Environment Department, World Bank, 2004This report investigates the extent to which people in rural areas of developing countries depend on income from forest environmental resources, and how this dependence is conditioned by different political, economic, ecological, and socio-cultural factors.DocumentBio-economic modelling for NRM impact assessment
Department of Economics and Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, 2004This paper discusses the various bio-economic modelling approaches and methods which can be used for simultaneously evaluating the economic and environmental impacts of natural resource management (NRM) technologies and policies affecting natural resource use and management in rural areas in the developing countries.DocumentThe Mepanda Unkua Project: a planned regulation of the Zambezi River in Mozambique
Association for International Water Studies, Norway, 2003This report examines the potential social and environmental consequences of the proposed Mepanda Unkua Project, a large scale dam planned on the Zambezi River in the Province of Tete in Mozambique.DocumentAir quality estimates in Taiyan, Shanxi Province, China
Center for International Climate and Environmental Research, Oslo, 2003DocumentInterdisciplinary research on development and the environment
Centre for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo, Norway, 2001DocumentStrategies for controlling pollution from vehicular emissions in Beijing
Center for International Climate and Environmental Research, Oslo, 2002DocumentCan the clean development mechanism attain both cost effectiveness and sustainable development objectives?
Center for International Climate and Environmental Research, Oslo, 2001This paper looks at both the back ground of the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), and discusses to what extent its current design allows it to achieve both its objectives as defined in the Kyoto Protocol: to promote sustainable development in host developing countries, and to improve global cost-effectiveness by assisting developed countries in meeting their Kyoto targets.The first part of thePages
