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Community Organizations Molecular Diversity Preservation International
Molecular Diversity Preservation International
Molecular Diversity Preservation International
Acronym
MDPI
Publishing Company

Location

Basil
Switzerland
Working languages
anglais

 


Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI), an organization for deposit and exchange of molecular and biomolecular samples, was active in 1996-2010. 

 

Members:

Resources

Displaying 16 - 20 of 21

Indigenous Territories and REDD in Latin America: Opportunity or Threat?

Journal Articles & Books
Mars, 2011
Amérique centrale
Amérique du Sud

An important proportion of Latin America’s forests are located in indigenous territories, and indigenous peoples are the beneficiaries of about 85% of the area for which local rights to land and forest have been recognized in Latin America since the 1980s. Nevertheless, many of these areas, whether or not rights have been recognized, are subject to threats from colonists, illegal loggers, mining and oil interests and others, whose practices endanger not only the forests but also indigenous people’s territory as a whole.

Rights to Land, Forests and Carbon in REDD+: Insights from Mexico, Brazil and Costa Rica

Journal Articles & Books
Février, 2011
Costa Rica
Mexique
Brésil
Amérique centrale
Amérique du Sud

Land tenure and carbon rights constitute critical issues to take into account in achieving emission reductions, ensuring transparent benefit sharing and determining non-permanence (or non-compliance) liabilities in the context of REDD+ strategies and projects. This is so because tenure systems influence who becomes involved in efforts to avoid deforestation and improve forest management, and that land tenure, carbon rights and liabilities may be linked or divorced with implications for rural development.

Governing Competing Demands for Forest Resources in Sweden

Journal Articles & Books
Février, 2011
Sweden

Changing and competing land use, where we make use of a growing share of resources, potentially undermines the capacity of forests to provide multiple functions such as timber, biodiversity, recreation and pasture lands. The governance challenge is thus to manage trade-offs between human needs and, at the same time, maintain the capacities of forests to provide us with these needs. Sweden provides a clear example of this kind of challenge. Traditionally, timber has been the most apparent contribution of the forest to Swedish national interests.

Food, Paper, Wood, or Energy? Global Trends and Future Swedish Forest Use

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2010
Sweden

This paper presents a futures study of international forest trends. The study, produced as part of the Swedish Future Forest program, focuses on global changes of importance for future Swedish forest use. It is based on previous international research, policy documents, and 24 interviews with selected key experts and/or actors related to the forest sector, and its findings will provide a basis for future research priorities.

Water Property Models as Sovereignty Prerogatives: European Legal Perspectives in Comparison

Journal Articles & Books
Août, 2010

Water resources in European legal systems have always been vested in sovereign power, regardless of their legal nature as goods vested in State property or as res communes omnium not subject to ownership. The common legal foundation of sovereign power over water resources departed once civil law jurisdictions leveled the demesne on ownership model, by introducing public ownership in the French codification of 1804, while common law jurisdiction developed a broader legal concept of property that includes even the rights to use res communes.