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Groundwater Supply and Irrigation in the Rillito ValleySmith, G. E. P. 12 May 1910 (has links)
This item was digitized as part of the Million Books Project led by Carnegie Mellon University and supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF). Cornell University coordinated the participation of land-grant and agricultural libraries in providing historical agricultural information for the digitization project; the University of Arizona Libraries, the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, and the Office of Arid Lands Studies collaborated in the selection and provision of material for the digitization project.
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Prehispanic settlement patterns of the central part of the Valley of Oaxaca, MexicoKowalewski, Stephen A. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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Open your hearts ; the poetics and politics of faith and labor in California's San Joaquin ValleySandell, David Patrick, 1963- 03 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Perception of quality and changes in preferences of recreational resources of the Lower Colorado River ValleyKolbe, Phillip T. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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The influence of rainfall on the reproduction of Sonoran desert lagomorphsMadsen, Rees Low, 1939- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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ALTERNATIVE ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES IN THREE MEXICAN TOWNSKappel, Wayne Walter, 1941- January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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Plant associations of the Rillito floodplain in Pima County, ArizonaWillis, Eva Lavina, 1899- January 1939 (has links)
No description available.
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Obstacles to the reclamation of newly reformed land in Joe's River Valley, BarbadosRoss, Susan. January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Planning from the fringes: women’s organized action and community planning: a case study of the Nicola Valley Women in Action, Merritt, B.C.Griffith, Lisa Susanne January 1900 (has links)
Women's community organizing for change has the potential to improve many aspects of women's lives, the lives of their families, and community members at large. Yet the role of women's organized action in shaping the social environment is not well understood and is rarely supported by the mainstream institutions of planning. In rural areas, women's contributions to community planning may be even less apparent given the voluntary nature of their work and the lack of sensitivity paid to women's particular needs. The purpose of this study is to contribute to contemporary planning thought by providing some insight in to why, to what extent, and how women successfully organize to meet their social needs in rural communities. Two themes are examined: (1) the motivating factors that led to the
development of a women's planning rganization, the Nicola Valley Women in Action, (NVWIA) in Merritt, B.C., and; (2) the dynamic forces in this community that support and/or limit women's abilities to engage in gender-informed community planning.
A literature review outlines the need for gender-sensitive approaches to planning and the potential of women's community organizing for change (feminist activism) to serve as a catalyst for gendersensitive
planning praxis. To explore the experiences of a particular group of women engaged in
community organizing from a feminist perspective, a case study of the NVWIA is described through a review of organizational material and interviews with members. The principal findings are: (1) there was a definite need for gender-sensitive planning to meet the social needs of women in Merritt; (2) factors such as the lack of gender-sensitivity in institutional
planning, the existence of barriers to women's involvement, and the dearth of opportunities for women in Merritt to influence decision-making motivated the development of the NVWIA; (3)
opportunities, including government incentive, municipal support, inter-agency co-operation, organizing skills and member initiative, enabled the NVWIA to successfully respond to women's
needs; and (4) constraints, including the absence of funding, philosophical differences, anti-feminist sentiment, and limits to voluntary time, hinder the ability of the NVWIA to continue its efforts.
The study highlights the value of supporting women's community organizing as a means of
encouraging planning approaches in rural areas that are gender-sensitive. It concludes by identifying the implications for self-help and professional planners wishing to support women's organized action.
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Openings in the forest economy : a case study of small forest operators in the Bulkley Valley, BC, CanadaBronson, Elizabeth Anne 05 1900 (has links)
The thesis is an exploration of the current role of the small business forest sector in
hinterland forest communities, and the extent to which their economic and social positions
correspond to the role envisioned for them by two prevailing visions of the future of the forest
industry. One, advocated by Canadian political economists, predicts a continuation, indeed
an intensification of corporate concentration, with attendant downsizing and job losses.
Corporate restructuring is seen in part to induce small business development, through subcontracting
arrangements and local entrepreneurialism, as a response to losses of core forest
industry jobs. The second interpretation, advocated by the alternative forestry school, views
the current crisis in the forest industry as an opportunity to return to decentralised approaches
to ecologically-based forest management which encourage 'democracy in the forests', leading
to community and environmental sustainability. Local entrepreneurs are an important part of
this new 'value-based' forest economy.
Interviews with small forest operators reveal a diversity of economic and social
identities that do not conform well to either of the positions ascribed to small business by
the Canadian political economy or alternative forestry literatures. The representations of
small business found in these two literatures homogenize and suppress this diversity,
making it difficult to 'see' small forest operators as anything other than contractors to the
conventional system of corporate forestry, or alternative operators in an ecosystem- and
community-based forest economy.
In the place of these singular, marginalizing representations, I argue, using
poststructural and feminist approaches to economic geography, for a 'third way' of
exploring small forest operator subjectivities through overdetermined multiple class
processes. Exploring small forest operator identity through multiple class processes avoids
the essentialism found in fixed representations. It recognizes the transformative potential of
small business in the forest economy, without denying the potential for exploitation that
exists both within small business and corporate forestry. Class processes rendered invisible
in the Canadian political economy and alternative forestry narratives, such as unpaid labour
performed by family members and volunteer work in local planning processes, as well as
work performed for wages and profit, are considered in this multiple class processes
approach.
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