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Otter Realm, October 28, 2010, California State University, Monterey Bay
Otter Realm, October 28, 2010, California State University, Monterey Bay
The Otter Realm
AS & OSU Students Helping Students Get the Best Out of College -- You Otter Be Doing Oct.28 - Nov. 10 --For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge -- The Dharma of the Dalai Lama -- Save the Rainforests & Breathe Easier -- Students Promote "End The War Rally" -- Signed With an X: Poets Speak about Immigration -- Cal Sate Monterey Attends Ethics Conference -- You Otter Have a Safe Halloween! -- Santa Cruz Politics: Prepare for Trick or Treat -- Staff of the Issue: Steven Levinson -- Student of the Issue: Rheann Fall -- AS vs. OSU Whose running the show? …
The Collegian (2010-03-22), Julianna Sosa
The Collegian (2010-03-22), Julianna Sosa
UTB/TSC Archives - The Collegian
No abstract provided.
The Changing Contexts And Transboundary Dynamics Of Reconciling Conservation And Development In The Amazon Borderlands, David S. Salisbury, Jorge Vela Alvarado, Cloe R. Franko
The Changing Contexts And Transboundary Dynamics Of Reconciling Conservation And Development In The Amazon Borderlands, David S. Salisbury, Jorge Vela Alvarado, Cloe R. Franko
Geography and the Environment Poster Presentations
The 12,000 kilometers of international boundaries within the Amazon’s lowland rainforest biome form the axis of a borderland region shared by the nine states of Amazonia (Figure 1). These Amazon borderlands contain high concentrations of conservation units and indigenous territories to preserve the transboundary region’s rich ecological and cultural diversity (Figures 2 & 3). However, this biocultural diversity is increasingly threatened by advancing development frontiers and a growing global demand for Amazonian resources.