2006 TRI Bulletin Latin America articles are here!
The lastest edition of the Tropical Resources Institute Bulletin brings six interesting articles featuring recent research by FES students in Latin America:
Modeling Soil Erosion Risk in Los Maribios Volcanic Chain, Nicaragua by Richard Chávez, MF 2003
Bird Composition in Living Fences: Potential of Living Fences to Connect the Fragmented Landscape in Esparza, Costa Rica by Wendy Francesconi, MESc 2006
Opportunity in the Land of Conflict: Mining, Peasants, and Changing Attitudes in Northern Peru by Oscar Franco, MEM 2006
Payment for Hydrological Environmental Service in Costa Rica: The Procuencas Case Study by Alvaro Redondo-Brenes, MFS 2005, and Kristen Welsh, MESc 2006
From Research to Reality: Exploring the Tensions between Environmentalism's Moral Religion and Rural Agricultural Poverty in the Ecuadorian Amazon by Catherine Schloegel, MESc 2006
Assessing Access to Potable Water in Rural Communities in Costa Rica by Kristen Welsh, MESc 2006
... and one article featuring the research done by a Latin American student in Africa:
Conflicts in the Human–Elephant Border: Studying the Possible Causes in the Bia Conservation Area in Ghana by Gonzalo Griebenow, MEM 2006
Modeling Soil Erosion Risk in Los Maribios Volcanic Chain, Nicaragua by Richard Chávez, MF 2003
Bird Composition in Living Fences: Potential of Living Fences to Connect the Fragmented Landscape in Esparza, Costa Rica by Wendy Francesconi, MESc 2006
Opportunity in the Land of Conflict: Mining, Peasants, and Changing Attitudes in Northern Peru by Oscar Franco, MEM 2006
Payment for Hydrological Environmental Service in Costa Rica: The Procuencas Case Study by Alvaro Redondo-Brenes, MFS 2005, and Kristen Welsh, MESc 2006
From Research to Reality: Exploring the Tensions between Environmentalism's Moral Religion and Rural Agricultural Poverty in the Ecuadorian Amazon by Catherine Schloegel, MESc 2006
Assessing Access to Potable Water in Rural Communities in Costa Rica by Kristen Welsh, MESc 2006
... and one article featuring the research done by a Latin American student in Africa:
Conflicts in the Human–Elephant Border: Studying the Possible Causes in the Bia Conservation Area in Ghana by Gonzalo Griebenow, MEM 2006
