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CSPAN2 Key Capitol Hill Hearings October 29, 2014

Knew there were a secular regime and natural enemies. The irony is that uc what is happening. We go in and focus of so bad that we create something that makes al qaeda look like a tea party. People see that the beach so when you say, well, would you have the same standards and practices, you know, if that is the Gold Standard of, you know, everyone was marred by that. Everyone knew what was happening. That is the Gold Standard of integrity, you can have it. I think thats a great point. [applause] club. [applause] i want to [applause] when you talk about your core audience and the disillusionment that that generation hence developed in the wake of the failure to change everything that is wrong with washington and the last five and a half, six years, does that translate into a withdrawal from political activism in your mind . People were already saber in 2012, and i think republicans are banking on it. They said, there is no way because he is disillusioned and disappointed so many people

Glaciers a Common Thread Throughout New UN Climate Report

Glaciers a Common Thread Throughout New UN Climate Report
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What Climate Change Adaptation Programs in Peru Are Missing: Indigenous Women s Knowledge

GlacierHub A woman from Chillca, Peru and her daughters with their herd. Source: Allison Caine As climate change in the high Andes threatens alpaca herding, the primary source of livelihood for many of Peru’s Indigenous communities, development programs are teaching men how to use technical herd management strategies such as herd immunization, selective breeding, and modern pasture management. New research from anthropologist Allison Caine, however, reveals what these projects are excluding: the knowledge that Quechua women have about their herds which increases their communities’ resilience in the face of climate change. Herding is becoming more difficult in high alpine regions as glaciers are disappearing, reducing the stream-flows that support pasture and provide drinking water to herds and people. Additionally, rain and temperature patterns are becoming more unpredictable, disrupting the seasonal patterns that have long guided Quechua communities’ decisions to shift thei

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