NSF Awards Focus on Policy Implications of Global Change Throughout the Americas
<<   November/2007   >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30  

Arts
Movies
Humor
Television
Music

Business
Internet
Finance
Jobs
Investing
Economy

Computers
Software
Hardware
World
Mobile

Games
Video Games
RPGs

Health
Fitness
Medicine
Alternative

Home
Consumers
Cooking

Recreation
Travel
Food
Outdoors

Reference
Psychology
Science
Education

Regional
US
Canada
Europe

Science
NSF
Space
Technology

Society
People
Religion

Sports
Baseball
Soccer
Basketball
 
26/Nov/2007 12:00AM
NSF Awards Focus on Policy Implications of Global Change Throughout the Americas

Funding for six international research projects to study the interactions of global change, climate variability, land use and human effects has been awarded as part of a new Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI) program to investigate the policy implications of climate change in the Americas. The IAI is supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and its equivalents in other IAI member countries.

The collaborative research network (CRN) awards fund international projects by scientists investigating global change problems across the Americas. In collaboration with the CRN projects, researchers funded through another set of IAI awards--the Small Grants for Human Dimensions program (SGP-HD)--are looking at how human health, welfare and activities depend on the productivity, diversity and functioning of ecosystems.

"Governments have now widely accepted that Earth's climate is changing," said Paul Filmer, NSF program director for IAI. "The difficult question has become 'what do we do about it'? The IAI's CRN and SGP-HD programs are making the links between projections of future climate change and its impacts on humans, and attempting to answer questions like: how much will we have to pay for gas? for fish? for coffee? for clean air?"

The first round of CRN awards supported 14 projects from 1999 to 2006. The second round of the CRN program includes 12 international research consortia involving more than 40 institutions in 18 countries in the Americas.

"The SGP-HD program will integrate a broad range of social sciences with the natural sciences of the CRN projects," said Holm Tiessen, IAI director. "For example, one finding of research on climate change is that climate stress unveils already existing human vulnerabilities. Cooperation between the natural and social sciences is needed to uncover the connections between natural events and human conditions."

In collaboration with the Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE), IAI recently published Communicating Global Change Science to Society. The book is a review of experiences by CRN scientists in the first round of awards and an analysis of the policy interface that developed through these networks.

Projects Funded under the CRN Program (2006-2011)

 

Title of ProjectPrincipal InvestigatorParticipating Countries Documenting, understanding and projecting changes in the hydrological cycle in the American CordilleraLuckman, Brian
University of Western Ontario, Canada Canada, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, USA Tropical cyclones: current characteristics and potential changes under a warmer climate Binimelis De Raga, Graciela
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Mexico, Costa Rica, Cuba, USA Paleotempestology of the Caribbean Region: A Multi-proxy, Multi-site Study of the Spatial and Temporal Variability of Caribbean Hurricane ActivityLiu, Kam-Biu
Louisiana State University USA, Canada, Costa Rica, Mexico An International Consortium for the Study of Oceanic Related Global and Climate Changes in South America (SACC) Piola, Alberto
Servicio de Hidrografia Naval, Argentina Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, USA From Landscape to Ecosystem: Across-scales Functioning in Changing Environments (LEAF in Change) Sarmiento, Guillermo
Universidad de los Andes, Venezuela Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, (Germany) Functional links between above ground changes and below ground activity with land use in the Americas: Soil biodiversity and food security Berbara, Ricardo Luis
Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janiero, Brazil Brazil, Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico, USA Functional Biodiversity Effects on Changing Ecosystem Processes and Services and Sustainability Diaz, Sandra Myrna
Universidad Nacional de Cordoba, Argentina Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Costa Rica, USA Understanding the human, biophysical and political dimensions of tropical primary and secondary dry forests in the Americas Sanchez Azofeifa, Gerardo Arturo
University of Alberta, Canada Canada, Brazil, Costa Rica, Cuba, Mexico, USA, VenezuelaLand use change in the Rio de la Plata Basin: Linking biophysical and human factors to predict trends, assess impacts, and support viable land-use strategies for the future Jobbagy, Esteban
Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, USA South American Emissions, Megacities, and Climate (SAEMC)Klenner, Laura Gallardo
Universidad de Chile Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Peru, USA Caribbean Coastal Scenarios McClain, Michael
Florida International University USA, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Jamaica, (Puerto Rico) Effective Adaptation Strategies and Risk Reduction towards Economic and Climatic Shocks: Lessons from the Coffee Crisis in Mesoamerica Castellanos, Edwin
Universidad del Valle de Guatemala Guatemala, Costa Rica, Mexico, USA

Projects Funded under the SGP-HD Program (2007-2009)

Project TitlePrincipal InvestigatorComing Down the Mountain: Understanding the vulnerability of Andean communities to hydroclimatologic variability and global environmental changeDavid Gauthier
University of Regina, CanadaInformation Flows and Policy: Use of climate diagnostics and cyclone prediction for adaptive water-resources management under climatic uncertainty in western North AmericaRobert G. Varady
University of Arizona, USAClimate Change and Irrigated Agriculture: Towards a better understanding of driving forces and feedbacks between decision-makers and the biophysical environmentFrancisco J Meza
Pontifícia Universidad Católica de Chile, ChileDecision Support System for Risk Reduction in Agriculture

Clyde Fraisse
University of Florida, USA

Conservation Policy Impacts in Tropical Dry Forests: Regional and spatially focused analyses, given other social and natural drivers of land useAlexander Pfaff
Columbia University, USADesigning a methodology to evaluate local knowledge of global change and its role in the construction of future land use scenariosJean F. Tourrand
Universidade Federal de Brasilia, Brazil

-NSF-




Recent news in category
NSF, NASA Successfully Flight-Test New Balloon Over Antarctica
Scientists Take off on Historic Mission to Measure Greenhouse Gases That Have an Impact on Climate
Mother Nature Knows Nano

Global recent news
Strong Future for Video Conferencing
Nigerian flip-flop: Linux or Windows for schools? (and Grant vs. Google)
Gaming Industry: New Year Resolutions

26/Nov/2007 12:00AM
New research suggests that children entering school with behavior problems, as a rule, can keep pace with classroom learning, but persistent behavior problems can be a strong indicator of how well these students adapt to the work world.Two studies entirely funded by the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Developmental and Learning Sciences program uncovered these results. Researchers working through the Center for the Analyses of Pathways from Childhood to Adulthood (CAPCA) a More ...

26/Nov/2007 12:00AM
The National Science Foundation (NSF) has selected sites for three critical zone observatories (CZO). The observatories are designed to provide scientists with an understanding of what has come to be called the critical zone--the region between the top of the forest canopy and the base of unweathered rock: our living environment--and its response to climate and land use changes. The CZOs represent the first set of systems-based observatories dedicated to Earth surface processes. Scient More ...

26/Nov/2007 12:00AM
The National Science Foundation (NSF) will accept applications for the National Medal of Science until Dec. 7, 2007. Established by Congress in 1959, the National Medal of Science is the Nation's highest honor for American scientists and engineers presented annually by the President of the United States. The National Medal of Science is presented to individuals deserving of special recognition by reason of their outstanding contributions to knowledge in the biological, engineering, mat More ...

23/Nov/2007 12:00AM
Most of us take it for granted that plants respond to light by growing, flowering and straining towards the light, and we never wonder just how plants manage to do so. But the ordinary, everyday responses of plants to light are deceptively complex, and much about them has long stumped scientists.Now, a new study &quot;has significantly advanced our understanding of how plant responses to light are regulated, and perhaps even how such responses evolved,&quot; says Michael Mishkind, a pr More ...

20/Nov/2007 12:00AM
After funding more than $10 million dollars of scientific research and study projects during the last three years to record and analyze some of the world's most endangered languages, the National Science Foundation (NSF) recently made its Documenting Endangered Languages (DEL) initiative a permanent program.The program was established in NSF's social, behavioral and economic sciences directorate in 2005. It was part of a collaborative arrangement with the National Endowment for More ...

Copyright © 2006 Rootio Ltd. All rights reserved.