Your search found 6 records
1 Bishop, S.; Taylor, D.. 1995. Training for change: Activities to promote positive attitudes to change. New Delhi, India: Viva Books Pvt. Ltd. 349p. (Kogan Page training activities series)
Training and development ; Teaching materials ; Management training ; Attitudes ; Human resource development
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 658.31245 G000 BIS Record No: H025609)

2 Taylor, D.; Dieme, E.; Bracke, A.; Schneider-von Deimling, K. 2005. Ramsar sites: directory and overview. Gland, Switzerland: Ramsar. 1CD.
Wetlands ; Maps ; Directories
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: CD Col Record No: H038313)
http://www.wetlands.org/RSIS/_COP9Directory/ENG/Default.htm

3 Zwarts, L.; Van Beukering, P.; Koné, B.; Wymenga, E.; Taylor, D.. 2006. The economic and ecological effects of water management choices in the Upper Niger River: Development of decision support methods. International Journal of Water Resources Development, 22(1):135-156.
Rivers ; Water management ; Economic aspects ; Dams ; Reservoirs ; Operations ; Models ; Decision support tools ; Flood water ; Food supply ; Rice ; Fisheries ; Livestock ; Cost benefit analysis / Africa / Mali / Niger / Guinea / Ivory Coast / Senegal River / Niger River
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H038387)

4 Rosenqvist, A.; Finlayson, Max; Lowry, J.; Taylor, D.. 2007. The potential of long-wavelength satellite-borne radar to support implementation of the Ramsar Wetlands Convention. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, 17:229-244.
Wetlands ; Surveys ; Flooding ; Vegetation ; Mapping ; Monitoring ; Remote sensing
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.918 G000 ROS Record No: H039956)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H039956.pdf

5 Wiseman, R.; Taylor, D.; Zingstra, H. (Eds.) 2003. Wetlands and agriculture: proceedings of the Workshop on Agriculture, Wetlands and Water Resources: 17th Global Biodiversity Forum, Valencia, Spain, November 2002. New Delhi: India: National Institute of Ecology. 122p.
Wetlands ; Agricultural practices ; Agricultural production ; Irrigated rice ; Agroecosystems ; Biodiversity ; River basin management / Asia / Africa South of Sahara / Swaziland / Ethiopia / South Africa / Malawi / China / Indonesia / Lithuania / Cameroon / Lake Chilwa Wetland / Tarim River Basin / Santa Maria River Basin
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.918 G000 WIS Record No: H044448)
http://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H044448_TOC.pdf
(0.42 MB)

6 Suhardiman, Diana; Rigg, J.; Bandur, M.; Marschke, M.; Miller, M. A.; Pheuangsavanh, N.; Sayatham, M.; Taylor, D.. 2021. On the coattails of globalization: migration, migrants and COVID-19 in Asia. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 47(1):88-109. [doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2020.1844561]
Migration ; Migrants ; Migrant labour ; Labour mobility ; COVID-19 ; Pandemics ; Sustainable livelihoods ; Globalization ; Working conditions ; Unemployment ; Remuneration ; Uncertainty ; Social aspects ; Economic aspects ; Households / Asia / Bangladesh / India / Lao People's Democratic Republic / Myanmar / Singapore / Thailand / China
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H050115)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H050115.pdf
(1.73 MB)
Positioning migrants as quintessential globalisation subjects, this paper reveals how the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the ambivalent positioning of migration as a pathway for human development. Drawing on interviews with international and domestic labour migrants from Bangladesh, India, Laos and Myanmar working in Laos, Myanmar, China, Singapore and Thailand, the paper explores the vulnerabilities, challenges and opportunities that have come with migration and how these have been reconfigured as the pandemic has progressed, disproportionately heightening migrants’ exposure to the virus and their socioeconomic precarity. Through their personal stories, the paper provides insights into the evolving livelihood pathways of migrant workers during the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, their (changing) views of migration as a route to progress, and tentatively sets out how ruptures caused by the pandemic may lead to a re-thinking of livelihood pathways for such men and women and their families.

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