Your search found 18 records
1 Binsack, R. 1987. Scientific collaboration between European Institutions and International Agricultural Research Centers - Country and center reports. CGIAR. 432 p.
Agricultural research ; Development aid ; Research institutes ; International cooperation / Austria / Belgium / Denmark / Finland / France / Germany / Ireland / Italy / Netherlands / Norway / Spain / Sweden / Switzerland
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 338.88 G000 BIN Record No: H03360)

2 Foy, R. H.; Kirk, M. 1995. Agriculture and water quality: A regional study. Water and Environmental Management, 9(3):247-256.
Water quality ; Catchment areas ; Water pollution ; Land use ; Ecosystems / Ireland
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 4181 Record No: H017930)

3 Bridle, R. 1996. Building the Pollan Dam. World Water and Environmental Engineering, 19(1):24-25.
Dams ; Dam construction ; Design / Ireland
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H018114)

4 Grimes, S.; Lyons, G. 1994. Information technology and rural development: Unique opportunity or potential threat? Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, 6:219-237.
Rural development ; Information systems ; Technology ; Models ; Decentralization / Ireland
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 4393 Record No: H019958)

5 Bibby, C. J.; Burgess, N. D.; Hill, D. A. 1992. Bird census techniques. London, UK: Academic Press. xvii, 257p.
Wildlife ; Surveys ; Mapping / Finland / USA / North America / UK / Ireland / Netherlands
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 598 G000 BIB Record No: H024855)

6 Wheater, H.; Kirby, C. (Eds.) 1998. Hydrology in a changing environment: Proceedings of the British Hydrological Society International Conference, Exeter, July 1998. Volume I. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons. x, 592p.
Hydrology ; Models ; Environmental effects ; River basins ; Catchment areas ; Rain ; Stochastic process ; Forecasting ; Precipitation ; Climate ; Runoff ; Stream flow ; Water resources ; Groundwater development ; Drought ; Watercourses ; Water quality ; Ecology ; Flood plains ; Effluents ; Water pollution ; Databases / USA / Nigeria / Netherlands / Europe / Asia / India / UK / Wales / Australia / Ireland / Estonia / Canada / Slovania / Russian Federation / Red-Arkansas River Basin / Rhine / River Kennet / Scottish River / New South Wales / Lake Chad Basin / Devon Rivers / Cuilcagh Mountain / Quebec / Drogonja River
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 551.48 G000 WHE Record No: H027236)
http://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H027236_TOC.pdf
(0.43 MB)

7 McCoy, B. A.; Conn, M.; Spain, L.; Murray, A. 2003. Network modeling helps Dublin reduce leakage. Water and Wastewater International, 27(1):21.
Water supply ; Computer models ; GIS / Ireland / Dublin
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H033927)

8 Holden, N. M.; Brereton, A. J. 2002. An assessment of the potential impact of climate change on grass yield in Ireland over the next 100 years. Irish Journal of Agricultural and Food Research, 41:213-226.
Climate change ; Agroclimatology ; Forecasting ; Pastures ; Grassland management ; Livestock ; Simulation models / UK / Ireland
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 7367 Record No: H037153)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H_37153.pdf

9 Holden, N. M.; Brereton, A. J. 2006. Adaptation of water and nitrogen management of spring barley and potato as a response to possible climate change in Ireland. Agricultural Water Management, 82(3):297-317.
Barley ; Potatoes ; Climate change ; Nitrogen ; Irrigation management / Ireland
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H038692)

10 Chave, P.; Howard, G.; Schijven, J.; Appleyard, S.; Fladerer, F.; Schimon, W. 2006. Groundwater protection zones. In Schmoll, O.; Howard, G.; Chilton, J.; Chorus, I. (Eds.). Protecting groundwater for health: Managing the quality of drinking-warter sources. London, UK: PUB IWA Publishing for WHO. pp.465-492.
Groundwater management ; Pollution control ; Aquifers ; Water quality ; Land use ; Monitoring / Ireland / UK / Ghana / Denmark / Germany / Australia / Oman / Indonesia / Tunisia / USA
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 613.287 G000 SCH Record No: H040329)

11 O’reilly, S.; Keane, M.; Enright, P. (Eds.) 2007. Proceedings of the 16th International Farm Management Association Congress: A vibrant rural economy – The challenge for balance. University College Cork, Cork, Ireland 15-20 July 2007. Vol. 1. Cork, Ireland: International Farm Management Association. 473p.
Horticulture ; Organic fertilizers ; Sugarcane ; Agricultural policy ; Dairy farms ; Food security ; Rural economy ; Marketing ; Farm income ; Cotton / New Zealand / Bulgaria / Netherlands / South Africa / Kenya / Uganda / Tanzania / Ireland / Kwazulu-Natal
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 630 G000 ORE Record No: H040765)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H040765.pdf

12 Waylen, K.; Aaltonen, J.; Bonaiuto, M.; Booth, P.; Bradford, R.; Carrus, G.; Cuthbert, A.; Langan, S.; O’Sullivan, J.; Rotko, P.; Twigger-Ross, C.; Watson, D. 2011. Coordination of the Research Financed in the European Union on Flood Management (CRUE) final report for URFlood - understanding uncertainty and risk in communicating about floods [Report of the European Flood Risk Management Research]. Rome, Italy: CRUE Funding Initiative on Flood Resilience. 90p. + appendixes.
Flooding ; Risk management ; Communication ; Research projects ; Case studies / Finland / Ireland / Italy / Scotland / Lapland Province / Rovaniemi / County Galway / Ballinasloe / County Tipperary / Clonmel / Dublin / River Dodder / County Wexford / Wexford Town / Lazio / Rome / Calabria / Vibo Valentia / Glasgow / Cathcart / Aberdeenshire / Huntly / Galloway / Dumfries / Moffat / Aberdeenshire / Newburgh
(Location: IWMI HQ Record No: H044700)
http://www.macaulay.ac.uk/urflood/URFloodfinalreport-Reduced.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H044700.pdf
(3.07 MB) (3.07MB)

13 Shukla, M. K. (Ed.) 2011. Soil hydrology, land use and agriculture: measurement and modelling. Wallingford, UK: CABI. 455p.
Soil management ; Soil properties ; Hydrological factors ; Indicators ; Land use ; Land cover ; Land management ; Watersheds ; Models ; Data ; River basins ; Flow discharge ; Water availability ; Water quality ; Water balance ; Catchment areas ; Drainage ; Climate change ; Precipitation ; Evapotranspiration ; Ecology ; Surface water ; Groundwater recharge ; Subsurface drainage ; Case studies ; Sensitivity analysis / Europe / USA / Australia / Germany / Ireland / India / Nepal / Austria / Southern Portugal / Arkansas / Texas / Kosi Himalayan Basin / Himalayan Basin / Illinois River / Bosque River
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy SF Record No: H045772)

14 Bastola, S.; Kumar, S.; Murphy, C.; Sweeney, J. 2011. Climate change and soil hydrology: European perspectives. In Shukla, M. K. (Ed.) Soil hydrology, land use and agriculture: measurement and modelling. Wallingford, UK: CABI. pp.350-365.
Climate change ; Soil moisture ; Soil organic matter ; Hydrology ; Erosion ; Land use ; Greenhouse gases ; Emission ; Sediment ; Models ; Rain / Europe / Ireland
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy SF Record No: H045788)

15 Favis-Mortlock, D.; Mullan, D. 2011. Soil erosion by water under future climate change. In Shukla, M. K. (Ed.) Soil hydrology, land use and agriculture: measurement and modelling. Wallingford, UK: CABI. pp.384-414.
Soil surface properties ; Soil erosion ; Climate change ; Sediment ; Hydrology ; Models ; Runoff ; Land use ; Precipitation ; Case studies / Ireland
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy SF Record No: H045790)

16 Global Water Intelligence (GWI). 2013. Global water market 2014: meeting the world's water and wastewater needs until 2018. Vol. 2. Oxford, UK: Media Analytics Ltd. pp.427-1038 + 1CD.
Water market ; Water requirements ; Indicators ; Government agencies ; Wastewater treatment ; Urban wastes ; Water availability ; Water demand ; Desalination ; Brackish water ; Water reuse ; Financing ; Expenditure ; Market analysis ; Forecasting ; Private sector / Algeria / Angola / Austria / Azerbaijan / Belarus / Belgium / Bulgaria / Cameroon / Cote d'Ivoire / Croatia / Cyprus / Czech Republic / Denmark / Egypt / Estonia / Ethiopia / Finland / France / Germany / Ghana / Greece / Hungary / Ireland / Italy / Kazakhstan / Kenya / Latvia / Libya / Lithuania / Luxembourg / Morocco / Netherlands / Nigeria / Norway / Poland / Portugal / Romania / Russian Federation / Serbia / Slovakia / Slovenia / South Africa / Spain / Sudan / Sweden / Sweden / Switzerland / Tanzania / Tunisia / Uganda / Ukraine / UK
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 GLO e-copy SF Record No: H046241)
http://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H046241_TOC.pdf
(0.57 MB)

17 Grilli, G.; Curtis, J. 2022. Knowledge and awareness of water quality protection issues within local authorities. Environmental Science and Policy, 135:46-57. (Online first) [doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2022.04.017]
Water quality ; Awareness ; Local government ; Water governance ; Information dissemination ; Water management ; Water pollution ; River basins ; Decision making ; Water policies ; Stakeholders ; Indicators / Ireland
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H051112)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1462901122001460/pdfft?md5=8b23a41c6d4da5cd3122dc5fbfbaa0cf&pid=1-s2.0-S1462901122001460-main.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H051112.pdf
(0.61 MB) (620 KB)
The EU Water Framework Directive’s (WFD) ambition to achieve good ecological status for waters is an ambitious target due to the complexity of water management governance. Usually, multiple institutions are responsible for water management, often operating within a hierarchical structure, in which each level has different responsibilities. It is essential that knowledge and awareness of plans and policies associated with water management are effectively transferred through the hierarchical structure to the staff responsible for day-to-day activities. This study investigates the level of knowledge and awareness of water quality issues among Local Authority (i.e., local government) staff within Ireland and the extent to which water protection measures are implemented within core functions of local government. There is relatively good knowledge or awareness related to high level issues, including institutions responsible for water management, awareness of WFD and river basin management plans. Knowledge and awareness levels are considerably lower on more specific details, including on water quality status and protection measures being implemented within their jurisdictional areas. Overall, the study suggests that there is considerable scope for improvement in knowledge and awareness, and outlines a series of recommendations to improve priority for water quality protection among Local Authority staff.

18 Flood, S.; Rogan, F.; Revez, A.; McGookin, C.; O’Dwyer, B.; Harris, C.; Dunphy, N.; Byrne, E.; O' Gallachoir, B.; Bolger, P.; Bolge, E.; Glynn, J.; Barry, J.; Ellis, G.; Mullally, G. 2023. Imagining climate resilient futures: a layered Delphi panel approach. Futures, 147:103100. [doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.futures.2023.103100]
Climate resilience ; Transdisciplinary research ; Stakeholders ; Governance ; Policies ; Communities ; Policy making ; Decision making ; Infrastructure ; Social learning ; Public participation / Ireland
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H051943)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0016328723000046/pdfft?md5=cf49b9d860d29e8609d43642129c1598&pid=1-s2.0-S0016328723000046-main.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H051943.pdf
(4.39 MB) (4.39 MB)
This paper in using a novel application of the Delphi panel method, explores and consolidates the future visions of a low carbon and climate resilient future in Ireland through community-based visioning processes that emerged through co-created, deliberative approaches at local level. It embraces a visioning process that applies a transdisciplinary approach, which aims to match different visions and stakeholder needs, combining bottom-up and top-down perspectives. Community visions were articulated by means of a series of deliberative futures workshops facilitated by the transdisciplinary project research team. Through iterations of the Delphi feedback loop, the notion of deep and shallow agreement is explored to examine the spectrum of consensus to dissent around the co-developed future visions and pathways of climate action, articulated by the Irish community case study. This approach enables a critical exploration of the conventional science-policy-practice nexus through the use of innovative creative communication and engagement methods. Findings suggest that more deliberative forums which bring together a diverse range of stakeholders are needed to develop a shared vision for the future; the importance of language use and the creation of a shared vocabulary of climate action; and the power of civic imaginaries in helping to create useful future narratives.

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