The Italian Constitution enshrines the protection of mountain and rural areas, with laws and telemedicine solutions playing a key role in their revitalization and improved healthcare access.
How much wilderness is left? Need for non-go-to policy in renewable energy infrastructures in mountainous areas of high ecological integrity.
Preserving the last European mountainous wilderness is the most efficient way to resolve conflicts between renewable energy and conservation targets in the frame of Nature Restoration Regulation
Sustaining Indigenous Mountain Cultures in a Changing Economy: A case-study of the Mao-Nagas
The loss of indigenous knowledge perpetuating sustainable human-nature relationships is under threat in the guise of development without adequate policies that checks and balances
Linking community ties and public leadership: How social capital and village cadres shape rural community disaster resilience in Wenchuan County, China
Developing a scale to measure how social capital—networks, trust, reciprocity—enhances rural disaster resilience, highlighting the role of village cadres in complementing top-down risk management.
Aren’t ethnographic materials on mountain communities qualified as mountain information? Can they be assembled? And How?
The talk gauges the interest of the mountain research community in making use of a wealth of qualitative information about the mountain and its people embedded in ethnographic materials.
Empowering Indigenous Peoples as Agents of Conservation – Exploring the Substantive and Enabling Rights of Indigenous Peoples in the Western Ghats, Kerala
Ensuring substantive and enabling rights to empower indigenous peoples as agents of sustainability.
Spatialising international and multilateral environmental agreements across the world’s mountains
A spatial analysis of 1,400+ treaties reveals few mountain-specific instruments but many mountain-relevant, highlighting gaps and opportunities for mountain governance.
Where the forest recedes: Land use changes in mountain areas and their impacts on the livelihoods of Indigenous communities.
Preserving natural forests is vital not only for sustaining livelihoods of Indigenous peoples but also for maintaining environmental sustainability and safeguarding Indigenous knowledge and culture
Integrating science and policy: Lessons from ARCOS’ work in African mountains
Views and contributions on the science-policy interface for regional mountain governance
Uncertain futures, resilient pathways: exploratory modeling for adaptive water and risk management in mountain regions
Exploratory Modeling and Analysis supports adaptation planning by identifying robust measures, adjusting strategies, and detecting adaptation limits under deep uncertainty