group_modelling
Diferenças
Aqui você vê as diferenças entre duas revisões dessa página.
Ambos lados da revisão anteriorRevisão anteriorPróxima revisão | Revisão anterior | ||
group_modelling [2009/03/19 12:49] – tiago | group_modelling [2009/03/19 14:38] (atual) – tiago | ||
---|---|---|---|
Linha 77: | Linha 77: | ||
- | ==== " | ||
- | * What are the legal and illegal processes of land appropriation at the Brazilian Amazon? | + | |
- | * How to simulate negotiation and corruption for land appropriation? | + | |
- | * What are the alternative scenarios for corruption mitigation? | + | |
- | \\ | + | |
Linha 107: | Linha 105: | ||
Land changes are results from complex social and biophysical systems and their interactions (Turner et al., 1995). Such interactions result from processes that act on different hierarchical levels. At the global scale, the national and international commodities market (beef, grains and timber) drives demand for land change. This way, these changes cannot be adequately understood without knowing their linkages to decisions and structures made elsewhere. In this sense, understanding the role of networks is essential to understanding how to decide about the land use. | Land changes are results from complex social and biophysical systems and their interactions (Turner et al., 1995). Such interactions result from processes that act on different hierarchical levels. At the global scale, the national and international commodities market (beef, grains and timber) drives demand for land change. This way, these changes cannot be adequately understood without knowing their linkages to decisions and structures made elsewhere. In this sense, understanding the role of networks is essential to understanding how to decide about the land use. | ||
- | A network is a set of items, which we will call vertices or nodes, with connections between them, called edges. Networks exist everywhere and at every scale and can be physical, such as infrastructure networks, and logical ones, such as market chains, linking a certain location to distant consumption or influential sites. Several works argue that networks | + | A network is a set of items, which we will call vertices or nodes, with connections between them, called edges. Networks exist everywhere and at every scale and can be physical, such as infrastructure networks, and logical ones, such as market chains, linking a certain location to distant consumption or influential sites. Several works argue that networks |
group_modelling.1237466956.txt.gz · Última modificação: 2009/03/19 12:49 por tiago