Economics of Ecosystem Services & Global Environmental Health

Category: Uncategorized (Page 1 of 2)

3/9/2025 In the Heart of Vanilla Country, Farmers on the Climate Frontlines Struggle to Adapt

As erratic weather upends the seasonal rhythms that crops depend on, farmers in the island nation of Madagascar are feeling the effects but struggle to adapt to the new normal. That’s one of the key takeaways of a recent survey of nearly 500 small-scale farmers in the country’s northern Sava region, which produces about two thirds of the world’s vanilla beans. In the new study, published March 7 in the journal PLOS Climate, researchers from Duke University and Madagascar’s University of Antananarivo interviewed 479 farmers about the challenges to their livelihood and what they’re doing to cope.

The results were striking. According to the study, nearly all farmers in the area are experiencing changes in temperature and rainfall that make farming more difficult than it used to be. They were already struggling to feed their families, the data show. But while most said they expect things to get worse in the future, remarkably few are altering their farming practices to adapt. READ MORE

2/19/2025 Do Protected Areas Contribute to Social Welfare?

(from Duke Environment Digest)

Conserving biodiversity has long been recognized as a global good whose success depends on improving local livelihoods. However, little evidence shows that protected areas have had sustained positive effects on the welfare of local communities, especially in the Global South, according to Randall Kramer, Priya Shyamsundar, Ph.D.’93, and colleagues. In a commentary for Nature Reviews Biodiversity, the team argues for a cultural shift that considers the need for financial resources and depth of engagement with local communities to deliver sustained and socially just conservation.

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05/23/2024 New CITES Publication Calls for Mobilizing Sustainable Finance for African Elephant Conservation

The Secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) announces a publication titled “Mobilizing Sustainable Finance for African Elephant Conservation“. Commissioned by the CITES Secretariat, and written by Randall Kramer, this  paper examines sustainable financing of wildlife conservation, with African elephants as an example. The paper is available in English, French and Spanish.

Photo by R. Kramer

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11/13/2023 – Community Collaboration Takes Aim at Failing Septic Systems and Environmental Injustice

DURHAM, N.C.—A new paper by a team of Duke researchers examines longstanding environmental justice issues in Lowndes County, Alabama, and presents key findings from an innovative, multi-year collaboration with the local community aimed at addressing and resolving the problems.

The peer-reviewed paper, published Oct. 24 in the journal Local Environment, describes a sanitation system that’s either failing or nonexistent for hundreds of homes in Lowndes County, exposing a legacy of centuries of racial discrimination and government indifference.

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CITATION: “Failing Septic Systems in Lowndes County, Alabama: Citizen Participation, Science, and Community Knowledge,” Elizabeth A. Albright, Catherine Coleman Flowers, Randall A. Kramer and Erika S. Weinthal;  Local Environment, Oct. 24, 2023. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/13549839.2023.2267066

11/16/2022 – Kramer Presents at Elephant Conservation Workshop

Ivonne Higuero and Randy Kramer at the CITES Nairobi Workshop

Randy Kramer presented a talk, “Mobilizing Sustainable Finance for African Elephant Conservation,” at a workshop organized by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES) in Nairobi, Kenya, last month. NSOE alumna Ivonne Higuero (MEM ’92), who is Secretary General of CITES, chaired the workshop. Randy’s talk summarized key findings of a report he prepared to help inform discussions on conservation finance at the 2022 CITES Conference of the Parties being held this week and next in Panama.

7/6/2020 – New reports on agriculture and health in the SAVA region of Madagascar

Vanilla growing near Mandena, Madagascar

As part of several research projects exploring the connections between human health and the environment, the Kramer research group conducted agricultural and health surveys in several villages in the SAVA region of Madagascar between 2018 and 2019.  Early findings from these surveys have been developed into two reports; one on agriculture and another one on  health. These reports help provide an overview of the health challenges and agricultural practices in the SAVA region.

 

 

4/30/2020 – Undergraduate Miranda Metz Receives Leadership Award

Miranda Metz

Miranda Metz  is the recipient of the 2020 Michael Merson Undergraduate Student Leadership Award in Global Health.  Bestowed by the Duke Global Health Institute (DGHI), the award recognizes students who has excell in the classroom and in fieldwork and who demonstrate a strong commitment to global health and health equity through extracurricular activities and leadership.  Miranda Metz is an undergraduate with the Kramer Research Group.

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01/14/2020 – Duke Team Wins NIH Grant on Disease Ecology, Conservation and Global Health in Madagascar

An interdisciplinary research team recently launched an NIH-supported project aimed at investigating infectious diseases at the human-animal interface in Northeastern Madagascar.  The team will model disease transmission within and across small mammals (rats, bats, and tenrecs), domesticated mammals (cats, cows, pigs, and dogs), and humans by screening humans and animals for a wide range of diseases, undertaking rigorous surveys of people and their environments, and conducting sophisticated mathematical modeling to represent connections between humans and animals in a network framework.

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