6904 results
 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Environmental Monitor 2002 is designed to provide basic information about PNG's natural resources, pressures affecting these resources and steps which need to take place to ensure PNG's awareness of economic benefits and trade-offs involved between development and sustainability. It is the first in Monitor Series which aim to engage and inform stakeholders of key environmental issues.

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

This research provides information to assist PNG with the development of the Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) framework. It expands the work done by Dr. Eric L Kwa (Biodiversity Law and Policy in Papua New Guinea) in 2004 for PINBio.

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Research paper which provides overview of how villagers have intensified agricultural systems in Papua New Guinea

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Proceedings of the Papua New Guinea Food and Nutrition 2000 Conference, PNG University of Technology, Lae

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Development Studies research on the maternal deaths and their impacts on children in Papua New Guinea

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

From Wealth to Wellbeing: Translating Resource Revenue into Sustainable Human Development

2xpdf

The report reviews the state of human development in Papua New Guinea in terms of the three pillars of sustainable development –economic, social and environmental – and specifically examines the ways in which the extractive industries have contributed –positively and negatively – to these related but distinct pillars. While there have been some measurable achievements in terms of improvements in human development (increases in life expectancy, per capita income and educational achievement), many of the indicators are less positive.

5 paged report on the HDI values and rank changes in the 2014 Human Development Report for PNG

In the late 1960s, Harold Brookfield and Doreen Hart were ‘startled’ by the order of magnitude differences in incomes from village cash cropping in different parts of Papua New Guinea (PNG). This paper traces these differences, back into a pre-colonial past and forward to the present and concludes, as Brookfield did in the 1960s, that severe environmental constraints, rather than market forces, are the primary cause of the pattern of spatial inequalities observable in PNG.

-76 paged background paper for the Chronic Poverty Report 2008-2009. This report outlines how poverty which spans generations manifests in PNG and in the health sector especially, why it is getting worse, and why there has been so little success in tackling it in recent years

37 paged research paper from 2006 or before. Highlights the conceptual framework behind the poverty-environment relationship in PNG.

36 paged research paper which seeks to understand how effective access to infrastructure is in reducing poverty in PNG. To meet this goal, we examine poverty in PNG, and seek to show the relationship between poverty and access to infrastructure and then identify the determinants of poverty. In our analysis, we test whether or not access to infrastructure is a significant factor in a household's poverty status. Finally, we want to understand what policies will be effective in overcoming poverty in PNG.

With a renewed interest in large-scale malaria interventions, knowledge about the possible long-term effects of such interventions on the nature of malaria transmission is essential. We document complex changes in malaria epidemiology over the last 40 years associated with changing malaria control activities in Karimui, an isolated area in Papua New Guinea. An initially equal distribution of Plasmodium falciparum, P. vivax and P. malariae changed to currently 68% P. falciparum, after passing through a phase of transitory P. vivax dominance, when control started to fail.

15 paged paper as part of the Pacific Economic Bulletin Volume 23 published in 2008. A survey of women roadside sellers in Madang Province of Papua New Guinea found that they earn a weighted average income of more than three times the national minimum wage. The relative economic success of these roadside vendors relies to a large extent on access to good-quality customary land and proximity to major roads.

32 paged research paper on the extent to which both donor finance and resource revenues have contributed to higher rates of expenditure in key development sectors of the PNG economy—social services (including health and education) and infrastructure, between 1975 and 2010.

Published 21 paged research paper which evaluates the impact of foreign aid on poverty and human well-being in Papua New Guinea during the 1990s. The methodology of the paper involves comparing the mix of donors’ aid policies aimed at the promotion of economic growth, direct targeting of the poor and the provision of safety nets with the poverty and well-being situation in Papua New Guinea. Growth in Papua New Guinea has not been pro-poor and the high level of inequality reduces the impact of growth on poverty.

The purpose of the tours is therefore to study innovative approaches to optimising sustainable returns from fisheries, while examining any obstacles they face; and to report on any policy adaptations that may be needed, given the significance of marine fisheries for coastal communities in particular. In addition, this work builds capacity and a broader regional awareness among selected participants, and hints at future capacity-building measures. This report highlights the approaches seen, obstacles observed and the outcomes of

PNG background information on the Proceedings of the Pacific Regional Consultation on Water in Small Island Countries – Country Briefing Papers pages 127-138. Outlines legislation, themes, guidelines and standards including technology and institutional arrangement used for water resources

18 paged chapter of the Status of Coral Reefs of the World 2008 Report. Discusses corals reefs of Australia and Papua New Guinea, the levels of biological diversity approaching the ‘hot spots’ of the Philippines and Indonesia and Human pressures on these reefs are lower than in other parts of the world (particularly SE Asia). The reefs of eastern Australia, particularly the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), have a long history of research and monitoring and world leading management;

An introduction to the natural history, societies, conservation and sustainable development of the New Guinea region prepared by CSIRO Australia