Folk Filmmaking: A Participatory Method for Engaging Indigenous Ethics and Improving Understanding Adam Pérou Hermans Amir Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):123-134 On an assignment to produce videos promoting Cross River gorilla conservation to indigenous communities in Nigeria and Cameroon, I invited community members to join me. I followed decolonising and feminist methodologies to develop a form of participatory video production, 'Folk Filmmaking', in which participants present their own accounts of wildlife, conservation, and environmental values by performing stories. Through the films, participants shared their knowledge as morality tales, providing contextual nuance to moral challenges, clarity on local concerns, and opportunities for better understanding of local conflicts with conservation. Most films use gorillas as a plot device but orient the moral issues not to the ape's plight but to communal struggles with challenges such as marginalisation, modernity, and corruption. The films do not say how best to conserve the last 300 Cross River gorillas but they help articulate indigenous values and show the challenges conservation must overcome. This paper shares an account of lessons learned during the project through continual, critical reflection on my process. It describes my methodology and the films produced then offers an analysis and evaluation of the project. It concludes with notes on the potential and pitfalls of participatory video in contexts of cross-cultural conflict over conservation. |
When Race and Social Equity Matters in Nature Conservation in Post-apartheid South Africa Regis Musavengane, Llewellyn Leonard Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):135-146 Current academic literature examining race and nature conservation in South Africa has relied mainly on secondary data analysis while neglecting the voices of local communities. This article draws on empirical experience to assess the extent of the impact of race and social equity in conservation, with the aim of promoting sustainable and more inclusive conservation practices in South Africa. Empirical results are drawn from different cases to examine racial equity in conservation. The findings suggest that conservation practices in post-apartheid South Africa are still exclusionary for the majority black population. Promoting more inclusive conservation is complex and requires a broader conservation agenda for more inclusivity and to genuinely tackle issues of poverty. There is a need for conservation groups to also include the previously marginalised in leadership structures and to incorporate indigenous knowledge systems. This will assist in changing the perception of marginalised people that particular persons dominate conservation. The paper further makes specific recommendations on how conservation can become more inclusive across social and race lines. |
Multi-stakeholder Platforms and Protected Area Management: Evidence from El VizcaÃno Biosphere Reserve, Mexico Ludger Brenner Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):147-160 This article analyses the potentials and limitations of multi-stakeholder platforms (known as advisory councils in Mexico) involved in protected area and resource management in peripheral regions. Qualitative, in-depth expert interviews conducted in 2015 at one of the world's most prominent Biosphere Reserves focused on the sources of effective and inclusive stakeholder participation through collective decision-making and joint implementation. Results identified three key interrelated factors that explain the performance and effectiveness of the advisory council at the El Vizcaíno Biosphere Reserve: 1) comparatively favourable socioeconomic and political conditions at the outset; 2) efficient internal organisation that fosters informed decision-making by consensus; and 3) the ability to influence governmental institutions through collective lobbying. As a result, the council has been able to exclude several non-local actors from resource use, obtain public funding, and participate in diverse management activities. Due to the lack of a well-defined mandate; however, it still depends on centralised institutions and has no decisive stake in the governmental decision-making process yet. Therefore, despite notable progress, genuine stakeholder participation in protected area management still faces limitations in Mexico and probably other countries as well. |
What the Gringos Brought: Local Perspectives on a Private Protected Area in Chilean Patagonia Elena Louder, Keith Bosak Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):161-172 Privately Protected Areas (PPAs) are a growing trend in conservation and have been promoted by global environmental institutions such as the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as an essential component for achieving conservation targets. PPAs are on the rise worldwide and particularly in Chile, where neoliberal reform has created new spaces in conservation management for private individuals and civil society. However, little empirical research examines their effects on local people. Drawing from critiques of the neoliberalisation of nature and the intertwining of capitalism and conservation, this research explores the case of a particular PPA in Chile, Patagonia Park; asking specifically: what are the impacts of this particular PPA on local residents? Based on in-depth, semi-structured interviews, this research finds that the park has been detrimental to local livelihoods, disrupted systems of production, and elicited emotional responses of pain, sadness, and loss. The relation between the park and community has been characterised by a lack of information and understanding, and reveals deeply contrasting views of nature held by park administrators and local residents. We find that, in this case, the social impacts of the PPA are similar to those that have long been documented and criticised in state-run, 'fortress conservation' models. When we look closely at the history of many state-run protected areas, we see that private capital has always played a central role in conservation. This research suggests then that there may be little truly novel about PPAs in terms of both process of development, and the ways that local people experience them. |
The Displacement of Insufficiently 'Traditional' Communities:Local Fisheries in the Pantanal Rafael Morais Chiaravalloti Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):173-183 The rise of community-based conservation (CBC) from the 1980s, heralded a paradigm shift in the global conservation and development agenda, increasing the engagement of conservationists towards the cause of the needs of Indigenous people. As a result, many international agreements were implemented, such as Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention (1989) and the Convention on Biological Diversity (1992). In Brazil, a National Policy for the Sustainable Development of Traditional Peoples and Communities (PNDSPCT) was introduced in 2007, which came to recognise the rights and existing sustainable use practices of 'traditional communities'. This paper uses data from a long-term ethnography of both the local people and the conservation agenda in the Pantanal wetland, Brazil, to discuss how environmentalists used the PNDSPCT to justify the displacement of local people by claiming they do not fit in any traditional community category, and instead should be called 'rural poor'. Interview-based evidence from these communities shows the contrary—pointing out a long history of occupation in the region, customary practices that guarantee sustainable use and self-recognition as a culturally differentiated group. The results are used to explore how narrow notions of indigenous identity have been used to oppress communities in Brazil and in other parts of the global south. The paper concludes that a flexible and fluid categorisation of traditional peoples or indigenous groups should be used in order to avoid reinforcing the already oppressive restrictions placed on local communities that are close to or part of conservation initiatives. |
Towards a Conceptualisation of Power in Fuelwood Access in Zimbabwe Ellen Fungisai Chipango Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):184-194 Fuelwood scarcity in sub-Saharan African countries is a pressing challenge to rural households. However, what is not appreciated is that the scarcity is conceived by the power dynamics constraints, which impede fuelwood access. That being so, the growing body of work on fuelwood does not as yet pay adequate attention to the relationship between power asymmetries and fuelwood access, hence there is a gap in fuelwood policy. In the face of this wider problem, the case of Buhera District demonstrates power dynamics of fuelwood access in Zimbabwe. Based on extensive qualitative fieldwork, the article illuminates the relations between state actors and the local people in accessing fuelwood. This is important because access is determined by the policing action taken by the powerful state actors. The questions at the centre of this article are how rural people's access to fuelwood is influenced by power dynamics and how these dynamics contribute to fuelwood scarcity in their villages. From the study it emerged that there are various techniques of power, which are used by state actors in controlling and regulating fuelwood access, leading me to draw two major conclusions. First, there is no one fuelwood scarcity (shortage in a specific location), but rather even where fuelwood is available, power relations play a role in determining accessibility. Second, hidden power is used to present fuelwood scarcity as apolitical, leading to flawed solutions which intensify rural people's plight. Accordingly, by showing the workings of power relations, I endeavour to provide the foundation for well-informed fuelwood policy. |
Genealogies and Politics of Belonging: People, Nature and Conservation in the Nilgiri Hills of Tamil Nadu Ajit Menon, Manasi Karthik Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):195-203 The landscape of Gudalur, located in the Nilgiri Hills of Tamil Nadu, India, has been shaped and re-shaped by multiple waves of in-migration that date back to the mid-nineteenth century. The political-economic imperatives for these phases of migration have ranged from the development of capitalist relations within the estate economy to the compulsions of the Grow More Food Campaign to the political repatriation of 'Indian' Tamils from erstwhile Ceylon, now Sri Lanka. This article focuses on how the politics of belonging in Gudalur is a consequence of this history and has resulted in a sedentarist metaphysics shaping state policy and contestations around conservation. The article highlights how the state increasingly sees adivasis (=indigenous people) as a possible ethno-environmental fix for conservation and how non-adivasis project their environmental subjectivities to claim that they too belong. By unpacking the politics of belonging through a historical account of the making of conservation in the region, the article attempts to illustrate how conservation includes and excludes people from the hill landscape. |
Creating Landscapes of Coexistence: Do Conservation Interventions Promote Tolerance of Lions in Human-dominated Landscapes? Guy Western, David W Macdonald, Andrew J Loveridge, Amy J Dickman Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):204-217 The range-wide decline of lions has led to their conservation becoming a top priority. Protection of free-ranging lion populations is dependent on securing space for lions but also on the ability and desire of local communities to coexist with lions. Our investigation takes a comparative and case study approach to explore the individual and societal desire to maintain current lion populations alongside communities in, or surrounding, Zimbabwe's Hwange National Park, Tanzania's Ruaha National Park, and Kenya's southern Maasailand. Using data from attitudinal questionnaire surveys, we compare the desire to maintain current lion populations as well as the prevalence and success of conservation interventions aimed at increasing human-lion coexistence. In Maasailand, 88% of the respondents expressed a desire to see current lion populations maintained, while only 42% of the respondents in Ruaha and only 5% of the respondents in Hwange expressed this desire. More respondents reported predation by lions (lion predation) on livestock in Maasailand than in Hwange; personal benefits from conservation were greatest in Maasailand; and exposure to conservation education was highest in Ruaha. The Hwange findings were confounded by Zimbabwe's political and economic climate. In Ruaha and Maasailand, communal and individual conservation benefits influenced desired changes to lion population. Once variation between sites was controlled for, twinning personal benefits and conservation education together was most likely to increase an individual's desire to see current lion populations maintained. |
Indigenous Sacred Natural Sites and Spiritual Governance: the legal case for Juristic Personhood Bas Verschuuren Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):218-219 |
In Defense of Public Lands Megan Youdelis Conservation and Society 2019 17(2):220-221 |
ENT-MD Alexandros G. Sfakianakis,Anapafseos 5 Agios Nikolaos 72100 Crete Greece,00306932607174,00302841026182,alsfakia@gmail.com
Blog Archive
- ► 2020 (479)
-
▼
2019
(2381)
-
▼
April
(390)
-
▼
Apr 02
(20)
- Dermatology
- Oral and Maxillofacial
- Clinical Cancer Research
- Cancer Research
- Oncology
- Cancer of Hypopharynx
- Cancer Medicine
- Cancer
- Cancer
- Advances in Therapy
- Environmental Science
- Microbiology
- Transgenic Research
- Behavioral Medicine
- Taylor & Francis
- Quality and Safety in Healthcare
- Médecine & Droit
- Ethnopharmacology
- Conservation and Society
- Nature and Medicine
-
▼
Apr 02
(20)
-
▼
April
(390)
About Me
Labels
Search This Blog
Tuesday, April 2, 2019
Conservation and Society
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
- Sep 24 (11)
- Sep 23 (70)
- Sep 20 (22)
- Aug 27 (2)
- Aug 25 (1)
- Aug 24 (2)
- Aug 20 (1)
- Aug 19 (1)
- Aug 18 (2)
- Aug 17 (1)
- Aug 16 (1)
- Aug 13 (1)
- Aug 12 (1)
- Aug 11 (1)
- Aug 10 (2)
- Aug 07 (1)
- Aug 06 (1)
- Aug 05 (1)
- Aug 04 (1)
- Aug 03 (1)
- Aug 02 (1)
- Jul 30 (1)
- Jul 29 (1)
- Jul 28 (1)
- Jul 27 (1)
- Jul 26 (1)
- Jul 23 (1)
- Jul 22 (1)
- Jul 21 (1)
- Jul 20 (1)
- Jul 19 (1)
- Jul 16 (1)
- Jul 15 (1)
- Jul 14 (1)
- Jul 13 (1)
- Jul 12 (1)
- Jul 09 (1)
- Jul 08 (1)
- Jul 07 (1)
- Jul 06 (28)
- Jul 05 (1)
- Jul 02 (1)
- Jul 01 (1)
- Jun 30 (1)
- Jun 29 (2)
- Jun 25 (1)
- Jun 24 (41)
- Jun 23 (7)
- Jun 22 (1)
- Jun 21 (1)
- Jun 18 (1)
- Jun 17 (1)
- Jun 16 (18)
- Jun 15 (1)
- Jun 14 (1)
- Jun 11 (1)
- Jun 10 (1)
- Jun 09 (36)
- Jun 08 (1)
- Jun 04 (1)
- Jun 03 (1)
- Jun 02 (1)
- Jun 01 (1)
- May 31 (8)
- May 28 (1)
- May 27 (1)
- May 26 (1)
- May 25 (1)
- May 24 (1)
- May 21 (40)
- May 19 (1)
- May 18 (1)
- May 17 (1)
- May 14 (2)
- May 13 (1)
- May 12 (1)
- May 10 (1)
- May 07 (1)
- May 06 (3)
- May 05 (2)
- May 03 (1)
- Apr 30 (1)
- Apr 28 (1)
- Apr 27 (1)
- Apr 26 (1)
- Apr 24 (1)
- Apr 22 (2)
- Apr 20 (1)
- Apr 16 (1)
- Apr 15 (1)
- Apr 14 (1)
- Apr 13 (1)
- Apr 10 (1)
- Apr 09 (1)
- Apr 08 (1)
- Apr 06 (2)
- Apr 05 (1)
- Apr 03 (1)
- Apr 02 (2)
- Apr 01 (2)
- Mar 30 (1)
- Mar 29 (1)
- Mar 27 (1)
- Mar 26 (1)
- Mar 24 (1)
- Mar 23 (1)
- Mar 20 (1)
- Mar 19 (1)
- Mar 18 (1)
- Mar 17 (1)
- Mar 16 (1)
- Mar 13 (1)
- Mar 11 (2)
- Mar 10 (1)
- Mar 08 (1)
- Mar 05 (3)
- Mar 04 (2)
- Mar 03 (2)
- Feb 27 (1)
- Feb 26 (2)
- Feb 24 (3)
- Feb 21 (2)
- Feb 20 (1)
- Feb 19 (1)
- Feb 16 (2)
- Feb 13 (1)
- Feb 12 (2)
- Feb 10 (3)
- Feb 09 (1)
- Feb 07 (1)
- Feb 05 (2)
- Feb 04 (1)
- Feb 03 (1)
- Feb 02 (4)
- Jan 30 (2)
- Jan 28 (1)
- Jan 27 (3)
- Jan 26 (1)
- Jan 23 (3)
- Jan 22 (1)
- Jan 21 (3)
- Jan 20 (2)
- Jan 19 (1)
- Jan 16 (1)
- Jan 15 (7)
- Jan 14 (6)
- Jan 12 (1)
- Jan 09 (2)
- Jan 07 (2)
- Jan 06 (3)
- Jan 04 (1)
- Jan 03 (1)
- Jan 02 (2)
- Jan 01 (1)
- Dec 31 (1)
- Dec 30 (2)
- Dec 29 (2)
- Dec 28 (1)
- Dec 26 (1)
- Dec 20 (1)
- Dec 17 (2)
- Dec 16 (1)
- Dec 13 (1)
- Dec 12 (1)
- Dec 11 (1)
- Dec 10 (1)
- Dec 09 (1)
- Dec 04 (1)
- Dec 03 (1)
- Dec 01 (1)
- Nov 30 (1)
- Nov 29 (1)
- Nov 27 (3)
- Nov 26 (1)
- Nov 25 (1)
- Nov 24 (4)
- Nov 23 (1)
- Nov 22 (1)
- Nov 21 (1)
- Nov 19 (2)
- Nov 17 (2)
- Nov 16 (1)
- Nov 14 (1)
- Nov 13 (1)
- Nov 12 (1)
- Nov 11 (2)
- Nov 10 (1)
- Nov 09 (1)
- Nov 07 (1)
- Nov 06 (1)
- Nov 05 (2)
- Nov 04 (3)
- Nov 03 (2)
- Nov 02 (1)
- Nov 01 (1)
- Oct 31 (1)
- Oct 30 (1)
- Oct 29 (1)
- Oct 28 (1)
- Oct 27 (1)
- Oct 26 (1)
- Oct 24 (1)
- Oct 23 (1)
- Oct 22 (1)
- Oct 21 (2)
- Oct 20 (1)
- Oct 18 (1)
- Oct 17 (2)
- Oct 15 (2)
- Oct 13 (2)
- Oct 12 (1)
- Oct 10 (2)
- Oct 09 (3)
- Oct 08 (1)
- Oct 07 (2)
- Oct 06 (2)
- Oct 05 (1)
- Oct 04 (1)
- Oct 02 (3)
- Oct 01 (1)
- Sep 30 (4)
- Sep 29 (3)
- Sep 27 (1)
- Sep 26 (2)
- Sep 25 (2)
- Sep 24 (3)
- Sep 23 (4)
- Sep 19 (3)
- Sep 18 (1)
- Sep 17 (4)
- Sep 16 (1)
- Sep 15 (1)
- Sep 12 (1)
- Sep 11 (2)
- Sep 10 (4)
- Sep 09 (1)
- Sep 08 (2)
- Sep 05 (4)
- Sep 04 (1)
- Sep 03 (3)
- Sep 02 (5)
- Sep 01 (2)
- Aug 30 (2)
- Aug 29 (3)
- Aug 28 (2)
- Aug 27 (1)
- Aug 26 (2)
- Aug 23 (1)
- Aug 22 (1)
- Aug 21 (3)
- Aug 19 (2)
- Aug 18 (3)
- Aug 17 (1)
- Aug 16 (1)
- Aug 15 (1)
- Aug 13 (1)
- Aug 12 (3)
- Aug 11 (6)
- Aug 08 (6)
- Aug 07 (9)
- Aug 06 (5)
- Aug 05 (8)
- Aug 04 (1)
- Aug 01 (5)
- Jul 31 (6)
- Jul 30 (7)
- Jul 29 (6)
- Jul 28 (7)
- Jul 27 (1)
- Jul 26 (1)
- Jul 25 (4)
- Jul 24 (7)
- Jul 23 (10)
- Jul 22 (4)
- Jul 21 (10)
- Jul 20 (8)
- Jul 19 (2)
- Jul 18 (3)
- Jul 17 (5)
- Jul 16 (8)
- Jul 15 (19)
- Jul 14 (15)
- Jul 13 (8)
- Jul 11 (13)
- Jul 10 (26)
- Jul 09 (4)
- Jul 08 (26)
- Jul 07 (7)
- Jul 05 (33)
- Jul 04 (10)
- Jul 03 (24)
- Jul 02 (26)
- Jul 01 (26)
- Jun 30 (23)
- Jun 29 (24)
- Jun 28 (14)
- Jun 27 (19)
- Jun 26 (8)
- Jun 25 (78)
- Jun 24 (19)
- Jun 23 (17)
- Jun 22 (25)
- Jun 21 (12)
- Jun 20 (34)
- Jun 19 (4)
- Jun 18 (1)
- Jun 17 (17)
- Jun 16 (23)
- Jun 14 (2)
- Jun 13 (16)
- Jun 12 (27)
- Jun 11 (30)
- Jun 10 (39)
- Jun 09 (3)
- Jun 08 (15)
- Jun 07 (5)
- Jun 06 (14)
- Jun 05 (16)
- Jun 04 (21)
- Jun 03 (14)
- Jun 02 (33)
- May 31 (4)
- May 30 (23)
- May 29 (8)
- May 28 (23)
- May 27 (16)
- May 26 (22)
- May 25 (8)
- May 24 (12)
- May 23 (7)
- May 22 (1)
- May 21 (36)
- May 20 (4)
- May 19 (21)
- May 17 (24)
- May 16 (17)
- May 15 (30)
- May 14 (19)
- May 13 (6)
- May 12 (18)
- May 09 (6)
- May 08 (3)
- May 07 (27)
- May 06 (1)
- May 05 (9)
- May 03 (7)
- May 02 (15)
- May 01 (34)
- Apr 29 (34)
- Apr 27 (18)
- Apr 25 (19)
- Apr 24 (1)
- Apr 23 (9)
- Apr 22 (23)
- Apr 21 (14)
- Apr 19 (10)
- Apr 18 (34)
- Apr 17 (12)
- Apr 16 (19)
- Apr 15 (12)
- Apr 14 (18)
- Apr 12 (5)
- Apr 11 (17)
- Apr 10 (12)
- Apr 09 (20)
- Apr 08 (14)
- Apr 07 (21)
- Apr 05 (1)
- Apr 04 (26)
- Apr 03 (9)
- Apr 02 (20)
- Apr 01 (22)
- Mar 31 (16)
- Mar 29 (7)
- Mar 28 (29)
- Mar 27 (6)
- Mar 26 (20)
- Mar 25 (18)
- Mar 23 (26)
- Mar 22 (3)
- Mar 20 (18)
- Mar 19 (19)
- Mar 18 (5)
- Mar 17 (2)
- Mar 16 (5)
- Mar 15 (7)
- Mar 14 (27)
- Mar 13 (7)
- Mar 12 (15)
- Mar 11 (1)
- Mar 10 (1)
- Mar 08 (1)
- Mar 07 (6)
- Mar 06 (4)
- Mar 04 (6)
- Mar 02 (4)
- Mar 01 (7)
- Feb 27 (3)
- Feb 26 (6)
- Feb 25 (2)
- Feb 24 (4)
- Feb 22 (2)
- Feb 21 (6)
- Feb 20 (9)
- Feb 19 (4)
- Feb 18 (11)
- Feb 16 (1)
- Feb 13 (8)
- Feb 11 (17)
- Feb 10 (4)
- Feb 07 (7)
- Feb 06 (1)
- Feb 01 (5)
- Jan 26 (2)
- Jan 24 (7)
- Jan 23 (1)
- Jan 22 (2)
- Jan 21 (2)
- Jan 20 (1)
- Jan 17 (10)
- Jan 16 (1)
- Jan 15 (1)
- Jan 14 (7)
- Jan 13 (35)
- Jan 10 (29)
- Jan 08 (2)
- Jan 07 (8)
- Jan 06 (2)
- Jan 05 (1)
- Jan 04 (8)
- Jan 03 (13)
- Jan 02 (12)
- Jan 01 (4)
- Dec 31 (7)
- Dec 30 (4)
- Dec 29 (6)
- Dec 28 (25)
- Dec 27 (6)
- Dec 26 (10)
- Dec 25 (1)
- Dec 24 (1)
- Dec 22 (3)
- Dec 21 (55)
- Dec 20 (71)
- Dec 19 (59)
- Dec 18 (89)
- Dec 17 (19)
- Dec 16 (15)
- Dec 15 (42)
- Dec 14 (57)
- Dec 13 (33)
- Dec 12 (51)
- Dec 11 (30)
- Dec 10 (47)
- Dec 09 (11)
- Dec 08 (46)
- Dec 07 (35)
- Dec 06 (54)
- Dec 05 (34)
- Dec 04 (50)
- Dec 03 (11)
- Dec 02 (9)
- Dec 01 (34)
- Nov 30 (43)
- Nov 29 (46)
- Nov 28 (28)
- Nov 27 (47)
- Nov 26 (37)
- Nov 25 (7)
- Nov 24 (37)
- Nov 23 (38)
- Nov 22 (15)
- Nov 21 (34)
- Nov 20 (40)
- Nov 19 (66)
- Nov 18 (10)
- Nov 17 (32)
- Nov 16 (49)
- Nov 15 (51)
- Nov 14 (40)
- Nov 13 (38)
- Nov 12 (25)
- Nov 11 (22)
- Nov 10 (13)
- Nov 09 (30)
- Nov 08 (40)
- Nov 07 (19)
- Nov 06 (62)
- Nov 05 (45)
- Nov 04 (37)
- Nov 03 (49)
- Nov 02 (17)
- Nov 01 (26)
- Apr 10 (380)
- Jan 08 (404)
- Dec 13 (358)
- Dec 12 (24)
- Dec 07 (304)
- Dec 06 (59)
- Nov 20 (419)
- Oct 30 (423)
- Sep 25 (333)
- Sep 24 (57)
- Sep 13 (290)
- Sep 12 (48)
- Aug 17 (389)
- Jul 31 (340)
- Jul 25 (349)
- Jul 20 (1)
- Jul 19 (443)
Labels
Pages
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health IJERPH, Vol. 17, Pages 6976: Overcoming Barriers to Agriculture Green T...
-
Calcium oxalate films on works of art: A review Publication date: Available online 14 June 2019 Source: Journal of Cultural Heritage Author...
-
The conceptualization of gangs: Changing the focus Publication date: July–August 2019 Source: Aggression and Violent Behavior, Volume 47 Au...
-
Increased REDD1 facilitates neuronal damage after subarachnoid hemorrhage Publication date: September 2019 Source: Neurochemistry Internati...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.