Books on the topic 'Public control in the field of public control in the field of environmental protection'

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1

Rich, Gerald A. Hiring/getting hired in the environmental field. Cahners Pub. Co., 1994.

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2

Nitschke, Christoph. Occupational structures and profiles in the Federal Republic of Germany in the field of environmental protection in the public service sector with reference to air pollution control. CEDEFOP-European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training, 1994.

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3

ECOTEC Research and Consulting Limited., ed. Occupational and qualification structures in the field of environmental protection in the public sector with reference to air pollution control: United Kingdom. CEDEFOP, European Centre for Development of Vocational Training, 1992.

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4

Mannocci, Virgilio. Occupational structures and profiles in Italy in the field of environmental protection in the public service sector with reference to air pollution control. CEDEFOP-European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training, 1994.

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5

United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Environment and Public Works. Subcommittee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Providing necessary flood protection to protect coastal communities: Field hearing before the Subcommittee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the Committee on Environment and Public Works, United States Senate, One Hundred Fourteenth Congress, first session, May 15, 2015, New Orleans, LA. U.S. Government Publishing Office, 2015.

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6

Avhadeev, V., L. Bitkova, C. Bogolyubov, et al. Implementation of the Law on Responsible Treatment of Animals: from the quality of norms to effective law enforcement. INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1410760.

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The collection contains articles on the quality of the conceptual apparatus and terminology of Federal Law No. 498-FZ of December 27, 2018 "On Responsible Treatment of Animals and on Amendments to Certain Legislative Acts of the Russian Federation", the subject of its legal regulation, the effectiveness of the mechanism for its implementation laid down in the law, state supervision and public control in the field of animal treatment. The problems of organizing the activities of animal shelters without owners, protecting animals from abuse and responsibility for such offenses, directions and ways to improve Federal Law No. 498-FZ and the practice of its application are also highlighted. Attention is paid not only to modern, but also to historical, international and foreign experience of legal regulation of the considered social relations, norms-requirements, restrictions and prohibitions in the field of keeping and using animals, moral and ethical aspects of interaction between people and animals, which emphasizes the complex and interdisciplinary nature of the presented research. 
 The publication is addressed to lawyers-scientists and practitioners, subjects of the law of legislative initiative, employees of state authorities and local self-government bodies directly involved in the application of the norms of Federal Law No. 498-FZ, employees of various organizations engaged in the maintenance, use and protection of animals, animal rights activists, students and postgraduates of law schools, as well as a wide range of readers interested in this issue.
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7

Ghebrehewet, Sam, and Alex G. Stewart. Incidents and outbreak management. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198745471.003.0020.

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Communicable disease outbreak investigation is one of the key health protection functions. The investigation of environmental situations and incidents is also a developing area in the field. This chapter takes an all-hazard approach to cover the general principles and practice of incident and outbreak investigation and management in all three domains of health protection (communicable disease control, emergency response, and environmental public health). It includes: the key definitions and steps in investigation of incidents and outbreaks; the practical approaches to managing incidents and outbreaks; the steps and processes in the investigation and control of emergency response and environmental public health incidents; and the overall approach to public health risk assessment in all three domains.
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8

Harrison, Henrietta, Naima Bradley, Greg Hodgson, Robie Kamanyire, and Andrew Kibble. Essentials of Environmental Public Health Science: A Handbook for Field Professionals. Oxford University Press, 2014.

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9

Ghebrehewet, Sam, Alex G. Stewart, and Ian Rufus. What is health protection? Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198745471.003.0001.

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Health Protection is one of the core fields of public health work. It can be defined as: “The protection of individuals, groups and populations through expert advice and effective collaboration to prevent and mitigate the impact of infectious disease, environmental, chemical and radiological threats.” This chapter concisely sets out the breadth and nature of health protection practice across its three domains: communicable disease control, emergency preparedness, resilience and response (EPRR), and environmental public health. The development of these domains and the scope of health protection are illustrated by a brief history of its development in England. The role of a specialist health protection service is also described.
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10

Ghebrehewet, Sam, and Alex G. Stewart. Who is involved in health protection? Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198745471.003.0002.

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Health protection encompasses a wide range of professionals, with a complex skill mix, in a wide variety of fields, across all domains of public health, and in every corner of the globe. Contributions to health protection functions and activities are not limited to those who practice health protection professionally. Protecting the nation’s health relies on involvement and meaningful engagement of the general public, professionals, media, politicians, and many other parties. This chapter describes how the health protection functions delivered by specialized professionals are complemented by the roles of other individuals and organizations, from the lowest operator to the highest strategist. It also sets out the different roles of the organizations and staff providing health protection functions for communicable disease control, emergency preparedness, resilience and response (EPRR), and environmental public health in the UK.
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11

Porta, Miquel, and John M. Last. A Dictionary of Public Health. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acref/9780191844386.001.0001.

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Over 5,000 entriesThis dictionary covers terms used in public health science and practice, including areas such as communicable disease control, epidemiology, genetics, nutrition, toxicology, social work, sanitation and public health engineering, environmental sciences, and administration. It offers definitions, discussion, and an occasional brief commentary on the relevance of each term to people and their health.The second edition expands coverage of terms relevant to the following areas, amongst others: health policy, health economics, and health services, including the Affordable Care Act and related topics; preventive medicine, health promotion, and behavioral sciences; risk assessment and risk management; emerging diseases; emergency preparedness; and bioethics and essential legal terms relevant for public health. It includes a list of useful web links and c.300 bibliographic references, directly linked from relevant entries. It continues to be a trusted resource for answers to questions that arise in the course of public health practice, whether in the office or in the field, in interactions with the public or with the media.
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12

Bedding, RA, RJ Akhurst, and HK Kaya, eds. Nematodes and the Biological Control of Insect Pests. CSIRO Publishing, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643105218.

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Environmental and public health problems arising from the use of chemical insecticides have led to an increasing demand for alternatives for insect pest control. Together with this, widespread public concern resulting in governmental bans on many of the most effective insecticides and development of insecticide resistance has severely reduced the range of useful insecticides available. Alternative control measures such as the biological control of pest insects with parasitoids and predators and microbial biocides have been in field use for several decades. Although these alternatives are being continually improved, most insect pests are nonetheless still controlled with chemical insecticides.
 This book presents the latest work on the biological control of insects using nematodes; it covers a range of topics that will help provide a better understanding of the potential problems involved in developing these nematodes as biological control agents. Nematodes infect hundreds of different species from most orders of insects and affect their insect hosts in a variety of ways.
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13

Butler, Jay C., and Michael R. Fraser, eds. A Public Health Guide to Ending the Opioid Epidemic. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190056810.001.0001.

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Few contributions to the field concerning the current opioid crisis in the United States focus sufficient attention on the public health aspects of the epidemic and share examples that practitioners can use to prevent opioid use disorder and the broader issues of substance misuse and addiction. A great deal of prior published work has concentrated on health care and clinical perspectives related to the crisis, including developing prescribing guidelines, enhancing prescription drug monitoring programs, scaling up access to overdose reversal medication, and making medication-assisted treatment more widely available nationwide. This book adds to and complements this prior work by addressing the central tenets of the public health approach to the opioid crisis. Topics include how to best support community-based, primary prevention of substance misuse and addiction in various settings with diverse populations and how to effectively address the cultural, social, and environmental aspects of health that are driving the epidemic. Chapters describe how governmental public health agencies play a significant role in responding to the epidemic, in both public health’s traditional approach to disease surveillance and control and contemporary approaches to health promotion that include building community resilience, addressing the impact of adverse childhood events, and mitigating the root causes of addiction community-wide. This volume can be used to explore what it means to address primary prevention of addiction and how public health practitioners have led efforts to promote “opioid stewardship” at the local, state, and federal levels.
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14

Prah Ruger, Jennifer. International and Global Health Law. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199694631.003.0007.

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International health law and global health law comprise a rather new field of academic study. Most broadly, this field encompasses all international legal arrangements pertinent to health—international environmental law, humanitarian and human rights law, trade and labor law, laws relating to arms control, and so on. More narrowly, it incorporates only international legal systems targeting health threats. The two most prominent examples are the International Health Regulations (IHR), focused on infectious diseases, and WHO’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), concerned with chronic diseases. The PG/SHG approach reaches beyond international health law to offer a normative global health law theory. It sees human flourishing as global society’s end goal and proposes an ethical demand for health equity as the criterion for evaluating global health law. Realizing this ethical goal will likely require legal instruments, but, more fundamentally, it will require public moral norms.
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15

West, Peter. Guide to Introduced Pest Animals of Australia. CSIRO Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9781486305681.

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Australia’s introduced vertebrate pest species cost at least $1 billion annually in economic, environmental and social impacts. The Guide to Introduced Pest Animals of Australia is a comprehensive, practical guide to 60 introduced pest animal species present in Australia, including 27 mammals, 18 birds, nine freshwater fish, two amphibians and four reptiles. It contains descriptive information to identify each species in the field, including distinctive physical characteristics, size, weight, colouration, diet, breeding behaviour, habitat preferences, and information about footprints, dung, scats and audible animal calls.
 Each species profile is accompanied by practical management information, maps and high-quality photographs – allowing readers to learn about pest species in their local area, what problems they might cause, and what control options exist for management. This guide also contains a number of emerging high-risk pest species that may pose a significant threat to our natural environment, economy, agriculture and human health.
 Whether you are a farmer, natural resource manager, public land manager, pest controller, teacher, student, field naturalist or wildlife ecologist, this easy-to-use guide will help you identify Australia’s most significant introduced pest animals in your local area.
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16

Cardoso, Leonardo. Sound-Politics in São Paulo. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190660093.001.0001.

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This book is an ethnographic study of controversial sounds and noise control debates in Latin America’s most populous city. It discusses the politics of collective living by following several threads linking sound-making practices to governance issues. Rather than discussing sound within a self-enclosed “cultural” field, I examine it as a point of entry for analyzing the state. At the same time, rather than portraying the state as a self-enclosed “apparatus” with seemingly inexhaustible homogeneous power, I describe it as a collection of unstable (and often contradictory) sectors, personnel, strategies, discourses, documents, and agencies. My goal is to approach sound as an analytical category that allows us to access citizenship issues. As I show, environmental noise in São Paulo has been entangled in a wide range of debates, including public health, religious intolerance, crime control, urban planning, cultural rights, and economic growth. The book’s guiding question can be summarized as follows: how do sounds enter and leave the sphere of state control? I answer this question by examining a multifaceted process I define as “sound-politics.” The term refers to sounds as objects that are susceptible to state intervention through specific regulatory, disciplinary, and punishment mechanisms. Both “sound” and “politics” in “sound-politics” are nouns, with the hyphen serving as a bridge that expresses the instability that each concept inserts into the other.
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