Books on the topic 'Building drinking water'

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1

Committee, New Jersey Legislature General Assembly Energy and Natural Resources. Public hearings before Assembly Energy and Natural Resources Committee on Assembly bills 2693 and 2694 (financing public water supply service surrounding GEMS landfill): July 24, 1985, Gloucester Twp. Municipal Building, Gloucester Township, Camden County, New Jersey. [Trenton, N.J.]: The Committee, 1985.

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2

3Ts for reducing lead in drinking water in schools: Revised technical guidance. Washington, DC: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, 2005.

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3

Juan Claudio Aznar de Polanco. Tratado de los cuatro elementos, origen, y nacimiento de las aguas, y fuentes de Madrid, y sus viages subterraneos. Madrid: E y P Libros Antiguos, 1992.

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4

US GOVERNMENT. The Solid Waste Disposal Act: As amended by the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984 (Public Law 98-616); the Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1986 (Public Law 99-339); and the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-499). Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1987.

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5

GOVERNMENT, US. The Solid Waste Disposal Act: As amended by the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984 (Public Law 98-616); the Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1986 (Public Law 99-339); and the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-499). Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1987.

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6

US GOVERNMENT. The Solid Waste Disposal Act: As amended by the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984 (Public Law 98-616), the Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1986 (Public Law 99-339), and the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-499). Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1987.

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7

Muller, Heini, Christian Meuli, Heini Pfiffner, and Karl Wehrle. Building Construction (Drinking Water Supply). The Swiss Centre for Development Cooperation (SKAT, 2002.

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8

Blokker, Mirjam, Chris Büscher, Luc Palmen, and Claudia Agudelo-Vera. Future drinking water infrastructure: building blocks for drinking water companies for their strategic planning. IWA Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/9781789060485.

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9

F, Hock V., and Construction Engineering Research Laboratories (U.S.), eds. Control of plumbosolvency in building plumbing supplies. [Champaign, IL]: US Army Corps of Engineers, Construction Engineering Research Laboratories, 1996.

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10

M, Ashrafuzzaman A. K., Sarwar Hasan, and Bāṃlādeśa Pallī Unnaẏana Ekāḍemī, eds. Drinking water contamination by arsenic in rural areas of Bangladesh: Possible solution and awareness building : a workshop report. Comilla: Bangladesh Academy for Rural Development, 1999.

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11

Chan, Emily Ying Yang. Building Bottom-up Health and Disaster Risk Reduction Programmes. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198807179.001.0001.

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Although urban living has accounted for being the lifestyle for more than half of the global population since 2010, nearly half are still living in a rural context. As pointed out by the United Nations as a backdrop of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) (2016–2030), at least 1.8 billion people across the world still consumed faecally contaminated drinking water by 2015, 2.4 million lacked access to basic sanitation services such as toilets or latrines, and nearly 1,000 children died every day of preventable water and sanitation-related diarrhoeal diseases. Rural areas fare far worse: children are about 1.7 times more likely to die before their fifth birthday as those in urban areas. About 16% of the rural population do not use improved drinking water sources, compared to 4% of the urban population. About 50% of people living in rural areas lack improved sanitation facilities, compared to only 18% of people in urban regions. Far too many one-off rural on-site public health knowledge transfer projects fail to deliver long-term results. Theoretical understanding may be strengthened among non-governmental organization (NGO) practitioners and volunteers to support project planning, monitoring, and evaluation. Based on public health theories and illustrated by relevant examples, as well as the insights gained from the long-established CCOUC Ethnic Minority Health Project in China, this book introduces how health, emergency, and disaster preparedness education programmes could be organized in remote rural Asia, which could become a useful reference for organizers and volunteers of rural development projects.
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12

Lead in Drinking Water in Schools and Non-Residential Buildings. Diane Pub Co, 1994.

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13

Giles, Cynthia. Next Generation Compliance. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197656747.001.0001.

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Abstract Nearly everyone accepts as gospel two assumptions: compliance with environmental rules is good, and enforcement is responsible for making compliance happen. Both are wrong. In fact, serious violations of environmental regulations are widespread, and by far the most important driver of compliance results is not enforcement but the structure of the rule itself. In Next Generation Compliance: Environmental Regulation for the Modern Era, Cynthia Giles shows that well-designed regulations deploying creative strategies to make compliance the default can achieve excellent implementation outcomes. Poorly designed rules that create many opportunities to evade, obfuscate, or ignore will have dismal performance that no amount of enforcement will ever fix. Rampant violations have real consequences: unhealthy air, polluted water, contaminated drinking water, exposure to dangerous chemicals, and unrestrained climate-forcing pollution. They also land hardest on already overburdened communities—that’s why Next Gen and environmental justice are tightly linked. The good news is there are tools to build much better compliance into regulations, including many tested strategies that can be the building blocks of programs that withstand the inevitable pressures of real life. Next Generation Compliance shows how regulators can avoid the compliance calamities that plague far too many environmental rules today, a lesson that is particularly urgent for regulations tackling climate change. It has an optimistic message: there are ways to ensure reliable results, if regulators jettison incorrect assumptions and design rules that are resilient to the mess and complexity of the real world.
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14

C, Dudley Jack, ed. Custodial staffing guidelines for educational facilities. Alexandria, Va: Association of Higher Education Facilities Officers, 1992.

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15

Lachniet, Matthew S., and Juan Pablo Bernal-Uruchurtu. AD 550–600 Collapse at Teotihuacan. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199329199.003.0006.

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We analyze a 2400-year rainfall reconstruction from an ultra-high-resolution absolutely-dated stalagmite (JX-6) from southwestern Mexico (Lachniet et al., 2012). Oxygen isotope variations correlate strongly to rainfall amount in the Mexico City area since 1870 CE, and for the wider southwestern Mexico region since 1948, allowing us to quantitatively reconstruct rainfall variability for the Basin of Mexico and Sierra Madre del Sur for the past 2400 years. Because oxygen isotopes integrate rainfall variations over broad geographic regions, our data suggest substantial variations in Mesoamerican monsoon strength over the past two millennia. As a result of low age uncertainties (≤ 11 yr), our stalagmite paleoclimate reconstruction allows us to place robust ages on past rainfall variations with a resolution an order of magnitude more precise than archeological dates associated with societal change. We relate our new rainfall reconstruction to the sequence of events at Teotihuacan (Millon, 1967; Cowgill, 2015a) and to other pre-Colombian civilizations in Mesoamerica. We observe a centuries long drying trend that culminated in peak drought conditions in ca. 750 CE related to a weakening monsoon, which may have been a stressor on Mesoamerican societies. Teotihuacan is an ideal location to test for links between climate change and society, because it was located in a semi-arid highland valley with limited permanent water sources, which relied upon spring fed irrigation to ensure a reliable maize harvest (Sanders, 1977). The city of Teotihuacan was one of the largest Mesoamerican cities, which apparently reached population sizes of 80,000 to 100,000 inhabitants by AD 300 (Cowgill, 1997; 2015a). Following the “Great Fire”, which dates approximately to AD 550, population decreased to lower levels and many buildings were abandoned (Cowgill, 2015). Because of the apparent reliance on rainwater capture (Linn é, 2003) and spring-fed agriculture in the Teotihuacan valley to ensure food security and drinking water, food production and domestic water supplies should have been sensitive to rainfall variations that recharge the surficial aquifer that sustained spring discharge prior recent groundwater extraction.
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16

Agenda 21 Earth Summit: United Nations Program of Action from Rio. United Nations, 1992.

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