

Health Information (particularly in relation to children and young persons’ and parent records) including medical records, counselling records, disabilities, immunisation details, psychological reports, individual health care plans, and counselling reports.Īs part of our recruitment processes for employees, contractors and volunteers, we collect and hold:.Sensitive Information particularly in relation to providing appropriate services and records in relation to young people and their families, as well as our work health and safety obligations including where relevant, government identifiers (such as TFN), religious beliefs, nationality, country of birth, languages spoken at home, family court orders and criminal records.
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Personal Information including names, addresses and other contact details dates of birth next of kin details photographic images attendance records and financial information.In the course of providing services we collect and hold: Depending on the circumstances, we may collect personal information from the individual in their capacity as a recipient of our services, a member of a service recipient’s family or household, contractor, volunteer, stakeholder, job applicant, service provider, visitors or others that come into contact with Redkite. The integrated conservation strategy is sufficiently general such that it can be adapted to inform conservation of other highly mobile species subject to global change.Personal information is information or an opinion about an individual from which they can be reasonably identified. We identify and explore key issues for conserving the red kite under global change, including enhancing conservation actions within and outside protected areas, recovering depleted populations, accounting for climate change, and transboundary coordination in adaptive conservation and management actions. This led us to a forward-looking and integrated strategy that emphasizes international coordination involving researchers and conservation practitioners to enhance the science-policy-action interface. Populations however remain depleted along the southern-most edge of the geographic range where many migratory red kites from northern strongholds overwinter. Based on our review, conservation actions have been successful at recovering red kite populations within certain regions. We fill this gap through a case study examining the ecological status and conservation of a migratory raptor and facultative scavenger, the red kite ( Milvus milvus), whose current breeding range is limited to Europe and is associated with agricultural landscapes and restricted to the temperate zone. While research on migratory populations has received growing attention, considerably less emphasis has been given to integrating ecological information throughout the annual cycle for examining strategies to conserve migratory species at multiple scales in the face of global change. Such laws and policies have been credited with positive outcomes for the conservation of migratory species, but the lack of international coordination and on-ground implementation pose major challenges. In the last two decades the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) has provided a framework for several subsidiary instruments including action plans for migratory bird species, but the effectiveness and transferability of these plans remain unclear. Calls for urgent action to conserve biodiversity under global change are increasing, and conservation of migratory species in this context poses special challenges.
