[The Guardians Hindi Dubbed 720p

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Abdul Soumphonphakdy

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Jun 13, 2024, 6:40:42 AM6/13/24
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Weave networks: Re:wild works with a global network of more than 400 partners in 84 countries, and serves as a hub for connecting the right people to advance important biodiversity initiatives.

Re:wild stands with rangers, wildlife wardens, forest guards, scouts and watchers worldwide in honor of their courage, their commitment and their sacrifices. Without the rangers who risk their lives protecting wildlife and wild places, there would be very little wild at all. Rangers are guardians of the wild, of history and of culture sites. They are teachers, guides, scientific collaborators and emergency responders.

The Guardians Hindi Dubbed 720p


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The value of the services Rangers provide is estimated at $125-$140 TRILLION per year. From managing wildlife tourism to preventing illegal poaching and wildlife trade, Rangers are the stewards of our most precious resources.

Re:wild scholarships, paid fellowships, and mentorships have provided more than 450 young conservationists from underserved communities, HBCUs and Tribal colleges across the U.S. with marketable skills, field experience, career-planning tools and inspiring BIPOC role models.


Case Study: The Green Careers Roundtable is an annual virtual event hosted by the National Wildlife Federation, co-sponsored by Re:wild and Planet Women, designed to help prepare and inform students, faculty, and alumni of color for the explosion of career opportunities expected to come as the world transitions to a greener economy with an increased focus on the intersection of social, economic, and environmental justice. You can watch the most recent one here.

The global 30x30 effort to protect 30% of our planet's wild lands will require more rangers and protected area personnel, according to a study led by Re:wild. Women are needed to fill these roles, and to pave the way for all who want to protect and restore the wild.

Re:wild Your Campus, a fiscally sponsored program of Re:wild, empowers the next generation of environmental leaders to create safer, more sustainable living and learning environments for all, by starting locally and advocating for organic land care on their campuses. Re:wild Your Campus provides students with tools to work with groundskeepers, develop campaign strategies, and provide alternatives in order to transition their campuses to organic land maintenance and ultimately re-wild and revolutionize landcare and create safer spaces for all.

Developing community-led and owned prevention strategies that take into account the societal and cultural drivers of wildlife crime, and implementing systems and technology to stop poachers before a crime is even committed.

Partnering with the next generation, passionate leaders, communities and organizations all over the world to ensure they have the enabling conditions, resources and expertise they need to most effectively protect and manage wildlife and wildlands.

Building a team of engaged global citizens by inspiring changes in daily habits and promoting individual and collective actions that drive real and lasting change. We harness our platforms and reach to generate international attention around imminent threats to wildlife and wildlands and the communities who rely on them, usually from extractive industries, to positively influence decision-makers and other stakeholders.

This tool focuses on temporary protection. It aims at assisting guardians appointed by Member States in supporting displaced children from Ukraine when registering for the temporary protection and exercising their rights. It is the first deliverable in the series of practical tools targeting guardians.

Guardians of the person and property must complete a training program. The training covers a guardian's specific responsibilities and provides helpful resources. There are separate programs for guardians of disabled persons and guardians of minors.

Some courts offer the training as a class you can attend. Others will allow you to complete the training program online. Ask the court that appointed you as guardian how you can meet the training requirement.

In addition to meeting the guardian orientation and training program requirements, attorneys appointed as guardians of minors or disabled persons with whom they have no prior relationship must watch a brief video on ethical considerations for attorney-guardians.

(c) The court may appoint a guardian if it determines that all the powers and duties listed in this section are needed to provide for the needs of the incapacitated person. The court may also appoint a guardian if it determines that a guardian is needed to provide for the needs of the incapacitated person through the exercise of some, but not all, of the powers and duties listed in this section. The duties and powers of a guardian or those which the court may grant to a guardian include, but are not limited to:

(1) the power to have custody of the person subject to guardianship and the power to establish a place of abode within or outside the state, except as otherwise provided in this clause. The person subject to guardianship or any interested person may petition the court to prevent or to initiate a change in abode. A person subject to guardianship may not be admitted to a regional treatment center by the guardian except:

(2) the duty to provide for the care, comfort, and maintenance needs of the person subject to guardianship, including food, clothing, shelter, health care, social and recreational requirements, and, whenever appropriate, training, education, and habilitation or rehabilitation. The guardian has no duty to pay for these requirements out of personal funds. Whenever possible and appropriate, the guardian should meet these requirements through governmental benefits or services to which the person subject to guardianship is entitled, rather than from the estate of the person subject to guardianship. Failure to satisfy the needs and requirements of this clause shall be grounds for removal of a private guardian, but the guardian shall have no personal or monetary liability;

(3) the duty to take reasonable care of the clothing, furniture, vehicles, and other personal effects of the person subject to guardianship, and, if other property requires protection, the power to seek appointment of a conservator of the estate. The guardian must give notice by mail to interested persons prior to the disposition of the clothing, furniture, vehicles, or other personal effects of the person subject to guardianship. The notice must inform the person of the right to object to the disposition of the property within ten days of the date of mailing and to petition the court for a review of the guardian's proposed actions. Notice of the objection must be served by mail or personal service on the guardian and the person subject to guardianship unless the person subject to guardianship is the objector. The guardian served with notice of an objection to the disposition of the property may not dispose of the property unless the court approves the disposition after a hearing;

(4)(i) the power to give any necessary consent to enable the person subject to guardianship to receive necessary medical or other professional care, counsel, treatment, or service, except that no guardian may give consent for psychosurgery, electroshock, sterilization, or experimental treatment of any kind unless the procedure is first approved by order of the court as provided in this clause. The guardian shall not consent to any medical care for the person subject to guardianship which violates the known conscientious, religious, or moral belief of the person subject to guardianship;

(ii) a guardian who believes a procedure described in item (i) requiring prior court approval to be necessary for the proper care of the person subject to guardianship, shall petition the court for an order and, in the case of a public guardianship under chapter 252A, obtain the written recommendation of the commissioner of human services. The court shall fix the time and place for the hearing and shall give notice to the person subject to guardianship in such manner as specified in section 524.5-308 and to interested persons. The court shall appoint an attorney to represent the person subject to guardianship who is not represented by counsel, provided that such appointment shall expire upon the expiration of the appeal time for the order issued by the court under this section or the order dismissing a petition, or upon such other time or event as the court may direct. In every case the court shall determine if the procedure is in the best interest of the person subject to guardianship. In making its determination, the court shall consider a written medical report which specifically considers the medical risks of the procedure, whether alternative, less restrictive methods of treatment could be used to protect the best interest of the person subject to guardianship, and any recommendation of the commissioner of human services for a public person subject to guardianship. The standard of proof is that of clear and convincing evidence;

(iii) in the case of a petition for sterilization of a person with developmental disabilities subject to guardianship, the court shall appoint a licensed physician, a psychologist who is qualified in the diagnosis and treatment of developmental disability, and a social worker who is familiar with the social history and adjustment of the person subject to guardianship or the case manager for the person subject to guardianship to examine or evaluate the person subject to guardianship and to provide written reports to the court. The reports shall indicate why sterilization is being proposed, whether sterilization is necessary and is the least intrusive method for alleviating the problem presented, and whether it is in the best interest of the person subject to guardianship. The medical report shall specifically consider the medical risks of sterilization, the consequences of not performing the sterilization, and whether alternative methods of contraception could be used to protect the best interest of the person subject to guardianship;

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