Source: UN Foundation
The report ‘Securing Water, Sustaining Growth’ draws on research led by the University of Oxford and analyses the links between investment in water management and economic development in river basins worldwide. It was written by an international Task Force of academics, researchers and practitioners that was established by the Global Water Partnership (GWP) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
The Conference will bring 250-300 leading researchers, early career scholars and policy experts from around the world to the Australian National University to engage in discussions on critical issues in social science governance research on the environment and sustainable development.
Every 10 years, Japan plays host to the World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction. The third such event, which kicks off this week in Sendai, will have particular resonance for local residents.
In the coming decades, climate change will expose hundreds of millions of people to its impacts.
An individual focus is needed to assess interconnected threats and build resilience worldwide, urge Jan Willem Erisman and colleagues.
Next Saturday, the Third World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction (WCDRR) kicks off in the coastal city of Sendai. Never heard of it? You’re not alone. Disaster risk reduction (DRR) has been on international agendas for decades, but it tends to get overshadowed by climate change.
Community-led solutions to the challenges of climate change are creating more resilient city infrastructure, researchers have found.
The Stockholm Resilience Centre has produced a new study of the planetary boundaries, a concept it first unleashed on the planet in 2009. It reveals a worsening situation. It has received considerable media attention as an issue of environmental impact. But it is much more than that.
As world leaders deal with climate change, aim to lift more people out of poverty, and make the world a more sustainable, prosperous place in 2015, here are the top Stories to Watch, according to WRI’s experts and as presented by WRI President and CEO Andrew Steer on January 8.