BIBLIOTECA MANUEL BELGRANO - Facultad de Ciencias Económicas - UNC

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Building a sustainable future : the Africa region environment strategy / Banco Mundial

Por: Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Directions in developmentDetalles de publicación: World Bank Washington, D.C. 2002Descripción: ix, 126 p. : ilISBN:
  • 0-8213-5146-X
Tema(s): Clasificación CDD:
  • 333.715096
Contenidos:
Foreword -- Preface -- Abbreviations and acronyms -- Executive summary -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Urgent issues and trends: environment through a poverty lens -- 3. Lessons from World Bank experience -- 4. Priorities for action -- 5. Implementing for action -- Appendix A -- Appendix B -- Notes -- References -- Tables -- Figure -- Boxes.
Resumen: This environment strategy outlines the current thinking in the World Bank Group Africa Region about priorities and actions for the institution in the environmental arena. The Africa Region Environment Strategy (ARES) outlines the Bank ' s commitment to help its clients achieve sustainable poverty reduction through better environmental management. It identifies the most urgent issues at the interface of environment and poverty and discusses targeted actions for addressing them. It reviews the lessons from experience to date and proposes new approaches. The strategic context in which the ARES has evolved and will be implemented is defined by the Bank ' s mission statement and operational policies, the World Bank Environment Strategy (WBES), and by the Bank ' s broader objectives, priorities, and strategies in the Africa Region. Like the WBES, the ARES approaches environment through a " poverty lens " and targets four main objectives: a) ensuring sustainable livelihoods, b) improving environmental health, c) reducing vulnerability to natural disasters, and d) maintaining local, regional, and global ecosystems and values. Key elements of the ARES include integrating environment into development and poverty reduction strategies; building an enabling environment and the institutional and human capacity for sustainable environmental management; promoting environmentally sustainable and equitable private sector-led economic development; improving governance; and encouraging decentralization.
Existencias
Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Signatura topográfica URL Estado Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras
Libro Libro Biblioteca Manuel Belgrano 333.715096 B 47786 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) Enlace al recurso Disponible 47786

Incluye bibliografía

Foreword -- Preface -- Abbreviations and acronyms -- Executive summary -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Urgent issues and trends: environment through a poverty lens -- 3. Lessons from World Bank experience -- 4. Priorities for action -- 5. Implementing for action -- Appendix A -- Appendix B -- Notes -- References -- Tables -- Figure -- Boxes.

This environment strategy outlines the current thinking in the World Bank Group Africa Region about priorities and actions for the institution in the environmental arena. The Africa Region Environment Strategy (ARES) outlines the Bank ' s commitment to help its clients achieve sustainable poverty reduction through better environmental management. It identifies the most urgent issues at the interface of environment and poverty and discusses targeted actions for addressing them. It reviews the lessons from experience to date and proposes new approaches. The strategic context in which the ARES has evolved and will be implemented is defined by the Bank ' s mission statement and operational policies, the World Bank Environment Strategy (WBES), and by the Bank ' s broader objectives, priorities, and strategies in the Africa Region. Like the WBES, the ARES approaches environment through a " poverty lens " and targets four main objectives: a) ensuring sustainable livelihoods, b) improving environmental health, c) reducing vulnerability to natural disasters, and d) maintaining local, regional, and global ecosystems and values. Key elements of the ARES include integrating environment into development and poverty reduction strategies; building an enabling environment and the institutional and human capacity for sustainable environmental management; promoting environmentally sustainable and equitable private sector-led economic development; improving governance; and encouraging decentralization.

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