An application of resilience thinking to Asia-Pacific food systems
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2018Corporate Author/ s
UN.ESCAP
Asian Development Bank (ADB)
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
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RT Generic T1 An application of resilience thinking to Asia-Pacific food systems A1 UN.ESCAP, Asian Development Bank (ADB), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), YR 2018 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5079 PB United Nations AB A resilience-thinking approach can help policy makers in addressing the risks confronting several critical human systems of the Asia-Pacific region. Application of the resilience-thinking approach reveals that food systems of the region are vulnerable to risks ranging from climate change to over-dependency on limited number of suppliers. Policy makers should proactively identify and adopt measures to build resilience of food systems, some of which are highlighted in this policy brief. OL English(30) TY - GEN T1 - An application of resilience thinking to Asia-Pacific food systems AU - UN.ESCAPAsian Development Bank (ADB)United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Y1 - 2018 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5079 PB - United Nations AB - A resilience-thinking approach can help policy makers in addressing the risks confronting several critical human systems of the Asia-Pacific region. Application of the resilience-thinking approach reveals that food systems of the region are vulnerable to risks ranging from climate change to over-dependency on limited number of suppliers. Policy makers should proactively identify and adopt measures to build resilience of food systems, some of which are highlighted in this policy brief. @misc{20.500.12870_5079 author = {UN.ESCAPAsian Development Bank (ADB)United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)}, title = {An application of resilience thinking to Asia-Pacific food systems}, year = {2018}, abstract = {A resilience-thinking approach can help policy makers in addressing the risks confronting several critical human systems of the Asia-Pacific region. Application of the resilience-thinking approach reveals that food systems of the region are vulnerable to risks ranging from climate change to over-dependency on limited number of suppliers. Policy makers should proactively identify and adopt measures to build resilience of food systems, some of which are highlighted in this policy brief.}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5079} } @misc{20.500.12870_5079 author = {UN.ESCAPAsian Development Bank (ADB)United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)}, title = {An application of resilience thinking to Asia-Pacific food systems}, year = {2018}, abstract = {A resilience-thinking approach can help policy makers in addressing the risks confronting several critical human systems of the Asia-Pacific region. Application of the resilience-thinking approach reveals that food systems of the region are vulnerable to risks ranging from climate change to over-dependency on limited number of suppliers. Policy makers should proactively identify and adopt measures to build resilience of food systems, some of which are highlighted in this policy brief.}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5079} } TY - GEN T1 - An application of resilience thinking to Asia-Pacific food systems AU - UN.ESCAPAsian Development Bank (ADB)United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5079 PB - United Nations AB - A resilience-thinking approach can help policy makers in addressing the risks confronting several critical human systems of the Asia-Pacific region. Application of the resilience-thinking approach reveals that food systems of the region are vulnerable to risks ranging from climate change to over-dependency on limited number of suppliers. Policy makers should proactively identify and adopt measures to build resilience of food systems, some of which are highlighted in this policy brief.Metadata
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A resilience-thinking approach can help policy makers in addressing the risks confronting several critical human systems of the Asia-Pacific region. Application of the resilience-thinking approach reveals that food systems of the region are vulnerable to risks ranging from climate change to over-dependency on limited number of suppliers. Policy makers should proactively identify and adopt measures to build resilience of food systems, some of which are highlighted in this policy brief.