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There is evidence that the world has been witnessing more intense
tropical cyclones. Accompanying these tropical cyclones are
heightened levels of devastation that witness the loss of human
life and wildlife, destruction of natural resources and property
and the disruption of major economic and social activities. To this
end, there is a growing demand for publications focusing on
tropical cyclones at various levels that include regional, national
and local levels, especially from Africa. One sub-region that has
been witnessing the harsh realities of the increasing intensity of
tropical cyclones in southern Africa. However, within this region,
countries are usually impacted at varying degrees of damage. Among
the countries that usually encounter the harshness of these
tropical cyclones are the Comoros, Botswana, Madagascar, Mauritius,
Malawi, Mozambique, Reunion, the Seychelles, South Africa and
Zimbabwe. From the history books, the following tropical cyclones
made landfall and hit southern Africa: Eline (2000), Favio (2007),
Dineo (2017), Idai (2019), Kenneth (2019), Eliose (2021), and
Chalane (2020). Although all these tropical cyclones had negative
impacts, it is undoubtedly Tropical Cyclone Idai that shocked the
world with its devastation mainly in Mozambique, Malawi and
Zimbabwe in March 2019. Key infrastructure was destroyed,
livelihoods were lost, and the environment was degraded. Thousands
of people died, many more were injured, many remain unaccounted for
and others remained homeless as of the time of finalising this book
in February 2021. This book, therefore focuses on the devastating
impacts of Tropical Cyclone Idai in Zimbabwe. The book interfaces
Tropical Cyclone Idai's impacts with the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development and some of the 17 Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs). This linkage was deliberate given that there is still
time remaining until 2030, and the world has generally agreed to
move into the future along the pathways of sustainable development
and sustainability. The book adds to the first comprehensive
profiling of the impacts of tropical cyclones on southern African
economies, particularly that of Zimbabwe. It also comes up as the
first in a three-volume series. The other volumes to look out for
are Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol 2: Foundational and Fundamental
Topics; and Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol 3: Implications for the
Sustainable Development Goals. To this end, this book is suitable
as a read for several professionals and disciplines such as tourism
and hospitality studies, economics, sustainable development,
development studies, environmental sciences, arts, geography, life
sciences, politics, planning and public health.
The subject of tropical cyclones in Southern Africa, also known as
hurricanes or typhoons in other regions of the world, has been
growing over the past few decades. However, there is still limited
literature on foundational and fundamental topics on the matter. To
this end, this book addresses this gap, citing some examples from
both historic and recent tropical cyclones. The book presents
meteorological and climatic aspects of tropical cyclones, including
reviews on forecasting, warning message dissemination and public
response aspects of early warning systems with a focus on the
Tropical Cyclones Idai and Kenneth. Fundamentals in disaster risk
reduction (DRR) are also discussed moving from the provisions of
the Hyogo Framework for Action (2005-2015), to the Sendai Framework
for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015-2030). Climate change issues are
central to the publication, as well as the role of information and
communication technologies in DRR and management. The book also
tackles some challenges and opportunities associated with the
implementation of regional legal and institutional frameworks on
DRR. The book comes as part of a series with three volumes. The
other volumes include "Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol. 1:
Interfacing the Catastrophic Impact of Cyclone Idai with SDGs in
Zimbabwe" and "Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol 3: Implications for
the Sustainable Development Goals". To this end, this book is
suitable as a read for several professionals and disciplines such
as tourism and hospitality studies, economics, sustainable
development, development studies, environmental sciences, arts,
geography, life sciences, politics, planning and public health.
This book profiles various cases that are emerging in addressing
global challenges in the context of SDGs for society in the era of
climate change and covers case studies of projects being undertaken
to tackle biodiversity, food security, climate change, energy and
water security. The book is written by 37 authors, and will appeal
to various stakeholders including academics working within the
identified thematic areas, policy planners, development agencies,
governments and United Nations agencies. The adoption of the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015 ushered a new era in
the global development agenda as the world transitioned from the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The new era of SDGs that are
all-inclusive, unlike the MDGs with the focus now being on ensuring
human success that is predicated on environmental protection. The
year 2020 marked five years post the adoption of the SDGs with
increased calls for stock-taking of progress made amid strong calls
for a decade of action to accelerate the delivery of the SDGs by
2030. These calls have been louder now given the impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic, which reset the global economy and increased
intensity of extreme weather events across the world. Since climate
change has emerged as one of the biggest threats to the achievement
of the SDGs, there has been growing concerns on its impact on
biodiversity loss and the extinction of some species. There are
also concerns regarding increased food insecurity at the household
level in some parts of the world, particularly in Asia and Africa.
With the demand for climate change action on the increase, there
have also been growing calls for the big carbon emitters to
drastically cut their emissions and invest in clean energy to save
the planet by following development pathways making emissions stay
under the 1.5 DegreesC increase in temperature.
Written by 43 authors from Africa, Europe and Latin America, this
book presents 19 topics addressing poverty in the context of
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), leadership in implementing
SDGs, and SDGs in service delivery and local government. As the
world has gone past five years of implementing the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development and the intertwined 17 SDGs, new
opportunities in research continue to open up. Hence, documenting
some of the initiatives put in place around the world regarding the
implementation of the SDGs is one of the aims of this publication.
With 10 years remaining, the book further enhances the desire to
scale up SDGs implementation. The selection of case studies from
the selected regions also provides a balance in terms of how the
SDGs are being rolled out for economic growth, environmental
stewardship and social protection. The ambition remains even with
the challenge brought by the COVID-19 pandemic that preoccupied the
whole of 2020; spilling over to 2021. There is no doubt that
resources have been diverted, but the world must stay on the course
to 2030 and beyond. Therefore, the book is relevant for several
stakeholders including the academics, development partners,
government officials and other individuals that are involved in
making sure no one is left behind in the lead to 2030.
This volume challenges global leaders and citizenry to do more in
order to resource the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development (AfSD) and its 17 interwoven Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs). Starting from the concept 'we cannot
manage what we cannot measure', the book presents some cases
showing how to draw national level baselines for the domestication
and localisation of the SDGs seeking to provide a clear roadmap
towards achieving the 2030 AfSD. Scaling up SDGs Implementation is
targeted at the United Nations, national and state governments,
sub-national governments, the corporate sector and civil society,
including higher education institutes, labour groups,
non-governmental organisations and youth movements. The book is
cognizant of these institutions' common, but differentiated
responsibilities and capabilities within their socio-political,
environmental and economic conditions. The book presents case
studies of how the corporate sector has been scaling up SDGs
implementation, from the tourism sector, insurance, to the aviation
and agricultural sectors. To make sure that no one is left behind,
the volume includes cases on solutions for pressing environmental
and socio-economic problems ranging from cooperatives in Brazil to
the conservation of springs in Zimbabwe. The matter of finding
synergies between the climate SDG and the Paris Agreement's
Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) is elaborated at length.
Lastly, the book discusses how institutions of higher education
remain critical pillars in SDGs scaling up, with cases of
curriculum re-orientation in South Africa to the rolling out of the
Women's University in Africa. In this context, this volume
challenges every global citizen and organization to invest every
effort into making the implementation of the SDGs a success as we
welcome the second four to five year segment down the road to the
year 2030.
The COVID-19 pandemic had a devastating impact on tourist
destinations in developing and developed countries. Though
the entire globe was impacted, the short- and long-term
implications for tourism as well as prospects for
recovery vary across regions. This volume showcases research
on the impact of COVID-19 on tourism from across the
world. The book is divided into three parts, with the stage
set by an introductory chapter that will provide a background
and context. Part I contains chapters that explore the
impact of COVID-19 on selected international tourist destinations.
Part II showcases how various hotspots across the world adjusted to
the new normal under pandemic conditions. Part III is a
collection of chapters that address how various
destinations are attempting to recover from the shocks of the
COVID-19 pandemic. The concluding chapter, written by the editors,
seeks to synthesize the lessons offered in
the book and provide policy and practical implementation for
the tourism industry and other important tourism
stakeholders. Â
Tropical cyclones in Southern Africa, also known as hurricanes or
typhoons in other regions of the world, is a hot subject for
academic research. This focus has been magnified by the need to
consider tropical cyclones in the context of other global
development agendas, that includes the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development and its inseparable 17 Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs), the Paris Agreement, the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk
Reduction and Habitat III's New Urban Agenda. The ambitious SDGs
challenge global and community leaders to make sure development
addresses the nexus among poverty, inequality and employment
creation, as well as care for the earth and its natural resources
and biodiversity. The SDGs further present an agenda to eradicate
hunger, bring quality education and sustain water and sanitation.
The infrastructure development, human settlements, sustainable
consumption and production, climate change, biodiversity and the
ocean (blue) economy agendas are also pitched. Lastly, the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development encourages partnerships on
delivering various programmes and projects at all spatial levels.
However, as tropical cyclones continue to make multiple landfalls
and ravage Southern Africa and other parts of the world, the
achievement of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is
threatened. To this end, this book addresses this gap by
documenting the implications of tropical cyclones, drawing examples
and case studies from recent tropical cyclones such as cyclone Idai
and cyclone Kenneth that resulted in catastrophic impacts in 2019.
The book comes as part of a series with three volumes. The other
volumes include "Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol. 1: Interfacing
the Catastrophic Impact of Cyclone Idai with SDGs in Zimbabwe" and
"Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol 2: Foundational and Fundamental
Topics". Given the foregoing, the book is suitable as a read for
several professionals and disciplines such as tourism and
hospitality studies, economics, sustainable development,
development studies, environmental sciences, arts, geography, life
sciences, politics, planning and public health.
Written by 43 authors from Africa, Europe and Latin America, this
book presents 19 topics addressing poverty in the context of
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), leadership in implementing
SDGs, and SDGs in service delivery and local government. As the
world has gone past five years of implementing the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development and the intertwined 17 SDGs, new
opportunities in research continue to open up. Hence, documenting
some of the initiatives put in place around the world regarding the
implementation of the SDGs is one of the aims of this publication.
With 10 years remaining, the book further enhances the desire to
scale up SDGs implementation. The selection of case studies from
the selected regions also provides a balance in terms of how the
SDGs are being rolled out for economic growth, environmental
stewardship and social protection. The ambition remains even with
the challenge brought by the COVID-19 pandemic that preoccupied the
whole of 2020; spilling over to 2021. There is no doubt that
resources have been diverted, but the world must stay on the course
to 2030 and beyond. Therefore, the book is relevant for several
stakeholders including the academics, development partners,
government officials and other individuals that are involved in
making sure no one is left behind in the lead to 2030.
The subject of tropical cyclones in Southern Africa, also known as
hurricanes or typhoons in other regions of the world, has been
growing over the past few decades. However, there is still limited
literature on foundational and fundamental topics on the matter. To
this end, this book addresses this gap, citing some examples from
both historic and recent tropical cyclones. The book presents
meteorological and climatic aspects of tropical cyclones, including
reviews on forecasting, warning message dissemination and public
response aspects of early warning systems with a focus on the
Tropical Cyclones Idai and Kenneth. Fundamentals in disaster risk
reduction (DRR) are also discussed moving from the provisions of
the Hyogo Framework for Action (2005-2015), to the Sendai Framework
for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015-2030). Climate change issues are
central to the publication, as well as the role of information and
communication technologies in DRR and management. The book also
tackles some challenges and opportunities associated with the
implementation of regional legal and institutional frameworks on
DRR. The book comes as part of a series with three volumes. The
other volumes include "Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol. 1:
Interfacing the Catastrophic Impact of Cyclone Idai with SDGs in
Zimbabwe" and "Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol 3: Implications for
the Sustainable Development Goals". To this end, this book is
suitable as a read for several professionals and disciplines such
as tourism and hospitality studies, economics, sustainable
development, development studies, environmental sciences, arts,
geography, life sciences, politics, planning and public health.
This book profiles various cases that are emerging in addressing
global challenges in the context of SDGs for society in the era of
climate change and covers case studies of projects being undertaken
to tackle biodiversity, food security, climate change, energy and
water security. The book is written by 37 authors, and will appeal
to various stakeholders including academics working within the
identified thematic areas, policy planners, development agencies,
governments and United Nations agencies. The adoption of the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015 ushered a new era in
the global development agenda as the world transitioned from the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The new era of SDGs that are
all-inclusive, unlike the MDGs with the focus now being on ensuring
human success that is predicated on environmental protection. The
year 2020 marked five years post the adoption of the SDGs with
increased calls for stock-taking of progress made amid strong calls
for a decade of action to accelerate the delivery of the SDGs by
2030. These calls have been louder now given the impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic, which reset the global economy and increased
intensity of extreme weather events across the world. Since climate
change has emerged as one of the biggest threats to the achievement
of the SDGs, there has been growing concerns on its impact on
biodiversity loss and the extinction of some species. There are
also concerns regarding increased food insecurity at the household
level in some parts of the world, particularly in Asia and Africa.
With the demand for climate change action on the increase, there
have also been growing calls for the big carbon emitters to
drastically cut their emissions and invest in clean energy to save
the planet by following development pathways making emissions stay
under the 1.5 DegreesC increase in temperature.
There is evidence that the world has been witnessing more intense
tropical cyclones. Accompanying these tropical cyclones are
heightened levels of devastation that witness the loss of human
life and wildlife, destruction of natural resources and property
and the disruption of major economic and social activities. To this
end, there is a growing demand for publications focusing on
tropical cyclones at various levels that include regional, national
and local levels, especially from Africa. One sub-region that has
been witnessing the harsh realities of the increasing intensity of
tropical cyclones in southern Africa. However, within this region,
countries are usually impacted at varying degrees of damage. Among
the countries that usually encounter the harshness of these
tropical cyclones are the Comoros, Botswana, Madagascar, Mauritius,
Malawi, Mozambique, Reunion, the Seychelles, South Africa and
Zimbabwe. From the history books, the following tropical cyclones
made landfall and hit southern Africa: Eline (2000), Favio (2007),
Dineo (2017), Idai (2019), Kenneth (2019), Eliose (2021), and
Chalane (2020). Although all these tropical cyclones had negative
impacts, it is undoubtedly Tropical Cyclone Idai that shocked the
world with its devastation mainly in Mozambique, Malawi and
Zimbabwe in March 2019. Key infrastructure was destroyed,
livelihoods were lost, and the environment was degraded. Thousands
of people died, many more were injured, many remain unaccounted for
and others remained homeless as of the time of finalising this book
in February 2021. This book, therefore focuses on the devastating
impacts of Tropical Cyclone Idai in Zimbabwe. The book interfaces
Tropical Cyclone Idai's impacts with the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development and some of the 17 Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs). This linkage was deliberate given that there is still
time remaining until 2030, and the world has generally agreed to
move into the future along the pathways of sustainable development
and sustainability. The book adds to the first comprehensive
profiling of the impacts of tropical cyclones on southern African
economies, particularly that of Zimbabwe. It also comes up as the
first in a three-volume series. The other volumes to look out for
are Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol 2: Foundational and Fundamental
Topics; and Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol 3: Implications for the
Sustainable Development Goals. To this end, this book is suitable
as a read for several professionals and disciplines such as tourism
and hospitality studies, economics, sustainable development,
development studies, environmental sciences, arts, geography, life
sciences, politics, planning and public health.
This volume discusses the increasing occurrence of floods and
tornadoes in Southern Africa over the last few years. The book
discusses existing flood and tornado management protocols,
indigenous approaches to mitigate disaster risk, urban and
peri-urban flooding, tornado-induced flooding and windstorms, and
the challenges and vulnerabilities associated with rural and
transboundary floods. The book offers planning and recovery
strategies to minimise impacts from these events through
sustainable means. Such means include sustainable drainage systems,
waste management in harbors and beaches, community engagement in
flood-prone areas, and improved food security measures in urban
poor households.
Tropical cyclones in Southern Africa, also known as hurricanes or
typhoons in other regions of the world, is a hot subject for
academic research. This focus has been magnified by the need to
consider tropical cyclones in the context of other global
development agendas, that includes the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development and its inseparable 17 Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs), the Paris Agreement, the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk
Reduction and Habitat III's New Urban Agenda. The ambitious SDGs
challenge global and community leaders to make sure development
addresses the nexus among poverty, inequality and employment
creation, as well as care for the earth and its natural resources
and biodiversity. The SDGs further present an agenda to eradicate
hunger, bring quality education and sustain water and sanitation.
The infrastructure development, human settlements, sustainable
consumption and production, climate change, biodiversity and the
ocean (blue) economy agendas are also pitched. Lastly, the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development encourages partnerships on
delivering various programmes and projects at all spatial levels.
However, as tropical cyclones continue to make multiple landfalls
and ravage Southern Africa and other parts of the world, the
achievement of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is
threatened. To this end, this book addresses this gap by
documenting the implications of tropical cyclones, drawing examples
and case studies from recent tropical cyclones such as cyclone Idai
and cyclone Kenneth that resulted in catastrophic impacts in 2019.
The book comes as part of a series with three volumes. The other
volumes include "Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol. 1: Interfacing
the Catastrophic Impact of Cyclone Idai with SDGs in Zimbabwe" and
"Cyclones in Southern Africa Vol 2: Foundational and Fundamental
Topics". Given the foregoing, the book is suitable as a read for
several professionals and disciplines such as tourism and
hospitality studies, economics, sustainable development,
development studies, environmental sciences, arts, geography, life
sciences, politics, planning and public health.
SDG7 aims to 'ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable
and modern energy for all.' Meeting the demands of the 2030 agenda
will be a unique challenge. National priorities and policy action
need to be strengthened in order to fulfil the ambitious energy
targets which SDG7 envisions. This book examines SDG7 and its
implications for how energy operates as a driver of change for
jobs, security, climate change, food production and increasing
incomes. It provides a succinct overview of how SDG7 visualizes a
world in which energy is universally accessible, increasingly
efficient and renewable in order to create sustainable, inclusive
and resilient communities. The key challenges such as public and
private investment, regulatory frameworks and evolving business
models are also considered so that a path forward towards the
achievement of the goal and the transformation of global energy
systems might become clear. Concise Guides to the United Nations
Sustainable Development Goals comprises 17 short books, each
examining one of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The series
provides an integrated assessment of the SDGs from economic, legal,
social, environmental and cultural perspectives.
The 21st century qualifies as one in which humanity raised
environmental decay, especially climate change, as a key global
concern requiring urgent political attention. The book Framework
and Tools for Environmental Management in Africa is written from
this perspective. It provides researchers from different
disciplines including environmental sciences, engineering,
commerce, planning, education, agriculture and law, as well as
NGOs, government officials, policy makers and researchers, with a
platform to engage with concerns relating to sustainable
environmental management in this epoch. Topics covered include
global landmarks for environmental governance, environmental
management on African agenda, sustainability reporting,
environmental impact assessment and public participation as well as
environmental education. These remain viable in the African set-up
where major development projects in mining and agriculture require
greater scrutiny. With a collection of both revision and critical
reflection questions, carefully constructed by authors with
significant experiences from institutions of higher learning across
Africa, readers will find this publication a valuable addition to
their shelves.
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