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Boundary Science and the Pursuit of Sustainable Development:
Lessons from Global Public Goods Research on the Water-Energy-Food
(WEF) Nexus addresses the problem of how global research can
reorient itself to better address sustainable goals and objectives
through the use of place-based observatories that support
multi-dimensional modelling. The book will provide an overview of
the impact of case studies and field trials in addressing critical
questions of poverty reduction and sustainable development. This
discussion will be followed by an examination of a theoretical
framework for boundary science that elaborates upon the Nexus
approach to environmental management.
Global trends such as urbanization, demographic and climate change
that are currently underway pose serious challenges to sustainable
development and integrated resources management. The complex
relations between demands, resource availability and quality and
financial and physical constraints can be addressed by knowledge
based policies and reform of professional practice. The nexus
approach recognizes the urgent need for this knowledge and its
interpretation in a policy- relevant setting that is guided by the
understanding that there is a lack of blueprints for development
based on integrated management of water, soil and waste resources
in the Member States. Generation and application of knowledge is
both a priority for individual but also institutional capacity
development.
More than 2.6 billion people in the developing world lack access to
safe water and sanitation service. The Millennium Development
Goal's (MDG) target is to halve the number of people without access
to a sustainable source of water supply and connection to a sewer
network by 2015. That target is unlikely to be met. If there is
anything that can be learnt from European experience it is that
institutional reform occurs incrementally when politically
enfranchised urban populations perceive a threat to their material
well-being due to contamination of water sources.
Global trends such as urbanization, demographic and climate change
that are currently underway pose serious challenges to sustainable
development and integrated resources management. The complex
relations between demands, resource availability and quality and
financial and physical constraints can be addressed by knowledge
based policies and reform of professional practice. The nexus
approach recognizes the urgent need for this knowledge and its
interpretation in a policy- relevant setting that is guided by the
understanding that there is a lack of blueprints for development
based on integrated management of water, soil and waste resources
in the Member States. Generation and application of knowledge is
both a priority for individual but also institutional capacity
development.
This book discusses the role of observatories in supporting
evidence-based decision-making. The book focuses on issues of data
accessibility, monitoring frameworks and governance processes with
regard to environmental resources - water, soil and waste. This
publication highlights challenges related to policy-implementation
measures and examines current monitoring approaches, and
illustrates how the UNU-FLORES Nexus Observatory seeks to overcome
concerns related to data, monitoring and governance of water, soil
and waste resources. In particular, given that extreme weather
events such as droughts and floods are predicted to become more
frequent in the future, it discusses the need for improved hazard
risk monitoring. It proposes risk indices for drought and floods,
which measure exposure and vulnerability to the phenomena through a
multitude of bio-physical, socio-economic and institutional
indicators. Furthermore, the potential for using openly accessible
data made available through observatories in decision-making aimed
at improving food security is also discussed. It acknowledges
governments as key players in environmental resource management,
and recognizes that decentralization reforms, as well as the
emergence of information and communication technologies, have
significantly changed the role of governments in promoting
sustainable development. The book is particularly relevant for
decision-makers, donor agencies, practitioners and students with an
interest in environmental management who are also keen followers of
discussions on the post-2015 monitoring agenda.
More than 2.6 billion people in the developing world lack access to
safe water and sanitation service. The Millennium Development
Goal's (MDG) target is to halve the number of people without access
to a sustainable source of water supply and connection to a sewer
network by 2015. That target is unlikely to be met. If there is
anything that can be learnt from European experience it is that
institutional reform occurs incrementally when politically
enfranchised urban populations perceive a threat to their material
well-being due to contamination of water sources.
This book demonstrates the application of Life-cycle Cost Approach
(LCCA) in the management of infrastructure and other investment
projects in the context of developing countries. The main goal is
to identify potential opportunities for the adoption LCCA in
developing countries, with the help of case studies and best
practices. The editors observe that developing countries are
plagued with poor and fluctuating service delivery which affords
low or no priority for environmental protection. They seek to
instill at the policy-making level an understanding of why
life-cycle cost assessment is central to achieving the goals of
sustainable development as well as sustainable service delivery and
to influence the behavior of sector stakeholders. The editors
examine the evolution of LCCA from a project appraisal tool to a
more comprehensive method of incorporating sustainable development
aspects in a variety of sectors. By providing a compendium of
concepts, tools and practical experiences, it seeks to broaden the
application of LCCA, which is often limited to specific phases of
the life-cycle with little or no weight given to environmental
aspects. The aim of the book is to mainstream LCCA into governance
processes at institutional levels from local to national, in order
to increase the ability and willingness of decision makers - both
users and those involved in service planning, budgeting and
delivery - to reach better informed and more relevant choices among
different types and levels of products and services.
As we approach a historic tipping point in the global trend toward
urbanisation - within two decades urban dwellers will increase from
49% to 60% of the planet's population - this book identifies and
addresses a critical problem: water. The editors show how cities
can shift from being water consumers to resource managers, applying
urban water management principles to ensure access to water and
sanitation infrastructure and services; manage rainwater,
wastewater, storm water drainage, and runoff pollution; control
waterborne diseases and epidemics; and reduce the risk of such
water-related hazards as floods, droughts and landslides. The book
explores the Multiple-Use Water Services (MUS) paradigm, offering a
section on the MUS approach and a means of calculating the value of
MUS systems, as well as tools and resources to support
decision-making. Case studies illustrate MUS in selected urban and
rural contexts. Each case study breaks out the challenges, policy
framework, benefits, benchmarks, lessons learned (success and
failures) and potential next steps. The contributors consider the
main options for applying the Multiple-Use Water Services (MUS)
paradigm, breaking down its components and offering cost-benefit
analyses along with challenges and considerations for both the
short and long term. Also discussed are methods by which mutual
interactions of water infrastructure and vegetated areas are taken
into account in the synergy of spatial planning and optimised
modelling of ecosystems' performance indicators. This method of
planning should make future developments cheaper to build; their
users will pay lower utility bills for water, energy and heating.
These developments will be more pleasant to live in and property
value would likely be higher. The brief includes a section on the
MUS approach and a means to calculate the value of MUS systems, as
well as provides tools and resources to support decision-making.
Case studies are included to illustrate MUS in selected urban and
rural contexts. Each case study breaks out the challenges, policy
framework, benefits, benchmarks, lessons learned (success and
failures) and potential next steps.
This book examines and analyzes issues related to public finance in
subnational governments, along with a discussion of case studies on
decentralization. Most of the analysis applies to all public goods
and services provided by subnational governments, with some placed
on the role of subnational governments in the management of
environmental resources, notably water and waste Coverage includes
optimal arrangements for sharing fiscal responsibilities among
different levels of government, the potential impact of
decentralization on the quality of public goods delivery, local
governments' expenditure and revenue choices, and the effect of
decentralization on accountability, governance and policy outcomes.
The scope of discussion extends to both public finance theory and
applied policy debates. The first chapter, on trends in financing
of public services, opens with an explanation of the how and why of
government intervention in the economy, the nature and purposes of
transfers between and among governments and trends in
decentralization. Case studies examine the impact of
decentralization in such areas as service delivery, water and
sanitation, education and health, and on poverty and income
inequality. Chapter 2 examines public budgets: governance
structures, norms and organizational practices, building up
understanding of budgets, budget cycles, fiscal revenues from fees
and taxes, expenses, debt and political economy issues, rules
mandating balanced budgets in government and more. Chapter 3
discusses issues of accountability and policy outcomes, offering
important lessons from recent international experience, including
ways to strengthen political, administrative and financial
accountability. The concluding chapter recounts lessons from recent
international experience and surveys implications for the nexus
approach to management of environmental resources. The information,
analysis and expert advice presented here is particularly relevant
for developing and emerging countries, where well designed
decentralization reforms have a higher potential to improve
efficiency in the provision of public services, and to enhance the
development of integrated and sustainable strategies for the use of
water, soil and waste resources and applications that advance the
nexus approach.
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