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Climate Change Challenge (3C) and Social-Economic-Ecological Interface-Building—Exploring Potential Adaptation Strategies for Bio-resource Conservation and Livelihood Development: Epilogue

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Title Climate Change Challenge (3C) and Social-Economic-Ecological Interface-Building—Exploring Potential Adaptation Strategies for Bio-resource Conservation and Livelihood Development: Epilogue
 
Creator Nautiyal, Sunil
 
Contributor Schaldah, Ruediger
Raju, KV
Kächele, Harald
Pritchard, Bill
Rao, K.S.
 
Subject climate change challenge
bioresource conservation
livelihood development
millennium development goals
adaptation strategies
 
Description Climate change is arguably the single most dominant environmental threat facing humanity. Its manifestations, particularly through
rising temperatures, changing rainfall, sealevel
rise and increasing droughts and floods have the potential to adversely impact natural
ecosystems (such as forests, grasslands, rivers and oceans) and socioeconomic systems (such as food production, fisheries and coastal
settlements). This is adding additional stresses to the ecosystem services which form a substantial source of income to the rural
inhabitants. It is most proximate and inextricably linked to wellbeing,
development and economic growth which are part of the eight
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which ran from 2000 to 2015.
 
Date 2016-06-15
2017-02-08T22:39:28Z
2017-02-08T22:39:28Z
 
Type Book Chapter
 
Identifier http://oar.icrisat.org/id/eprint/9553
https://mel.cgiar.org/reporting/download/hash/6Qkw23V3
Sunil Nautiyal, Ruediger Schaldah, KV Raju, Harald Kächele, Bill Pritchard, K. S. Rao. (15/6/2016). Climate Change Challenge (3C) and Social-Economic-Ecological Interface-Building—Exploring Potential Adaptation Strategies for Bio-resource Conservation and Livelihood Development: Epilogue, in "Climate Change Challenge (3C) and SocialEconomicEcological InterfaceBuilding: Exploring Potential Adaptation Strategies for Bioresource Conservation and Livelihood Development". Zurich, Switzerland: Springer Verlag (Germany).
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11766/5576
Limited access
 
Language en
 
Rights CC-BY-NC-4.0
 
Format PDF
 
Publisher Springer Verlag (Germany)