122 resultados para MDGs: Millennium Development Goal
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Résolution 676(XXXV) Calendrier de conférences de la CEPALC pour la période 2015-2016 .-- Résolution 677(XXXV) Conférence régionale sur les femmes de l’Amérique latine et des Caraïbes .-- Résolution 678(XXXV) Conférence statistique des Amériques de la Commission économique pour l’Amérique latine et les Caraïbes .-- Résolution 679(XXXV) Appui aux travaux de l’Institut latino-américain et des Caraïbes de planification économique et sociale (ILPES) .-- Résolution 680(XXXV) Comité de développement et de coopération des Caraïbes .-- Résolution 681(XXXV) Conférence régionale sur la population et le développement de l’Amérique latine et des Caraïbes .-- Résolution 682(XXXV) Création de la Conférence régionale sur le développement social de l’Amérique latine et des Caraïbes .-- Résolution 683(XXXV) Admission de Saint-Martin en qualité d’état membre associé de la Commission économique pour l’Amérique latine et les Caraïbes .-- Résolution 684(XXXV) Priorités et programme de travail de la Commission économique pour l’Amérique latine et les Caraïbes pour la période biennale 2016-2017 .-- Résolution 685(XXXV) Activités de la Commission économique pour l’Amérique latine et les Caraïbes dans le cadre du suivi des objectifs du Millénaire pour le développement et l’application des résultats des grandes conférences et des sommets des Nations Unies en matière économique et sociale et dans les domaines connexes .-- Résolution 686(XXXV) Application du Principe 10 de la Déclaration de Rio sur l’environnement et le développement en Amérique latine et dans les Caraïbes .-- Résolution 687(XXXV) La dimension régionale du programme de développement pour l’après 2015 .-- Résolution 688(XXXV) Coopération Sud-Sud .-- Résolution 689(XXXV) Lieu de la prochaine session .-- Résolution 690(XXXV) Résolution de Lima .-- Résolution 691(XXXV) Conférence ministérielle sur la société de l’information de l’Amérique latine et des Caraïbes.
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The region of Latin America and the Caribbean can boast a successful track record in the process of eradicating hunger: it is the only region in the world that has halved both the proportion of people who suffer from hunger (the target set in the Millennium Development Goals) and their absolute number (the target set at the World Food Summit of 1996). This publication aims to provide the region’s countries with up-todate and timely information on the status of food and nutrition security; on the role in eradicating hunger played by the different areas such as agriculture, agrifood trade and natural resources management; and on the possibility of successfully addressing the twin burden of malnutrition, in a context where the effects of climate change could threaten the progress achieved in Latin America and the Caribbean thus far. The CELAC Plan for Food and Nutrition Security and the Eradication of Hunger 2025 is a cross-cutting tool for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development; and it thus encourages the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean to redouble their efforts to identify key policy areas that will make it possible to speed up and consolidate the process of eradicating hunger and tackle the twin burden of malnutrition in the region, in which overweight and obesity are increasingly adding to that scourge.
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The Caribbean region remains highly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. In order to assess the social and economic consequences of climate change for the region, the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean( ECLAC) has developed a model for this purpose. The model is referred to as the Climate Impact Assessment Model (ECLAC-CIAM) and is a tool that can simultaneously assess multiple sectoral climate impacts specific to the Caribbean as a whole and for individual countries. To achieve this goal, an Integrated Assessment Model (IAM) with a Computable General Equilibrium Core was developed comprising of three modules to be executed sequentially. The first of these modules defines the type and magnitude of economic shocks on the basis of a climate change scenario, the second module is a global Computable General Equilibrium model with a special regional and industrial classification and the third module processes the output of the CGE model to get more disaggregated results. The model has the potential to produce several economic estimates but the current default results include percentage change in real national income for individual Caribbean states which provides a simple measure of welfare impacts. With some modifications, the model can also be used to consider the effects of single sectoral shocks such as (Land, Labour, Capital and Tourism) on the percentage change in real national income. Ultimately, the model is envisioned as an evolving tool for assessing the impact of climate change in the Caribbean and as a guide to policy responses with respect to adaptation strategies.