756 resultados para DESARROLLO ECONOMICO - VENEZUELA


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Caribbean policymakers are faced with special challenges from climate change and these are related to the uncertainties inherent in future climate projections and the complex linkages among climate change, physical and biological systems and socioeconomic sectors. The impacts of climate change threaten development in the Caribbean and may well erode previous gains in development as evidenced by the increased incidence of climate migrants internationally. This brief which is based on a recent study conducted by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (LC/CAR/L.395)1 provides a synthesis of the assessment of the economic and social impacts of climate change on the coastal and marine sector in the Caribbean which were undertaken. It provides Caribbean policymakers with cutting-edge information on the region’s vulnerability and encourages the development of adaptation strategies informed by both local experience and expert knowledge. It proceeds from an acknowledgement that the unique combination of natural resources, ecosystems, economic activities, and human population settlements of the Caribbean will not be immune to the impacts of climate change, and local communities, countries and the subregion as a whole need to plan for, and adapt to, these effects. Climate and extreme weather hazards related to the coastal and marine sector encompass the distinct but related factors of sea level rise, increasing coastal water temperatures, tropical storms and hurricanes. Potential vulnerabilities for coastal zones include increased shoreline erosion leading to alteration of the coastline, loss of coastal wetlands, and changes in the abundance and diversity of fish and other marine populations. The study examines four key themes in the analysis: climate, vulnerability, economic and social costs associated with climate change impacts, and adaptive measures.

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Introduction .-- I. Background .-- II. Frameworks for implementing the regional agenda on population and development .-- III. Making operational the priority measures of the Montevideo Consensus on Population and Development: A. Full integration of population dynamics into sustainable development with gender equality and respect for human rights. B. Rights, needs, responsibilities and the demands of girls, boys, adolescents and youth. C. Ageing, social protection and socioeconomic challenges. D. Universal access to sexual and reproductive health services. E. Gender equality. F. International migration and protection of the human rights of all migrants. G. Territorial inequality, spatial mobility and vulnerability. H. Indigenous peoples: interculturalism and rights. I. Afro-descendants: rights and combating racial discrimination.

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Pese a su relevancia potencial para América Latina y el Caribe , el concepto de bioeconomía ha recibido poca atención en las políticas públicas de los países de la región. Además, se percibe la existencia de un vacio de literatura en español sobre el tema, que limita el conocimiento del tema y de sus alcances como marco de referencia para las políticas de desarrollo e innovación. Esta publicación busca llenar ese vacio. El documento incluye la traducción de los articulos contenidos en la sección Focus del número especial sobre bioeconomia publicado por la revista Rural 21, The International Journal for Rural Development (Vol. 48, No. 3 / 2014, pp. 6- 27). Los artículos abarcan temas relativos al origen del concepto, las estrategias de bioeconomía alrededor del mundo, la investigación y la cooperación, el desarrollo de redes de valor basadas en la biomasa, los criterios para el desarrollo de estrategias de bioeconiomía pro-pobres, así como al rol del sector privado.