World development report 2010 : development and climate change.
Series: | World development report ; 2010Washington, DC : World Bank, c2010Description: xxi, 417 p. : col. ill., col. maps ; 27 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780821379875
- 0821379879
- 9780821379899 (hbk.)
- 0821379895 (hbk.)
- 9780821376072 (pbk.)
- 0821376071 (pbk.)
- 9780821379882
- 0821379887
- Development and climate change
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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NCAR Library Foothills Lab | HC59.7 .W659 2010 | 1 | Available | 50583010335481 |
" ... a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank."--Verso of title page.
Includes bibliographic references and index.
Overview: Changing the climate for development. 1. Understanding the links between climate change and development. -- 2. Reducing human vulnerability: Helping people help themselves. -- 3. Managing land and water to feed nine billion people and protect natural systems. --- 4. Energizing development without compromising the climate. -- 5. Integrating development into the global climate regime. -- 6. Generating the funding needed for mitigation and adaptation. -- 7. Accelerating innovation and technology diffusion. -- 8. Overcoming behavioral; and institutional inertia.
"Places do well when they promote transformations along the dimensions of economic geography: higher densities as cities grow; shorter distances as workers and businesses migrate closer to density; and fewer divisions as nations lower their economic borders and enter world markets to take advantage of scale and trade in specialized products. World Development Report 2009 concludes that the transformations along these three dimensions - density, distance, and division - are essential for development and should be encouraged." "This report has a different message: economic growth will be unbalanced. To try to spread it out is to discourage it - to fight prosperity, not poverty. But development can still be inclusive, even for people who start their lives distant from dense economic activity. For growth to be rapid and shared, governments must promote economic integration, the pivotal concept, as this report argues, in the policy debates on urbanization, territorial development, and regional integration. Instead, all three debates overemphasize place-based interventions." "Reshaping Economic Geography reframes these debates to include all the instruments of integration - spatially blind institutions, spatially connective infrastructure, and spatially targeted interventions. By calibrating the blend of these instruments, today's developers can reshape their economic geography. If they do this well, their growth will still be unbalanced, but their development will be inclusive."--BOOK JACKET.