Thinking ahead: Drought resilience and COVID-19

COVID-19 is a defining moment for strengthening drought resilience of society and managing ecosystems more sustainably. Both recent and historical experiences indicate that disease outbreaks very often follow extreme weather events. Drought, combined with other ecosystem changes such as habitat degradation, preceded the COVID-19 outbreak and has been associated with many other types of epidemics in the past. This paper highlights that the interactions between human, ecosystems and ecology often govern drought-linked disease. Factoring these interactions and their impacts on vulnerable communities and their environment is important for drought preparedness, resilience, and recovery. It also calls for increased investments and defines important steps for government and international agencies in responding to post COVID-19 period and in building back better for a more drought-resilient society and ecosystems. These steps require cross-sectoral, inter-disciplinary cooperation that responds to and addresses the underlying causes behind future disease outbreaks for a healthy living.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: FAO ; UNCCD
Format: Booklet biblioteca
Language:English
Published: FAO ; 2021
Online Access:https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB5547EN
http://www.fao.org/3/cb5547en/cb5547en.pdf
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spelling dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-CB5547EN2024-03-16T15:07:51Z Thinking ahead: Drought resilience and COVID-19 WASAG working group on drought preparedness FAO ; UNCCD COVID-19 is a defining moment for strengthening drought resilience of society and managing ecosystems more sustainably. Both recent and historical experiences indicate that disease outbreaks very often follow extreme weather events. Drought, combined with other ecosystem changes such as habitat degradation, preceded the COVID-19 outbreak and has been associated with many other types of epidemics in the past. This paper highlights that the interactions between human, ecosystems and ecology often govern drought-linked disease. Factoring these interactions and their impacts on vulnerable communities and their environment is important for drought preparedness, resilience, and recovery. It also calls for increased investments and defines important steps for government and international agencies in responding to post COVID-19 period and in building back better for a more drought-resilient society and ecosystems. These steps require cross-sectoral, inter-disciplinary cooperation that responds to and addresses the underlying causes behind future disease outbreaks for a healthy living. 2023-04-27T13:36:15Z 2023-04-27T13:36:15Z 2021 2022-02-07T09:15:12.0000000Z Booklet 978-92-5-134674-7 https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB5547EN http://www.fao.org/3/cb5547en/cb5547en.pdf English FAO 35 p. application/pdf FAO ;
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libraryname David Lubin Memorial Library of FAO
language English
description COVID-19 is a defining moment for strengthening drought resilience of society and managing ecosystems more sustainably. Both recent and historical experiences indicate that disease outbreaks very often follow extreme weather events. Drought, combined with other ecosystem changes such as habitat degradation, preceded the COVID-19 outbreak and has been associated with many other types of epidemics in the past. This paper highlights that the interactions between human, ecosystems and ecology often govern drought-linked disease. Factoring these interactions and their impacts on vulnerable communities and their environment is important for drought preparedness, resilience, and recovery. It also calls for increased investments and defines important steps for government and international agencies in responding to post COVID-19 period and in building back better for a more drought-resilient society and ecosystems. These steps require cross-sectoral, inter-disciplinary cooperation that responds to and addresses the underlying causes behind future disease outbreaks for a healthy living.
format Booklet
author FAO ; UNCCD
spellingShingle FAO ; UNCCD
Thinking ahead: Drought resilience and COVID-19
author_facet FAO ; UNCCD
author_sort FAO ; UNCCD
title Thinking ahead: Drought resilience and COVID-19
title_short Thinking ahead: Drought resilience and COVID-19
title_full Thinking ahead: Drought resilience and COVID-19
title_fullStr Thinking ahead: Drought resilience and COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Thinking ahead: Drought resilience and COVID-19
title_sort thinking ahead: drought resilience and covid-19
publisher FAO ;
publishDate 2021
url https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB5547EN
http://www.fao.org/3/cb5547en/cb5547en.pdf
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