Population, environment and agriculture linkages in Africa's food security and sustainable development

The general objectives of the paper are to (a) identify the challenges related to the management of the nexus issues (agriculture, population and the environment) and the need to propose strategies to help in addressing them; and (b) outline the comparative advantage of ECA/FSSDD in facilitating change in these issues in member States. More specifically, to, (i) outline the challenges and major issues of concern to Africa's sustainable development, (ii) present a suggested response and ECA's role in supporting such a response, and (iii) make suggestions for the way forward. Indeed, the paper will provide a platform from which the Commission and FSSDD will launch the necessary advocacy and technical delivery services that will be important inputs to the process of change in the region.

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Working paper biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 2000-10
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10855/1321
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id dig-uneca-et-10855-1321
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spelling dig-uneca-et-10855-13212018-12-28T15:28:18Z Population, environment and agriculture linkages in Africa's food security and sustainable development The general objectives of the paper are to (a) identify the challenges related to the management of the nexus issues (agriculture, population and the environment) and the need to propose strategies to help in addressing them; and (b) outline the comparative advantage of ECA/FSSDD in facilitating change in these issues in member States. More specifically, to, (i) outline the challenges and major issues of concern to Africa's sustainable development, (ii) present a suggested response and ECA's role in supporting such a response, and (iii) make suggestions for the way forward. Indeed, the paper will provide a platform from which the Commission and FSSDD will launch the necessary advocacy and technical delivery services that will be important inputs to the process of change in the region. 2011-03-31T15:27:27Z 2011-03-31T15:27:27Z 2000-10 Working paper http://hdl.handle.net/10855/1321 eng iii, 59 p. : application/pdf AFR Africa
institution ONU
collection DSpace
country Etiopía
countrycode ET
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uneca-et
tag biblioteca
region África del Este
libraryname Biblioteca de la Comisión Económica para África de la ONU
language eng
description The general objectives of the paper are to (a) identify the challenges related to the management of the nexus issues (agriculture, population and the environment) and the need to propose strategies to help in addressing them; and (b) outline the comparative advantage of ECA/FSSDD in facilitating change in these issues in member States. More specifically, to, (i) outline the challenges and major issues of concern to Africa's sustainable development, (ii) present a suggested response and ECA's role in supporting such a response, and (iii) make suggestions for the way forward. Indeed, the paper will provide a platform from which the Commission and FSSDD will launch the necessary advocacy and technical delivery services that will be important inputs to the process of change in the region.
format Working paper
title Population, environment and agriculture linkages in Africa's food security and sustainable development
spellingShingle Population, environment and agriculture linkages in Africa's food security and sustainable development
title_short Population, environment and agriculture linkages in Africa's food security and sustainable development
title_full Population, environment and agriculture linkages in Africa's food security and sustainable development
title_fullStr Population, environment and agriculture linkages in Africa's food security and sustainable development
title_full_unstemmed Population, environment and agriculture linkages in Africa's food security and sustainable development
title_sort population, environment and agriculture linkages in africa's food security and sustainable development
publishDate 2000-10
url http://hdl.handle.net/10855/1321
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