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MeetingMeeting documentCountry reports of the Twenty-seventh Session of the Working Party on the Management of Mountain Watersheds. Štrbské Pleso, Slovak Republic, 07-10 April 2010 2010
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MeetingMeeting documentCountry reports of the Twenty-fifth Session of the Working Party on the Management of Mountain Watersheds. Salzburg, Austria, 24-26 April 2006. 2006
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Book (stand-alone)Proceedings推广生态农业 实现可持续发展目标 — 联合国粮食及农业组织第二届生态农业国际研讨会纪实 2021
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2018年4月,联合国粮农组织(FAO)召开了第二届生态农业国际研讨会:“推广生态农业 实现可持续发展目标”。本届研讨会达成了部分协议并作出相关承诺,为推广生态农业、实现可持续发展目标奠定了基础。会议讨论并列举了推广生态农业为当地带来的主要好处、在全球层面推广生态农业的机遇以及将生态农业纳入其全球项目的具体路径,并发起了“生态农业推广举措”。该“举措”被视为推动并实现《2030年可持续发展议程》(特别是可持续发展目标2)的未来方向和战略方法。 -
Book (stand-alone)Manual / guideThe living marine resources of the Western Central Atlantic. Volume 2. Bony fishes part 1 (Acipenseridae to Grammatidae) 2002
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No results found.This is the second of a three volumes field guide that covers the species of interest to fisheries of the major marine resources groups exploited in the Western Central Atlantic. The area of coverage includes FAO Fishing Area 31. The marine resources groups included in this volume are Bony fishes part 1 (Acipenseridae to Grammatidae). The introductory chapter outlines the environmental, ecological and biogeographical factors influencing the marine biota and the basic components of the fisheries in the Western Central Atlantic.See also other volumes related to this series: -
Book (stand-alone)Technical bookVulnerability of mountain peoples to food insecurity
Updated data and analysis of drivers
2020Also available in:
No results found.This study, the third of its type published by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), adds further evidence that in mountain regions of developing countries, food insecurity, social isolation, environmental degradation, exposure to the risk of disasters and to the impacts of climate change, and limited access to basic services, especially in rural areas, are still prevalent and, under some circumstances, increasing. It also shows the technical challenges for producing more comprehensive and representative assessments based on scientific data, and providing a deeper understanding of the underlying factors of vulnerability of mountain people. Mountains cover 39 million km2, or 27 percent, of the world’s land surface. In 2017, the global mountain population reached nearly 1.1 billion, which is 15 percent of the world’s population, with an increase of 89 million people since 2012. The increase added almost entirely (86 million people) to the mountain population in developing countries, which reached one billion people in 2017. The population has increased in all the regions of the developing world. Only the areas at the highest mountain altitudes (above 3 500 m) continued to experience a depopulation trend in the last 17 years, while at all other elevations population increased. In all African subregions, in South America and in Central and Western Asia, the population density is higher in the mountains than in the lowlands. In developing countries, 648 million people (65 percent of the total mountain population) live in rural areas. Half of them – 346 million – were estimated to be vulnerable to food insecurity in 2017. In other words, one in two rural mountain dwellers in developing countries live in areas where the daily availability of calories and protein was estimated to be below the minimum threshold needed for a healthy life. In the five years from 2012 to 2017, the number of vulnerable people increased in the mountains of developing countries, approximately at the same pace as the total mountain population. Although the proportion of vulnerable people to the total mountain population did not change, the absolute number of vulnerable people increased globally by 40 million, representing an increment of 12.5 percent from 2012 to 2017.