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Ecosystem-based adaptation solutions can reduce vulnerability and build resilience of urban areas to climate change.
Indigenous peoples can better articulate their role in making sense of a project’s environmental and social impacts through participatory storytelling.
Experience from two projects shows digital tools for database management help ensure a fair and transparent process and efficient resource allocation.
The collapse of Mongolia’s Soviet-era health system created hardship but catalyzed reforms, strengthening primary care, insurance, and access.
Computer-assisted surveys make data collection possible despite COVID-19 travel and social restrictions.
Modernizing farming methods, establishing greenhouse farms, and improving post-harvest management can mitigate the adverse effects of climate change and enhance food security.
The Lao PDR is using gender, disability, and inclusion data to design better, more targeted public services.
Accurate baseline data can guide policy reforms that leverage the informal recycling sector for cost-effective urban waste management.
A better understanding of environmental standards—their differences and implications—can help developing countries better safeguard the environment.
Drones, remote sensing, and other tech-driven solutions make biodiversity monitoring and impact assessment for development projects easier and less costly.