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River infrastructure projects must consider natural flows in project planning to save aquatic ecosystems and downstream communities.
Change management, effective public–private partnership, and regulation are crucial to the success of citywide inclusive sanitation programs.
The Seoul Metropolitan Government provides market analysis, such as consumption patterns and purchasing power, to help small entrepreneurs succeed.
A livelihood project sets up night markets in border towns of the Greater Mekong Subregion and provides microfinance support to vendors.
Compared to other infrastructure sectors, education needs a different approach to identifying projects for public–private partnerships.
The experience of the People’s Republic of China shows that beyond economic growth, an adaptive and cooperative approach can help reduce poverty even at hard to reach places.
Looking at the next 10 years, global risk experts place environmental risks among not only the most likely, but also the most impactful risks.
The rise of megacities in the Republic of Korea requires management methods that align city-level development with metropolitan planning.
The People's Republic of China is experimenting with incentive-based mechanisms to resolve challenges in managing its trans-provincial watersheds.
Latin America's long experience with conditional cash transfers offers lessons for implementing these innovative human development programs in Asia and the Pacific.