Your search found 7 records
1 Munasinghe, M.. (Ed.) 1993. Environmental economics and natural resource management in developing countries. Washington, DC, USA: World Bank. xiv, 307p.
Environmental effects ; Environmental sustainability ; Environmental control ; Sustainability ; Decision making ; Poverty ; Natural resources ; Developing countries ; Case studies ; Rural development ; Economic aspects / Sri Lanka / Zimbabwe / Uruguay / Mexico / Africa South of Sahara / Djibouti
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 363.7 G000 MUN Record No: H013720)

2 Munasinghe, M.. 1991. Groundwater resource management and environmental protection: A case study of the Philippines. Natural Resources Forum, 15(4):302-312.
Groundwater management ; Environmental control ; Water resource management ; Aquifers ; Models ; Policy ; Water rates ; Case studies / Philippines
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 3603 Record No: H015291)

3 Munasinghe, M.; Cruz, W. 1995. Economywide policies and the environment: Lessons from experience. Washington, DC, USA: World Bank. ix, 86p. (World Bank environment paper no.10)
Economic policy ; Environmental effects ; Sustainability ; Decision making ; Poverty ; Case studies
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 363.7 G000 MUN Record No: H019425)

4 Munasinghe, M.. 1992. Water supply and environmental management: Developing world applications. Boulder, CO, USA: Westview Press. xviii, 447p. (Studies in water policy and management)
Water resource management ; Water policy ; Analysis ; Planning ; Water supply ; Optimization ; Rural development ; Natural resources ; Environmental policy ; Environmental effects ; Environmental degradation ; Groundwater ; Water pollution ; Salinity ; Aquifers ; Surface water ; Health ; Sanitation ; Water users ; Water costs ; Price policy ; Economic aspects ; Economic analysis ; Economic evaluation ; Water quality ; Models ; Water loss ; Water demand ; Forecasting ; Appropriate technology ; Groundwater depletion ; Developing countries ; Case studies / Egypt / UK / Africa / Nigeria / Ghana / Cyprus / India / USA / Brazil / Philippines
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 MUN Record No: H021845)

5 Munasinghe, M.. 1993. Environmental economics and sustainable development. Washington, DC, USA: World Bank. 112p. (World Bank environment paper no.3)
Environmental policy ; Environmental effects ; Economic aspects ; Economic development ; Sustainability ; Decision making ; Economic analysis ; Pricing ; Economic policy ; Cost benefit analysis ; Water supply ; Case studies
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 363.7 G000 MUN Record No: H022016)

6 Jepma, C. J.; Munasinghe, M.. 1998. Climate change policy: Facts, issues, and analyses. Cambridge, UK: CUP. xv, 331p.
Climate ; Ecology ; Ecosystems ; Environmental effects ; Hydrology ; Water resources ; Agriculture ; Food production ; Public health ; Equity ; Social systems ; Social aspects ; Decision making ; Cost benefit analysis ; Energy
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 551.6 G000 JEP Record No: H027098)

7 Munasinghe, M.. 2010. Integrated solutions for water, sustainable development and climate change issues: applying the sustainomics framework. In Lundqvist, J. (Ed.). On the water front: selections from the 2009 World Water Week in Stockholm. Stockholm, Sweden: Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI). pp.46-55.
Climate change ; Water scarcity ; Poverty
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H043360)
http://www.worldwaterweek.org/documents/Resources/Synthesis/On_the_Water_Front_selections_from_WWW.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H043360.pdf
(0.58 MB) (5.24 MB)
This paper practically addresses major global challenges involving water, sustainable development and climate change, which are interlinked. Water and climate change issues undermine development prospects and worsen existing problems, especially poverty. A longer term vision should go below the surface level development indicators, addressing deeper issues systematically and focusing on both immediate drivers and underlying pressures. The most effective approach is to integrate climate change and water policies into a national sustainable development strategy, using the sustainomics framework for “making development more sustainable”, with balanced and integrated analysis from three main perspectives – social, economic and environmental. Several applications of practical tools are shown at the global, national and local levels.

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