Operationalizing the Environment-Health Nexus in Asia and the Pacific
A Policy Guide on Opportunities for Enhancing Health, Biodiversity, Food System and Climate Action
This policy guide aims to support policymakers and stakeholders in the Asia-Pacific region to address environment-health risks and safeguard human health and well-being while protecting ecosystems. Specifically, it provides an overview of concrete opportunities to mainstream the environment-health nexus in public policies in Asia and the Pacific, including those pertinent to health, biodiversity loss, food systems, and climate change
This guide also lays out pathways to strengthen the enabling factors for operationalizing an environmentally comprehensive One Health approach. This guidance supports a regional approach to the global One Health Joint Plan of Action launched in 2022, and highlights the achievements of countries in their pursuit of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Multiple case studies, resources, and guiding principles can be found throughout the policy guide to support decision-making in the environment-health nexus at national and regional levels.
Funded by
You might also be interested in
Health in global biodiversity governance: what is next?
The dependency of human health and wellbeing on nature is documented across disciplines, regions, cultures, and economies. Environmental degradation contributes substantially to the global burden of disease and concurrent global environmental changes are increasingly recognised as public health threats, worldwide. The 196 parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) have called for increased engagement on biodiversity and health since 2014, while calls from stakeholders for integrated decision making are similarly long standing. Yet few civil society health organisations have historically engaged with the CBD and its intergovernmental negotiating process. This situation is, however, changing. In 2022, civil society health professionals and organisations were involved in the CBD agenda-setting (intersessional subsidiary body) and decision-making (Conference of the Parties [COP]) meetings. Five civil society health organisations attended the 15th UN Biodiversity Conference (COP 15) in Montréal, Canada, as newly accredited delegations to the CBD. The new participation of these organisations in global biodiversity governance embodies the interdisciplinary work needed to take a whole-of-society approach to respecting planetary boundaries and prioritising the environmental determinants of health. The agenda of the UN CBD recognises and increasingly includes health. Now is the time to mobilise contributions from diverse health experts to inform integrated policy.
Health in the Global Environmental Agenda: A policy guide
As awareness grows over the steep health impacts of global environmental changes, how can the health and environment sectors come together for joint action?
Addressing Liquidity Challenges: A conceptual framework
A conceptual framework for addressing liquidity challenges in sovereign debt.
The Chemical Analysis of Fresh Water (Third Edition)
This publication describes the protocols used in the IISD Experimental Lakes Area (IISD-ELA) Analytical Service Laboratory for the measurement of chemical constituents in freshwater samples.