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240103 ||| eng |
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|a Matsumoto, Tadashi
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|a Building systemic climate resilience in cities
|h Elektronische Ressource
|c Tadashi, Matsumoto and Mateo, Ledesma Bohorquez
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260 |
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|a Paris
|b OECD Publishing
|c 2023
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300 |
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|a 35 p.
|c 21 x 28cm
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653 |
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|a Urban, Rural and Regional Development
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|a Ledesma Bohorquez, Mateo
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|a eng
|2 ISO 639-2
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|b OECD
|a OECD Books and Papers
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|a OECD Regional Development Papers
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|a 10.1787/f2f020b9-en
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|a oecd-ilibrary.org
|u https://doi.org/10.1787/f2f020b9-en
|x Verlag
|3 Volltext
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|a 333
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|a 320
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|a Climate shocks such as extreme floods and storms, droughts and heatwaves have complex, inter-connected and far-reaching consequences across multiple policy sectors and systems. Shocks in other systems, such as financial or health crises, can, in turn, affect climate challenges. Applying a systems approach to climate change helps policymakers understand linkages between issues that are treated separately and propose cross-sectoral, multi-disciplinary solutions in cities. This paper proposes a four-pronged policy framework to disentangle the different elements of economic, social, environmental, and other systems operating in cities, maximise co-benefits and manage trade-offs across systems, and build systemic climate resilience in cities. It summarises the contribution of the Working Party on Urban Policy and the Regional Development Policy Committee to the 2021-2022 OECD Horizontal Project on "Building Climate and Economic Resilience in the Transition to a Low-Carbon Economy"
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