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by: Anthony G. Bigio, Bharat Dahiya
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The "brown agenda," or urban environmental issues, became
an important part of the international policy agenda following the 1992
United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de
Janeiro. Urban environmental issues continue to remain a major
challenge in the cities of developing countries. The World Bank
strengthened its focus on urban environmental management with the
adoption of this brown agenda as part of the Bank's urban
livability program.
Urban Environment and Infrastructure reviews the World
Bank's activities to improve urban environmental quality. It sets
out the Bank's expanded brown agenda and emphasizes the crucial
importance of infrastructure and environmental interventions in order
to improve livability in cities in developing countries. The World Bank
has more than US$12 billion worth of active commitments aimed at
improving urban environmental quality. While the Bank's investments
are directed at much needed basic environmental services especially for
the urban poor, the challenge of improving urban environment or
livability in large cities needs further attention.
Increasing climate variability, its impacts, especially sea-level
rise, and urban impacts of natural disasters are becoming more and more
part of the daily challenges facing cities in the developing world,
seventy percent of which are located on the coasts. The volume provides
pragmatic recommendations on how to deal with the challenge of this
expanded brown agenda.
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