Centro de Documentación
Repositorio de publicaciones de referencia y de interés para la sustentabilidad ambiental del desarrollo |
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2016

RFP, IETD (Ed.)
Aportes al debate constituyente de Ciudad de México, entre otros artículos Revista
Configuraciones 41, varios autores, no 41, 2016, ISBN: 1405-8847, (Revista de la Fundación Pereyra y del Instituto de Estudios para la Transición Democrática).
Resumen | Enlaces | BibTeX | Etiquetas: alcaldías, capital, CDMX, Constitución, delegaciones, derechos, Desarrollo, gobierno, justicia, Medio ambiente, política
@periodical{Varios2016b,
title = {Aportes al debate constituyente de Ciudad de México, entre otros artículos},
author = {Varios},
editor = {IETD RFP},
url = {/publicaciones/ConstituyenteCDMX/Configuraciones_41_ConstituyenteCDMX.pdf},
isbn = {1405-8847},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-06-15},
issuetitle = {Configuraciones 41, varios autores},
journal = {Instituto de Estudios para la Transición Democrática},
number = {41},
pages = {197},
abstract = {El 15 de septiembre se instalará la Asamblea Constituyente de Ciudad de México, para que 100 diputados constituyentes deberán iniciar sus trabajos para que el 31 de enero de 2017 esté listo el inédito ordenamiento. Por ello dedicamos este número de Configuraciones a presentar una serie de “insumos” para la multimencionada Asamblea. Estamos convencidos de que no se trata de un acto ritual más, sino que tiene que establecer las coordenadas de lo que debe ser la convivencia en nuestra ciudad capital, que al mismo tiempo es la sede de los poderes federales.},
note = {Revista de la Fundación Pereyra y del Instituto de Estudios para la Transición Democrática},
keywords = {alcaldías, capital, CDMX, Constitución, delegaciones, derechos, Desarrollo, gobierno, justicia, Medio ambiente, política},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {periodical}
}
El 15 de septiembre se instalará la Asamblea Constituyente de Ciudad de México, para que 100 diputados constituyentes deberán iniciar sus trabajos para que el 31 de enero de 2017 esté listo el inédito ordenamiento. Por ello dedicamos este número de Configuraciones a presentar una serie de “insumos” para la multimencionada Asamblea. Estamos convencidos de que no se trata de un acto ritual más, sino que tiene que establecer las coordenadas de lo que debe ser la convivencia en nuestra ciudad capital, que al mismo tiempo es la sede de los poderes federales.
2012

OCDE,
Sustainable Materials Management: Making Better Use of Resources Libro
2012, ISBN: 978-92-64-17426-9.
Resumen | Enlaces | BibTeX | Etiquetas: externalidades, extracción, Gestión sustentable de materiales, Instrumentos, OCDE, política, sustentabilidad
@book{OCDE2012c,
title = { Sustainable Materials Management: Making Better Use of Resources},
author = {OCDE},
editor = {OCDE},
url = {/publicaciones/OECD/2012_Sust.Mat.Man_oecd.pdf},
isbn = {978-92-64-17426-9},
year = {2012},
date = {2012-06-06},
abstract = {In the 20th century the world population grew 4 times, economic output 22 times and fossil fuel consumption 14 times. The total volume of material extracted or harvested worldwide reached nearly 60 billion metric tons per year in 2007, a 65% increase from 1980 and an estimated 8 fold increase over the last century.
The way economies use material resources determines to a significant extent what environmental pressures are being generated. In the near term sustainable development is threatened, not so much by the depletion of non-renewable resources such as minerals and fossil fuels, but rather by over-exploitation of renewable resources and the life-cycle impacts or externalities associated with material extraction, transport and utilization. These externalities include climate change, degradation of air, land and wildlife habitats, as well as depletion of natural resources including fresh water, biomass and topsoil.
Sustainable materials management can help to better manage those linkages. It supports sustainable decision-making by balancing the social, environmental and economic considerations throughout the life-cycle of a product or material, ensuring that negative impacts are not shifted from one life cycle stage to the next, and at the same time helping to improve resource security and competitiveness through better resource productivity. },
keywords = {externalidades, extracción, Gestión sustentable de materiales, Instrumentos, OCDE, política, sustentabilidad},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {book}
}
In the 20th century the world population grew 4 times, economic output 22 times and fossil fuel consumption 14 times. The total volume of material extracted or harvested worldwide reached nearly 60 billion metric tons per year in 2007, a 65% increase from 1980 and an estimated 8 fold increase over the last century.
The way economies use material resources determines to a significant extent what environmental pressures are being generated. In the near term sustainable development is threatened, not so much by the depletion of non-renewable resources such as minerals and fossil fuels, but rather by over-exploitation of renewable resources and the life-cycle impacts or externalities associated with material extraction, transport and utilization. These externalities include climate change, degradation of air, land and wildlife habitats, as well as depletion of natural resources including fresh water, biomass and topsoil.
Sustainable materials management can help to better manage those linkages. It supports sustainable decision-making by balancing the social, environmental and economic considerations throughout the life-cycle of a product or material, ensuring that negative impacts are not shifted from one life cycle stage to the next, and at the same time helping to improve resource security and competitiveness through better resource productivity.
The way economies use material resources determines to a significant extent what environmental pressures are being generated. In the near term sustainable development is threatened, not so much by the depletion of non-renewable resources such as minerals and fossil fuels, but rather by over-exploitation of renewable resources and the life-cycle impacts or externalities associated with material extraction, transport and utilization. These externalities include climate change, degradation of air, land and wildlife habitats, as well as depletion of natural resources including fresh water, biomass and topsoil.
Sustainable materials management can help to better manage those linkages. It supports sustainable decision-making by balancing the social, environmental and economic considerations throughout the life-cycle of a product or material, ensuring that negative impacts are not shifted from one life cycle stage to the next, and at the same time helping to improve resource security and competitiveness through better resource productivity.
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