Greenhouse Development Rights (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Greenhouse Development Rights" in English language version.

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doi.org

  • Lant, Pritchett (Spring 2006). "Who is Not Poor? Dreaming of a World Truly Free of Poverty". The World Bank Research Observer. 21 (1): 23. doi:10.1093/wbro/lkj002. hdl:10986/16399. and Lant, Pritchett (November 2003). "Who is not Poor? Proposing A Higher International Standard for Poverty". Center for Global Development. Pritchett concluded that the use of an elevated poverty line is "justifiable, more consistent with international fairness, and is a better foundation for the World Bank's organizational mission of poverty reduction” and that “If the poverty line were defined as the level of income at which people typically achieve acceptable levels of the Millennium Development Goal indicators (such as universal primary school completion), it would be set at about [$16] a day.”

frankackerman.com

gdrights.org

  • Athanasiou, Tom; Baer, Paul; Kartha, Sivan; Kemp-Benedict, Erik. The right to development in a climate constrained world.
  • T. Athanasiou; P. Baer; D. Cornland; S. Kartha, Cutting the Knot: Climate Protection, Political Realism and Equity as requirements of a Post-Kyoto regime (PDF), retrieved 2010-05-28
  • For a greater discussion of the Development Threshold, see section 3.2 of the GDRs 2nd edition http://gdrights.org/2009/02/16/second-edition-of-the-greenhouse-development-rights/
  • For a discussion of emergency pathways in general, and a specification of this one, see A 350 ppm Emergency Pathway.

grida.no

handle.net

hdl.handle.net

  • Lant, Pritchett (Spring 2006). "Who is Not Poor? Dreaming of a World Truly Free of Poverty". The World Bank Research Observer. 21 (1): 23. doi:10.1093/wbro/lkj002. hdl:10986/16399. and Lant, Pritchett (November 2003). "Who is not Poor? Proposing A Higher International Standard for Poverty". Center for Global Development. Pritchett concluded that the use of an elevated poverty line is "justifiable, more consistent with international fairness, and is a better foundation for the World Bank's organizational mission of poverty reduction” and that “If the poverty line were defined as the level of income at which people typically achieve acceptable levels of the Millennium Development Goal indicators (such as universal primary school completion), it would be set at about [$16] a day.”

indiaenvironmentportal.org.in

pwccc.wordpress.com

  • This upsurge of interest in climate debt began in early 2009, accelerated at the Copenhagen Conference of Parties, and became institutionalized as a pillar of climate-movement radicalism at the World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth held in Cochabamba, Bolivia between April 19 and 22, 2010. For more information, see "The Archives of Working Group 8 on Climate Debt". Working Grouping 8 of the World People's Conference. Retrieved 2010-05-31.

unfccc.int

web.archive.org