by Peter Rogers, Kazi F. Jalal, Bindu N. Lohani, Gene M. Owens, Chang-Chung Yu, Christia M Dufournaud and Jun Bi
Harvard University Press, 1997
Paper: 978-971-561-104-6
Library of Congress Classification GE160.A78M43 1997
Dewey Decimal Classification 363.702095

ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Pressures of population growth, rapid urbanization, industrialization, and stress on natural resources provide new challenges to the Asian Development Bank as it strives to set forth environmental issues as an important element of sustainable economic development in the Asian and Pacific region. While the Bank can provide policy and technical guidance, the governments themselves must take the lead in providing the resources and policies needed to address effectively the rapidly changing environmental condition. How we measure the effectiveness of governmental performance in meeting the environmental challenge in Asia and the Pacific is the subject of this book.

By drawing on experiences in six Asian and Pacific countries, the authors have developed a series of methodological tools to assist others in assessing the environmental quality of air, water, soil, and biological diversity in developing countries. These tools can then be used to determine the financial resources needed to achieve the quality of life characteristic of a sustainable development path.