Sustainability nexus analytics, informatics, and data (AID): Drought
Huning, Laurie S., Bateni, Sayed M., Hayes, Michael, Quynh-Giang Ho, Sarah, Jayasinghe, Susantha, Kumar, Rohini, Lima, Carlos, A Love, Charlotte, Madani, Kaveh, Markonis, Yannis, Matin, Mir A., Miao, Chiyuan, Motagh, Mahdi, Naeger, Aaron, Yumi de Oliveira, Debora, Read, Laura K., Samaniego, Luis, Shokri, Nima, Shukla, Shraddhanand, Soltanian, Reza et al., (2024). Sustainability nexus analytics, informatics, and data (AID): Drought. Springer Nature, 32(1), 18-n/a
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Sub-type Journal article Author Huning, Laurie S.
Bateni, Sayed M.
Hayes, Michael
Quynh-Giang Ho, Sarah
Jayasinghe, Susantha
Kumar, Rohini
Lima, Carlos
A Love, Charlotte
Madani, Kaveh
Markonis, Yannis
Matin, Mir A.
Miao, Chiyuan
Motagh, Mahdi
Naeger, Aaron
Yumi de Oliveira, Debora
Read, Laura K.
Samaniego, Luis
Shokri, Nima
Shukla, Shraddhanand
Soltanian, Reza
Stefanski, Robert
Trabelsi, Fatma
Tsegai, Daniel
Vo, Linh UC
Wanders, Niko
Wens, Marthe
Zarei, Azin
AghaKouchak, AmirTitle Sustainability nexus analytics, informatics, and data (AID): Drought Appearing in Springer Nature Volume 32 Issue No. 1 Publication Date 2024-11-13 Place of Publication Berlin Heidelberg Publisher Springer Nature Start page 18 End page n/a Language eng Abstract Drought occurs globally and can have deleterious effects on built and natural systems and societies. With the increasing human footprint on our planet, so has increased the anthropogenic influence on drought and water scarcity, leading to the development of notions of “anthropogenic drought” and “water bankruptcy”. Understanding the human dimension of drought is complex and requires a data-driven nexus approach to better understand the involved processes and address the implications of water deficits around the world. Just as it transcends scales and geographical boundaries, drought is neither restricted to a single hydrologic state in the water cycle nor are its effects confined to one sector. Drought impacts the water, energy, and food sectors, ecosystem services, socioeconomics, public policy, politics, etc. from local to regional and global scales. We argue that drought mitigation strategies and policy developments must be addressed with a multidisciplinary perspective that benefits from a nexus approach Copyright Holder Author Copyright Year 2024 Copyright type All rights reserved DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s00550-024-00546-w -
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