2016
DOI: 10.1007/s00506-016-0297-4
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Water-Energy-Food nexus: framing the opportunities, challenges and synergies for implementing the SDGs

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Cited by 69 publications
(71 citation statements)
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“…This deliberately stands in contrast to prominent thoughts in the WEF Nexus community (e.g., [19,21,53,54]). The unmanageable complexity of the WEF Nexus has been criticized (see e.g., [1,29]).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…This deliberately stands in contrast to prominent thoughts in the WEF Nexus community (e.g., [19,21,53,54]). The unmanageable complexity of the WEF Nexus has been criticized (see e.g., [1,29]).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…After the WEF Nexus gained popularity in 2011, it seems to be the common understanding that the Nexus Approach must be considered at all scales or across scales respectively [19,29,53,54], or at least at different scales [20,53,55]. What is exactly meant with the term "scale" in these cases is ambiguous.…”
Section: Water-energy-food Nexusmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Linking food security and sustainable development in industrial crop settings Food security goes beyond the fundamental biophysical needs related to nutrition, as it is linked with multiple other processes in ecosystems and socioeconomic systems, including employment/income generation, water management, energy provision, and biodiversity conservation, among others (Kanter et al 2016;Yillia 2016). These linkages are very profound in industrial crop systems of Africa (Gasparatos et al 2011(Gasparatos et al , 2015Wiggins et al 2015), suggesting that within such systems food security has all the characteristics of a wicked sustainability problem that cannot be tackled through simple solutions (Breeman et al 2015).…”
Section: The Role Of Education and Gender Equalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, these trade-offs can manifest at the household, local, regional or global scale, and can have varying effects at household food security (Griggs et al 2014;Kanter et al 2016;Yillia 2016). For example, the production of different bioenergy crops related in Africa can have important implications for carbon stocks and as a result the global climate (e.g., Elshout et al 2015;Romeu-Dalmau et al 2016), affecting thus the overall agricultural system considering that climate change is a major risk for agriculture in the continent (Muller et al 2011;Rosenzweig et al 2014).…”
Section: The Role Of Education and Gender Equalitymentioning
confidence: 99%