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Wittaler [7]
3 years ago
7

If the movement of people, food, and manufactured goods can have such a negative impact on public health, should steps be taken

to reduce these flows? What other options are there for lowering the spread of global diseases? How does increased trade in food lead to the spread of food-borne illnesses? What measures can be taken to reduce the incidence of these diseases?
Geography
1 answer:
pickupchik [31]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

People and governments should play an active role in awareness programs.

Explanation:

  • The movement of the people and the ideas and the food all are included in the cultural aspects of the globalized world and as they have their positive impacts they also have there negative impacts like that of the diseases and there impacts on the health of public badly affects the nations economy and the trade flows.
  • <u>Several steps must be take to stop or reduce the flow of the disease and control there harmful effects at the source regions as to lower the spread of the global disease, maybe by the elimination of the waste generation and full and proper diagnosis and monitoring of the food born illness. By limiting the factors that can cause exposure to these diseases. </u>
  • Measures like the proper disposal facilities and food standards should be maintained as guided by the WHO and UNEP, checking the source is a most essential precaution that can be taken along with more awareness programs the stare and the local governments.
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avanturin [10]

Answer:

i love you :)

Explanation:

The complex politics of global warming results from numerous cofactors arising from the global economy's dependence on carbon dioxide (CO2) emitting fossil fuels; and because greenhouse gases such as CO2, methane and N2O (mostly from agriculture) cause global warming.[1]

1. Implications to all aspects of a nation-state's economy: The vast majority of the world economy relies on energy sources or manufacturing techniques that release greenhouse gases at almost every stage of production, transportation, storage, delivery & disposal while a consensus of the world's scientists attribute global warming to the release of CO2 and other greenhouse gases. This intimate linkage between global warming and economic vitality implicates almost every aspect of a nation-state's economy.

2. Industrialization of the developing world: As developing nations industrialize their energy needs increase and since conventional energy sources produce CO2, the CO2 emissions of developing countries are beginning to rise at a time when the scientific community, global governance institutions and advocacy groups are telling the world that CO2 emissions should be decreasing.

3. Metric selection (transparency) and perceived responsibility / ability to respond: Among the countries of the world, disagreements exist over which greenhouse gas emission metrics should be used like total emissions per year, per capita emissions per year, CO2 emissions only, deforestation emissions, livestock emissions or even total historical emissions. Historically, the release of CO2 has not been even among all nation-states, and nation-states have challenges with determining who should restrict emissions and at what point of their industrial development they should be subject to such commitments;

4. Vulnerable developing countries and developed country legacy emissions: Some developing nations blame the developed world for having created the global warming crisis because it was the developed countries that emitted most of the CO2 over the twentieth century and vulnerable countries perceive that it should be the developed countries that should pay to fix the problem;

5. Consensus-driven global governance models: The global governance institutions that evolved during the 20th century are all consensus driven deliberative forums where agreement is difficult to achieve and even when agreement is achieved it is almost impossible to enforce;

6. Well organized and funded special-interest lobbying bodies: Special interest lobbying by well organized groups, such as the fossil fuels lobby, distort and amplify aspects of the challenge.

definitions - https://images.app.goo.gl/ywFNkHakcRcu8sPb9

7 0
3 years ago
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