Amanda Palazzo
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
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Publication
Featured researches published by Amanda Palazzo.
The research reports | 2010
Gerald C. Nelson; Mark W. Rosegrant; Amanda Palazzo; Ian Gray; Christina Ingersoll; Richard Robertson; Simla Tokgoz; Tingju Zhu; Timothy B. Sulser; Claudia Ringler; Siwa Msangi; Liangzhi You
As the global population grows and incomes in poor countries rise, so too, will the demand for food, placing additional pressure on sustainable food production. Climate change adds a further challenge, as changes in temperature and precipitation threaten agricultural productivity and the capacity to feed the worlds population. This study assesses how serious the danger to food security might be and suggests some steps policymakers can take to remedy the situation.
Science Advances | 2016
Michael Obersteiner; Brian Walsh; Stefan Frank; Petr Havlik; Matthew Cantele; Junguo Liu; Amanda Palazzo; Mario Herrero; Yonglong Lu; A. Mosnier; Hugo Valin; Keywan Riahi; F. Kraxner; Steffen Fritz; Detlef P. van Vuuren
Researchers apply an economic model to trade-offs facing the UN’s ambitious Sustainable Development Goals agenda. The 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) call for a comprehensive new approach to development rooted in planetary boundaries, equity, and inclusivity. The wide scope of the SDGs will necessitate unprecedented integration of siloed policy portfolios to work at international, regional, and national levels toward multiple goals and mitigate the conflicts that arise from competing resource demands. In this analysis, we adopt a comprehensive modeling approach to understand how coherent policy combinations can manage trade-offs among environmental conservation initiatives and food prices. Our scenario results indicate that SDG strategies constructed around Sustainable Consumption and Production policies can minimize problem-shifting, which has long placed global development and conservation agendas at odds. We conclude that Sustainable Consumption and Production policies (goal 12) are most effective at minimizing trade-offs and argue for their centrality to the formulation of coherent SDG strategies. We also find that alternative socioeconomic futures—mainly, population and economic growth pathways—generate smaller impacts on the eventual achievement of land resource–related SDGs than do resource-use and management policies. We expect that this and future systems analyses will allow policy-makers to negotiate trade-offs and exploit synergies as they assemble sustainable development strategies equal in scope to the ambition of the SDGs.
Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2017
Amanda Palazzo; Joost Vervoort; Daniel Mason-D’Croz; Lucas Rutting; Petr Havlik; Shahnila Islam; Jules Bayala; Hugo Valin; Hamé Abdou Kadi Kadi; Philip Thornton; Robert B. Zougmoré
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Regional Environmental Change | 2017
Arnout van Soesbergen; Andrew P. Arnell; Marieke Sassen; Benjamin Stuch; Rüdiger Schaldach; Jan Göpel; Joost Vervoort; Daniel Mason-D’Croz; Shahnila Islam; Amanda Palazzo
Abstract Competition for land is increasing as a consequence of the growing demands for food and other commodities and the need to conserve biodiversity and ecosystem services. Land conversion and the intensification of current agricultural systems continues to lead to a loss of biodiversity and trade-offs among ecosystem functions. Decision-makers need to understand these trade-offs in order to better balance different demands on land and resources. There is an urgent need for spatially explicit information and analyses on the effects of different trajectories of human-induced landscape change in biodiversity and ecosystem services. We assess the potential implications of a set of plausible socio-economic and climate scenarios for agricultural production and demand and model-associated land use and land cover changes between 2005 and 2050 to assess potential impacts on biodiversity in Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi. We show that different future socio-economic scenarios are consistent in their projections of areas of high agricultural development leading to similar spatial patterns of habitat and biodiversity loss. Yet, we also show that without protected areas, biodiversity losses are higher and that expanding protected areas to include other important biodiversity areas can help reduce biodiversity losses in all three countries. These results highlight the need for effective protection and the potential benefits of expanding the protected area network while meeting agricultural production needs.
Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2014
Joost Vervoort; Philip K. Thornton; Patricia M. Kristjanson; Wiebke Förch; Polly J. Ericksen; Kasper Kok; John Ingram; Mario Herrero; Amanda Palazzo; Ariella Helfgott; A. Wilkinson; Petr Havlik; Daniel Mason-D'Croz; Christine Jost
Archive | 2010
C Gerald; Mark W. Rosegrant; Amanda Palazzo; Ian Gray; Christina Ingersoll; Richard Robertson; Simla Tokgoz; Tingju Zhu; Timothy B. Sulser; Claudia Ringler; Siwa Msangi; Liangzhi Nelson You
Agricultural Water Management | 2014
Amanda Palazzo; Nicholas Brozović
Archive | 2010
Claudia Ringler; Miroslav Batka; Marilia Magalhaes; Rowena Valmonte-Santos; David R. Lee; Amanda Palazzo; Tingju Zhu; Richard Robertson; Mark W. Rosegrant; Jawoo Koo; Siwa Msangi; Gerald C. Nelson; Timothy B. Sulser; Mandy Ewing
Carbon Balance and Management | 2015
Brian Walsh; Felicjan Rydzak; Amanda Palazzo; F. Kraxner; Mario Herrero; Peer M. Schenk; Philippe Ciais; Ivan A. Janssens; Josep Peñuelas; Anneliese Niederl-Schmidinger; Michael Obersteiner
Archive | 2014
Mario Herrero; Petr Havlik; J. McIntire; Amanda Palazzo; Hugo Valin
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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