TY - JOUR
T1 - Increasing collaboration between China and India in the environmental sciences to foster global sustainability
AU - Goodale, Eben
AU - Mammides, Christos
AU - Mtemi, Wambura
AU - Chen, You Fang
AU - Barthakur, Ranjit
AU - Goodale, Uromi Manage
AU - Jiang, Aiwu
AU - Liu, Jianguo
AU - Malhotra, Saurav
AU - Meegaskumbura, Madhava
AU - Pandit, Maharaj K.
AU - Qiu, Guangle
AU - Xu, Jianchu
AU - Cao, Kun Fang
AU - Bawa, Kamaljit S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
PY - 2022/6
Y1 - 2022/6
N2 - As the two largest countries by population, China and India have pervasive effects on the ecosphere. Because of their human population size and long international boundary, they share biodiversity and the threats to it, as well as crops, pests and diseases. We ranked the two countries on a variety of environmental challenges and solutions, illustrating quantitatively their environmental footprint and the parallels between them regarding the threats to their human populations and biodiversity. Yet we show that China and India continue to have few co-authorships in environmental publications, even as their major funding for scientific research has expanded. An agenda for collaboration between China and India can start with the shared Himalaya, linking the countries’ scientists and institutions. A broader agenda can then be framed around environmental challenges that have regional patterns. Coordinated and collaborative research has the potential to improve the two countries’ environmental performance, with implications for global sustainability.
AB - As the two largest countries by population, China and India have pervasive effects on the ecosphere. Because of their human population size and long international boundary, they share biodiversity and the threats to it, as well as crops, pests and diseases. We ranked the two countries on a variety of environmental challenges and solutions, illustrating quantitatively their environmental footprint and the parallels between them regarding the threats to their human populations and biodiversity. Yet we show that China and India continue to have few co-authorships in environmental publications, even as their major funding for scientific research has expanded. An agenda for collaboration between China and India can start with the shared Himalaya, linking the countries’ scientists and institutions. A broader agenda can then be framed around environmental challenges that have regional patterns. Coordinated and collaborative research has the potential to improve the two countries’ environmental performance, with implications for global sustainability.
KW - Conservation
KW - Developing countries
KW - Environmental science
KW - Pollutants
KW - Sustainability
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85121874202&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s13280-021-01681-0
DO - 10.1007/s13280-021-01681-0
M3 - Article
C2 - 34962639
AN - SCOPUS:85121874202
SN - 0044-7447
VL - 51
SP - 1474
EP - 1484
JO - Ambio
JF - Ambio
IS - 6
ER -