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Publication On the cost-effectiveness of Nature-based Solutions for reducing disaster risk(2024-10) Vicarelli, Marta; Sudmeier-Rieux, Karen; Alsadadi, Ali; Shrestha, Aryen; Schütze, Simon; Kang, Michael; Leue, Madeline; Wasielewski, David; Mysiak, JaroslavThe potential of ecosystem-based interventions, also known as Nature-based Solutions (NbS), for Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) and Climate Change Adaptation (CCA) is now recognized by major national policies and international framework agreements. However, there is limited scientific evidence about their economic viability and equity impacts. We examined English-language peer-reviewed studies, published between 2000 and 2021, which undertook economic evaluations of NbS for DRR and CCA. Based on our results, 71 % of studies indicated that NbS have consistently proven to be a cost-effective approach to mitigating hazards and 24 % of studies found NbS cost-effective under certain conditions. The ecosystem-based interventions most frequently found effective in mitigating hazards are associated with mangroves (80 %), forests (77 %), and coastal ecosystems (73 %). Studies comparing the cost-effectiveness of NbS and engineering-based solutions for mitigating certain hazards showed that NbS are no less effective than engineering-based solutions. Among these studies, 65 % found that NbS are always more effective in attenuating hazards compared to engineering-based solutions and 26 % found that NbS are partially more effective. Our findings illustrate a range of factors, including the geographic locations of the NbS analyzed, their contribution to the restoration and increase of biodiversity, their property rights structure, their source of financing, and the economic methodologies employed to assess cost-effectiveness and distributional effects. The geographic location of the NbS observations included in this analysis was examined considering global projected temperature and precipitation changes.Publication Comments: Debating business: Women and liberalization at the council on foreign relations(2001-01-01) Folbre, NPublication Job gendering: Occupational choice and the marriage market(2003-01-01) Badgett, MVL; Folbre, NPublication Wages of virtue: The relative pay of care work(2002-01-01) England, P; Budig, M; Folbre, NPublication To honor and obey: Efficiency, inequality, and patriarchal property rights(2001-01-01) Braunstein, E; Folbre, NPublication Women's empowerment and demographic processes: Mating beyond Cairo(2001-01-01) Folbre, NPublication When does gender trump money? Bargaining and time in household work(2003-01-01) Bittman, M; England, P; Folbre, N; Sayer, L; Matheson, GPublication An economic analysis of the family(2005-01-01) Folbre, NPublication Saving social security: A balanced approach(2005-01-01) Folbre, NPublication Publication Who gets what? Gender differences in "spendable" income(2005-01-01) Ohler, T; Folbre, NPublication Hospital registered nurse shortages: Environmental, patient, and institutional predictors(2001-01-01) Seago, JA; Ash, M; Spetz, J; Coffman, J; Grumbach, KPublication Introduction: Gender and aging(2005-01-01) Folbre, N; Shaw, LB; Stark, APublication By what measure? Family time devoted to children in the United States(2005-01-01) Folbre, N; Yoon, J; Finnoff, K; Fuligni, ASPublication Not your grandfather's EC 101(2007-01-01) Folbre, NPublication Publication Unpaid work and the economy. A gender analysis of the standards of living(2008-01-01) Folbre, NPublication Why a well-paid nurse is a better nurse(2006-01-01) Nelson, JA; Folbre, NPublication Economics - When a commodity is not exactly a commodity(2008-01-01) Folbre, NPublication The effect of registered nurses' unions on heart-attack mortality(2004-01-01) Ash, M; Seago, JA