The Emerging Markets Symposium (EMS) was established in 2008 to consider solutions to ‘wicked’ problems of human welfare in emerging markets (1). The problems are complex, defy easy answers but demand attention because they menace growth, cohesion and stability in countries that will play disproportionately large roles in shaping the world in the 21st century.
The eighth symposium, in January 2017, 'Health and Environment in Emerging Markets', will be devoted to the impact of environmental pollution, depletion and degradation on human health in emerging markets and how it could be attenuated or reversed.
The Emerging Markets Symposium (EMS) was established in 2008 to consider solutions to ‘wicked’ problems of human welfare in emerging markets (1). The problems are complex, defy easy answers but demand attention because they menace growth, cohesion and stability in countries that will play disproportionately large roles in shaping the world in the 21st century.
The eighth symposium, in January 2017, 'Health and Environment in Emerging Markets', will be devoted to the impact of environmental pollution, depletion and degradation on human health in emerging markets and how it could be attenuated or reversed.