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Additional Materials
  • Front part
  • Analytical framework on credit risks for financing small and medium-sized enterprises in Asia
  • Indo-Nepal economic cooperation: a subregional perspective
  • Contribution of the urban poor: evidence from Chennai, India
  • Regional disparities in Sri Lanka: an empirical analysis
  • The challenge of betel nut consumption to economic development: a case of Honiara, Solomon Islands
  • Back part

The Asia-Pacific Development Journal is published twice a year by the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.

Its primary objective is to provide a medium for the exchange of knowledge, experience, ideas, information and data on all aspects of economic and social development in the Asian and Pacific region. The emphasis of the Journal is on the publication of empirically based, policy-oriented articles in the areas of poverty alleviation, emerging social issues and managing globalization.

Original articles analysing issues and problems relevant to the region from the above perspective are welcomed for publication in the Journal. The articles should have a strong emphasis on the policy implications flowing from the analysis. Analytical book reviews will also be considered for publication.

The Asia-Pacific Development Journal (APDJ) is published twice a year by the Macroeconomic Policy and Development Division of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP).

The primary objective of the APDJ is to provide a platform for the exchange of knowledge, experience, ideas, information and data on all aspects of economic and social development issues and concerns facing the region and to stimulate policy debate and assist in the formulation of policy.

The development experience in the Asian and Pacific region has stood out as an extraordinary example of what can be achieved when policymakers, experts, scholars and people at large harness their creativity, knowledge and foresight. The APDJ has been a proud partner in this process, providing a scholarly means for bringing together research work by eminent social scientists and development practitioners from the region and beyond for use by a variety of stakeholders. Over the years, the Journal has emerged as a key United Nations publication in telling the Asian and Pacific development story in a concise, coherent and impartial manner to stimulate policy debate and assist in the formulation of policy in the region.

Additional Materials
  • Front part
  • Analytical framework on credit risks for financing small and medium-sized enterprises in Asia
  • Indo-Nepal economic cooperation: a subregional perspective
  • Contribution of the urban poor: evidence from Chennai, India
  • Regional disparities in Sri Lanka: an empirical analysis
  • The challenge of betel nut consumption to economic development: a case of Honiara, Solomon Islands
  • Back part
Contact
Macroeconomic Policy and Financing for Development Division +66 2 288-1234 [email protected]