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Sabarnee Tuladhar

Researcher at International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development

Publications -  11
Citations -  227

Sabarnee Tuladhar is an academic researcher from International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development. The author has contributed to research in topics: Agriculture & Cash crop. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 10 publications receiving 136 citations.

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Household food security in the face of climate change in the Hindu-Kush Himalayan region

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors tried to understand local people's perceptions of climate change, its impacts on agriculture and household food security, and local adaptation strategies in the Hindu-Kush Himalayan (HKH) region, using data from 8083 households (HHs) from four river sub-basins (SBs), i.e. Upper Indus (Pakistan), Eastern Brahmaputra (India), Koshi (Nepal), and Salween and Mekong (China).
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Climate change-induced hazards and local adaptations in agriculture: a study from Koshi River Basin, Nepal.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated changes in climate, associated hazards, local adaptations in agriculture, and socioeconomic factors affecting adaptation were investigated using data from a large survey of 2310 households (HHs) in the Koshi River Basin (KRB), Nepal.
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Multidimensional poverty and catastrophic health spending in the mountainous regions of Myanmar, Nepal and India

TL;DR: The multidimensionally poor in the poorer regions are more likely to face health shocks and are less likely to afford professional health services, increasing government spending on health and increasing households’ access to health insurance can reduce catastrophic health spending and multidimensional poverty.
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Are Traditional Food Crops Really ‘Future Smart Foods?’ A Sustainability Perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the potential of traditional food crops (TFCs) to be future smart foods through the lens of sustainability, and find that TFCs have a huge potential to be "future smart foods" because they are socially acceptable, have high nutritional values and are key to the agrobiodiversity and resilience of farming systems.
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Multidimensional Poverty in Mountainous Regions: Shan and Chin in Myanmar

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data from 4290 households of poverty and vulnerability assessment survey and the Alkire-Foster methodology to estimate and decompose multidimensional poverty in the states of Shan and Chin in Myanmar.