கொள்ளை வாஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Stay updated with breaking news from கொள்ளை வாஸ். Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Top News In கொள்ளை வாஸ் Today - Breaking & Trending Today
Jeri Clausing The recent news about Europe reopening to vaccinated travelers this summer was, obviously, welcome news for the long-shuttered river cruise industry. But with opening dates and details on country-specific buy-in for welcoming travelers still elusive, river operators say it s too soon to say exactly when the season will resume. Still, there s renewed optimism about getting Americans back on Europe s waterways this summer, and possibly sooner than was widely predicted just a month ago. Finally, things are looking up, said Marcus Leskovar, executive vice president of Amadeus River Cruises, which ran a limited series of sailings last summer for European guests. We are currently planning to start the season in June and are preparing for the first group of American passengers onboard a Rhone cruise on July 1, with more American passengers to follow that month and a full return to sailings for Americans in August. ....
Food insecurity in the world’s poorest countries reached record highs in 2020, with millions staring at famine, a situation exacerbated in part by the COVID pandemic, according to a UN report. From Haiti to Syria, some 155 million people across 55 countries who rely the most on humanitarian assistance were classified as being in “crisis” – meaning in urgent need of food – a 20 million increase since 2019, according to the report released Wednesday. The report – based on a study organised by the Global Network Against Food Crises, a partnership between the European Union, Food and Agriculture Organization, and the UN World Food Programme – attributed three main factors to the worsening situation: conflict, economic factors related to the COVID pandemic and climate change. ....
The new rules of Millennial marketing in 2021 What brands and marketers need to know about connecting with this generation If last year was the wake-up call for Millennials, buffeted by the economic and social storm of the pandemic, this year represents a resetting of priorities. Millennials, which range from 25 to 40 years old, are a critical demographic for brands in 2021. Yet the coronavirus pandemic has altered several assumptions about the priorities for this generation and how brands can connect with them. These effects everything from brand values right down to choice of advertising medium. “The biggest change in this group I would call out is that they have grown up,” Snap GM A/NZ, Southeast Asia and Hong Kong, Kathryn Carter, told ....
New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2019; pp xx + 295, ₹ 895. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019; pp xxiv + 577, price not indicated. Asia’s Journey to Prosperity: Policy, Market, and Technology Over 50 Years by Asian Development Bank, Manila: ADB, 2020 (ebook), http://dx.doi.org/10.22617/TCS190290.
The transformation of Asia from its status as the most impoverished region to the growth locomotive of the world economy within five decades is unprecedented and nothing short of a miracle. The achievement seems all the more profound when juxtaposed with a very pessimistic outlook of Asia’s development prospects made by Gunnar Myrdal in his three-volume tome Asian Drama: An Inquiry into the Poverty of Nations, published in 1968. ....
Big Data and Near-Real-Time Monitoring of Food Emergencies Share Article MILWAUKEE (PRWEB) December 17, 2020 It’s no secret that today’s economic climate has drastically shifted due to COVID-19. In an AAEA session taking place virtually for the 2021 ASSA Annual Meeting, AAEA members and researchers will examine food insecurity with new technology, the poverty and malnutrition indicators, whether or not cell phone metadata can predict food security, and the vegetation index. The organizer of the session, Rob Vos from the International Food Policy Research Institute says, “Even before COVID-19, global hunger was on the rise, especially where livelihoods are affected by conflict, climate change and economic collapse. While the risk factors are known, their timely monitoring is tedious, but badly needed. This session should show us the prospects of filling this void and save lives.” ....