Springer Nature: China New Development Awards 2019 presented on 22nd August to 10 winning scholarly books and their authors, selected by a panel of Springer Nature editors and publishers for having made a significant contribution to research which contributed to the delivery of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals. Researchers and publishers joined by government representatives at the awards ceremony at the 2019 Beijing International Book Fair.(BIBF)
- Advances in Green Energy Systems and Smart Grid by Li, K., Zhang, J., Chen, M., Yang, Z., Niu, Q
- Atlas of Environmental Risks Facing China Under Climate Change by Tang Qiuhong, Quansheng Ge
- The Belt & Road Initiative in the Global Arena by Cheng Yu, Song Lilei, Huang Lihe
- China's Rural Development Road by Xiaoshan Zhang, Zhou Li
- China's 40 Years of Economic Reform and Development by Xinli Zheng
- Eco-development in China by Wu Deng, Ali Cheshmehzangi
- Green Intelligent Transportation Systems by Wuhong Wang, Klaus Bengler, Xiaobei Jiang
- HIV Vaccines and Cure by Linqi Zhang, Sharon R. Lewin
- Normative Readings of the Belt and Road Initiative by Wenhua Shan, Kimmo Nutio, Kangle Zhang
- Recycled Aggregate Concrete Structures by Jianzhuang Xiao
Click book titles to read the selected chapters for free until Aug.31, 2020.
Winning titles covering scholarly works from the social sciences, business and economics, engineering and technology, as well as the life sciences and the biomedicine research areas.
The China New Development Awards for academic books is one part of the Springer Nature SDG Programme, which features cutting-edge research from a wide range of science, engineering, social sciences and humanities disciplines, as well as across brands, platforms and product types. By creating new partnerships and new ways of collaborating, we want to improve the process of sharing discoveries on the world stage, and help practitioners to develop innovative and effective policies, programmes and technologies to tackle major social, environmental and economic challenges.
Through the Springer Nature SDG Programme, we want to better support researchers to help them to attract the wider attention of the policy and business communities who can put research insights into action to solve regional and global issues.
Making meaningful progress towards the delivery of the SDGs requires strong, sustained interaction not only between professional communities, but also between the research fields themselves. The approach to tackle urgent societal challenges must be multi-disciplinary, as no one research area can solve the challenges of global hunger, poverty, or climate change. By breaking down disciplinary silos, both in publishing and across the global research community, the Springer Nature SDG Programme aims to inspire new connections and help deliver real progress.