NEW APPROACHES IN HRM
34 Ø Reducing and gradually abolishing subsidies harmful to the environment. Ø Introducing procurement rules that will set clear criteria for the sustainability of the environment. Ø Improving waste management practice. Ø Promoting investments in environmentally sound technologies. Ø Fostering public-private partnerships for waste disposal. Ø Sustainably managing biodiversity and ecosystem services. Ø Reducing carbon footprint. III. Inclusive economic growth and resilience in all sectors of the economy by: Ø Promoting equality, including gender equality and economic empowerment of vulnerable groups; Ø Creating new and greening existing jobs. Ø Encouraging a high employment economy, which leads to social and territorial cohesion. Ø Improving the health and well-being of Montenegrin citizens. Ø Building social capital and improving the resilience of local communities. Ø Empowering citizens through access to information and justice and participation in decision-making, especially among vulnerable groups; Ø Reducing multidimensional poverty, as a measure of the number and intensity of overlapping human deprivations in healthcare, education, and standard of living. The core of the green economy process is the decoupling natural resource use and negative environmental impacts from economic growth ( Fig. 2 ). Figure 2 . Stylized presentation of decoupling of impacts Source: This figure is re-drawn from Bringezu et al., 2017 by Zoi Environment Networks
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