doughnut
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doughnut
Summary
doughnut is an economic model[1]. doughnut draws 425 Wikipedia views per month (economic_model category, ranking #5 of 38).[2]
Key Facts
- doughnut is credited with the discovery of Kate Raworth[3].
- doughnut's image is recorded as Doughnut (economic model).jpg[4].
- doughnut's instance of is recorded as economic model[5].
- doughnut is named after doughnut[6].
- doughnut's Commons category is recorded as Doughnut (economic model)[7].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as food security[8].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as health[9].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as climate change[10].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as ocean acidification[11].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as chemical pollution[12].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as groundwater depletion[13].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as biodiversity loss[14].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as air pollution[15].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as ozone depletion[16].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as social equity[17].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as gender equality[18].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as housing[19].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as water security[20].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as education[21].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as work[22].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as peace[23].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as energy[24].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as deforestation[25].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as eutrophication[26].
- doughnut's has part is recorded as digital divide[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
doughnut is credited with the discovery of Kate Raworth[3].
Why It Matters
doughnut draws 425 Wikipedia views per month (economic_model category, ranking #5 of 38).[2] doughnut has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] doughnut is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]