1st Edition

Community-based adaptation Mainstreaming into national and local planning

Edited By Hannah Reid Copyright 2016
    122 Pages
    by Routledge

    122 Pages
    by Routledge

    Community-based adaptation (CBA) to climate change is based on local priorities, needs, knowledge and capacities. Early CBA initiatives were generally implemented by non-government organisations (NGOs), and operated primarily at the local level. Many used ‘bottom-up’ participatory processes to identify the climate change problem and appropriate responses.

    Small localised stand-alone initiatives are insufficient to address the scale of challenges climate change will bring, however. The causes of vulnerability - such as market or service access, or good governance - also often operate beyond the project level. Larger organisations and national governments have therefore started to implement broader CBA programmes, which provide opportunities to scale up responses and integrate CBA into higher levels of policy and planning.

    This book shows that it is possible for CBA to remain centred on local priorities, but not necessarily limited to work implemented at the local level. Some chapters address the issue of mainstreaming CBA into government policy and planning processes or into city or sectoral level plans (e.g. on agriculture). Others look at how gender and children’s issues should be mainstreamed into adaptation planning itself, and others describe how tools can be applied, and finance delivered for effective mainstreaming.

    This book was published as a special issue of Climate and Development.

    1. Mainstreaming community-based adaptation into national and local planning  Hannah Reid and Saleemul Huq

    2. Mainstreaming climate change adaptation into development in Bangladesh  Jessica Ayers, Saleemul Huq, Helena Wright, Arif M. Faisal and Syed Tanveer Hussain

    3. Identifying operational mechanisms for mainstreaming community-based adaptation in Nepal  Bimal Raj Regmi and Cassandra Star

    4. Farmers, food and climate change: ensuring community-based adaptation is mainstreamed into agricultural programmes  Helena Wright, Sonja Vermeulen, Gernot Laganda, Max Olupot, Edidah Ampaire and M.L. Jat

    5. Gender-sensitive adaptation policy-making in Bangladesh: status and ways forward for improved mainstreaming  Dalia Shabib and Shusmita Khan

    6. Power and differential climate change vulnerability among extremely poor people in Northwest Bangladesh: lessons for mainstreaming  Cristina Coirolo and Atiq Rahman

    7. Moving towards inclusive urban adaptation: approaches to integrating community-based adaptation to climate change at city and national scale  Diane Archer, Florencia Almansi, Michael Digregorio, Debra Roberts, Divya Sharma and Denia Syam

    8. A review of decision-support models for adaptation to climate change in the context of development  John Jacob Nay, Mark Abkowitz, Eric Chu, Daniel Gallagher and Helena Wright

    9. Enablers for delivering community-based adaptation at scale  Elizabeth Gogoi, Marai Dupar, Lindsey Jones, Claudia Martinez and Lisa McNamara

    10. Mainstreaming children’s vulnerabilities and capacities into community-based adaptation to enhance impact  Paul Mitchell and Caroline Borchard

    11. Knowledge flows in climate change adaptation: exploring friction between scales  Claire Stott and Saleemul Huq

    12. Up-scaling finance for community-based adaptation  Adrian Fenton, Daniel Gallagher, Helena Wright, Saleemul Huq and Charles Nyandiga

    Biography

    Hannah Reid is a Research Associate at the International Institute for Environment and Development. She has over thirteen years of experience working on climate change and development, with particular focus on how to help those who are most vulnerable to climate change cope with its impacts, and ecosystem-based approaches to adaptation.