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Community-based adaptation - Mainstreaming into national and local planning (Paperback)
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Community-based adaptation - Mainstreaming into national and local planning (Paperback)
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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.
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