Integrating seasonal climate forecasts into adaptive social protection in the Sahel
Autor: | Celia Petty, Issa Lele, Cheikh Kane, Nicolas Fournier, Luisa Ciampi, Helen Ticehurst, Richard Graham, Jennifer S. R. Pirret, Nyree Pinder, Jessica Stacey, Cecilia Costella, Kathrin Hall, Mary Allen, Meghan Bailey, Rosalind Cornforth, Joseph Daron |
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Přispěvatelé: | UT-I-ITC-4DEarth, Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation, Department of Earth Systems Analysis |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Geography Planning and Development UT-Hybrid-D 010501 environmental sciences Development livelihoods 01 natural sciences Training (civil) West africa ITC-HYBRID Seasonal forecasts Resilience (network) resilience 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Global and Planetary Change Food security training business.industry Environmental resource management food and beverages food security Livelihood Geography Social protection ITC-ISI-JOURNAL-ARTICLE business |
Zdroj: | Climate and development, 13(6), 543-550. Taylor & Francis |
ISSN: | 1756-5529 1756-5537 |
Popis: | Sahelian West Africa is a region of high year-to-year climate variability that can significantly impact on communities and livelihoods. Adaptive social protection (ASP) is being introduced in the region to support vulnerable people through enabling more effective responses to climate shocks, bridging social protection with disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation. The ASPIRE (Adaptive Social Protection: Information for enhanced REsilience) project aimed to provide technical support to the World Bank’s Adaptive Social Protection Programme through demonstrating the use of climate forecasts in ASP and promoting dialogue between climate and social protection stakeholders. Here we discuss lessons learned in the project, highlighting challenges and opportunities for including climate forecasts in early warning systems to inform ASP. We provide recommendations to help achieve ASP systems designed to use climate forecasts, arguing that tailored seasonal forecast products have potential in some countries to improve the lead time of interventions to address climate-induced disasters. Critical to this is continued investment in underpinning science and capacity building of climate and social protection stakeholders, as well as continued dialogue and co-production between actors to develop climate forecasts that provide actionable information. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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