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PEOPLE-CENTREDCLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION: INTEGRATING GENDER ISSUES







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    Book (stand-alone)
    Communicating Gender For Rural Development - Integrating gender in communication for development 2011
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    In rural and agricultural development projects, ‘communication for development’ and ‘gender’ approaches are key to ensuring that food security, poverty and gender objectives are met sustainably. These two approaches are based on common values, namely the active and equal participation of all stakeholders, both men and women, and the empowerment of populations, particularly the most disadvantaged. They are in no way contradictory, and yet very few communication initiatives take the issue of gender into account. No doubt this is because gender is poorly understood, seen as complicated and labelled ‘a women’s issue’. Moreover, there is a tendency to forget that people’s livelihoods and their socioeconomic situation have a huge bearing on their ability to receive and transmit information. Lastly, commonly used methods of communication are supposedly gender-neutral. With gender seen as a ‘women’s issue’ and communication dressed in ‘unisex clothing’, it is hardly surprisin g that communication for development initiatives reach and engage more men than women, especially in rural areas.
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    Book (stand-alone)
    GENDER: THE MISSING COMPONENTOF THE RESPONSE TO CLIMATE CHANGE 2006
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    This report analyses the gender dimension of climate change and the policies enacted to mitigate and adapt to its impacts with the aim of developing gender sensitive approaches with regards to mitigation measures, adaptation projects and national regimes. The framework of the study is represented, on the one hand, by the scientific assessment of climate change, with its impacts and associated effects on human and natural systems, and, on the other hand, by the international response to this challenge. The findings show that the gender aspects have generally been neglected in international climate policy. This is a major concern given the emphasis of policymakers on general equity issues. It is only during the last few years, on the occasion of the sessions of the Conference of the Parties (COP), COP-8 (held in New Delhi, in October 2002) and COP-9 (held in Milan, December 2003), that gender was tangentially broached.
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    Project
    Building Capacities to Develop Gender-Sensitive Climate Change Adaptation Proposals for Funding Consideration in Caribbean Small Island Developing States - GCP/SLC/019/CAN 2022
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    Owing to their small size, position in tropical cyclone belts and dependence on agriculture and tourism, Small Island Developing States (SIDS) in the Caribbean are particularly vulnerable to climate change and its effects. The agrifood systems of these countries require adaptive measures to support resilience to climate change and sustainability to ensure food and nutrition security and to reduce the impacts of climate change on vulnerable groups, including women and Indigenous Peoples. This project was designed to support efforts to increase adaptive measures in targeted SIDS (Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Suriname) by building national capacities to develop concept notes and full proposals for gender sensitive climate adaptation projects, so that these countries can access climate and environmental financing through the Green Climate Fund (GCF) and the Global Environmental Facility (GEF).

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