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Agenda
Empowering women for gender equity
Volume 28, 2014 - Issue 3: Gender and climate change
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MAPPING THE ISSUES

Contextualising and conceptualising gender and climate change in Africa

 

abstract

This overview provides the conceptual and contextual foundation for the issue on ‘Gender and climate change’. Drawing on a literature review and appraisal of the contributions in this issue, we foreground the current key climate change debates. There is consensus that climate change is a global challenge with devastating impacts at different scales. It is also established in the literature that some communities and groups are more vulnerable than others. In mapping the issues we provide an overview of the gender and climate change debates, as the thematic focus. The importance of engendering policy development, research as well as adaptation and mitigation strategies are underscored. The discussion then provides a brief overview of climate change trends and dynamics in Africa, the continent which is viewed as the most vulnerable to climate change impacts due to persistent poverty (including socio-economic inequalities), unsustainable and insecure livelihoods, high reliance on the natural resource base, limited access to information and technologies, and weak institutions and state fragility. This is followed by a thematic examination of the key issues related to gender and climate change in Africa which include women as consumers, access to land and natural resources, agricultural production and food security, health aspects, security issues and adaptation and mitigation support. Finally, concluding remarks are forwarded which resonate with the contributions by writers in the issue.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Urmilla Bob

URMILLA BOB is the University Dean of Research and a Full Professor in the Discipline of Geography at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. Her research interest is in relation to a range of environmental and developmental issues including rural development and climate change dynamics in southern African contexts. Email: [email protected]

Agnes Babugura

AGNES BABUGURA is a lecturer at Monash University South Africa (Geography and Environmental Science Department). She holds a PhD in Environmental Science focusing specifically on social vulnerability to climate variability and change. Her key areas of expertise include gender and climate change, gender mainstreaming, social vulnerability and adaptation to climate change, poverty and development, agriculture and food security and project monitoring and evaluation. She is currently serving as the Expert on Gender and Environment, Climate Change and Sustainable Development for the UNDP gender team. In 2012, she had the opportunity of working with the UNDP gender team as the regional technical expert on gender and climate change adaptation. She was tasked to provide technical support to national governments and UNDP Country Offices to mainstream gender in the Africa Adaptation Programme (AAP). Email: [email protected] or [email protected]

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