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Searching with a thematic focus on Climate change, Climate change mitigation

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  • Document

    Community forest monitoring in REDD+: the ‘M’ in MRV?

    Science Direct, 2011
    This paper provides a literature review of community-based efforts of monitoring natural resources. The author further analyses the advantages of a community-based approach as compared to professional approaches in terms of lower costs, enhanced local ownership, greater cultural relevance and improved institutional strength at the community level.
  • Document

    How to measure carbon equity: Carbon Gini index based on historical cumulative emission per capita

    The Berkeley Electronic Press, 2011
    Using economic tools such as the Lorenz Curve and the Gini Index with adjustments to per capita historical cumulative emissions, this paper constructs a Carbon Gini Index to measure inequality in climate change discussions.
  • Document

    Low-Carbon Africa: Leapfrogging to a Green Future

    Christian Aid, 2011
    This new report by Christian Aid makes the case that Africa is able to deliver clean and sustainable energy to millions of energy-poor people across the continent without increasing greenhouse gas emissions – and for this renewable power potential to drive a green economic expansion across the region.
  • Document

    Trees on farms: Tackling the triple challenge of mitigation, adaptation and food security

    World Agroforestry Centre, 2009
    This short policy brief highlights three key points and provides various policy recommendations in relations to these: - Trees help fight climate change by storing carbon.- They buffer against weather-related production losses, enhancing resilience against climate impacts.- And trees on farms provide additional income and diversity of food sources through tree-based products.
  • Document

    Reducing emissions from deforestation, inside and outside the forest

    ASB Partnership for the Tropical Forest Margins, 2010
    New data from Indonesia suggests that one-third of greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation originate from areas not officially defined as ‘forest’. Accounting for carbon in the whole landscape and Reducing Emissions from All Land Uses (REALU) can be more effective in reducing emissions.
  • Document

    MCA4climate: A practical framework for planning pro-development climate policies

    United Nations [UN] Environment Programme, 2011
    This paper focuses on environmental pressures caused by climate change and their impact on marine ecosystem resilience. The authors also discuss the human impacts which increase the vulnerability and decrease the resilience of marine ecosystems.
  • Document

    A new NAMA framework for dispersed energy end-use sectors

    Science Direct, 2010
    This paper presents a new approach for a nationally appropriate mitigation actions (NAMA) framework to unlock the potential for greenhouse gas mitigation in dispersed energy end-use sectors in developing countries, more specifically the building and industrial sectors.
  • Document

    Visions of life with climate change: community photostories from Namibia, Tanzania & Kenya

    ResourceAfrica UK, 2011
    This report is a compilation of the community photostories below. It outlines ResourceAfrica UK's aim of bridging the knowledge and information gap and highlights how photostories can be used as a climate change vulnerability assessment tool. They are innovative, inclusive and fun ways of detecting community vulnerabilities.
  • Document

    Pakreport: Crowdsourcing for Multipurpose and Multicategory Climate related Disaster Reporting

    Centre for Development Informatics, 2011
    This case study focuses on Pakreport, an ICT initiative between crisis mapping organisations, engineers, relief agencies and crowdsourcing companies that began in July 2010 as a response to the floods.
  • Document

    Role of ICTs in Early Warning of Climate Related Disasters: A Sri Lankan Case Study

    Centre for Development Informatics, 2011
    Climate change is now increasing – and will further increase in future – both the frequency and intensity of natural disasters in Sri Lanka including cyclones, floods and landslides (MoE 2010).

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