Africlp report : fellows achievements
This report provides the individual Fellows’ country, titles, project experiences and achievements in relation to the Africa Climate Leadership Program (AfriCLP).
This report provides the individual Fellows’ country, titles, project experiences and achievements in relation to the Africa Climate Leadership Program (AfriCLP).
The mid-term review workshop aimed to provide training on leadership, review the progress Fellows had made in the implementation of their projects, promote co-learning, and ensure interaction between policy advisors/analysts, practitioners and res
The project aims to develop the leadership capacity of African researchers, policy advisers and practitioners for advancement in current climate knowledge, long-term adaptation, decision-making and climate action, and to improve science-policy-pra
Africa Climate Leadership Program (AfriCLP) is dedicated to strengthening the leadership capacity of beneficiaries from 15 African countries that includes academics, researchers, development practitioners and policy experts.
Twenty villages were selected from pastoral and agropastoral communities for a survey, randomly selected from participant and non-participant communities, along with follow-up interviews.
This project will train up to 36 emerging climate change leaders in the field of adaptation finance, which funds efforts to adapt to climate change impacts.
Changes in hydrological extremes will have implications on the design of future hydraulic structures, flood plain development, and water resource management.
This research develops water demand (end-use) modelling and forecasting, and assesses water conservation and demand management potential for the city of Addis Ababa.
This project explores urban flood management in the metropole of Cape Town. The literature
which underpins this project argues that flooding is one of many disasters which are expected
Rural-urban migrations have contributed to the steady increase in the population of Cape Town. Many of the migrants have settled in informal settlements because they cannot afford to rent or buy decent housing.