How can social protection build resilience? Insights from Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda
This working paper reflects on the actual and potential contributions social protection can make to increase the resilience of the poorest and most vulnerable.
Reality of Resilience: Learning from climate extremes
Reality of Resilience facilitates the generation, collection and dissemination of real-world examples of resilience interventions during floods and droughts.
Evaluative learning for resilience: Providing Humanitarian Assistance for Sahel Emergencies (PHASE)
A look at the extent to which flexible humanitarian finance, applied with resilience in mind, keeps development on track
Disasters and national economic resilience
This paper aims to provide an analysis of economic resilience at the national level, presenting broad changes in resilience to climate extremes over a 42 year period.
How does social protection build resilience?
A series of briefings assess evidence from Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia on how large-scale national social protection programmes contribute to resilience.
Increasing people抯 resilience through social protection
Social protection programmes and systems can contribute to building the anticipatory, adaptive and absorptive capacity of vulnerable people who are exposed to climate shocks and disasters.
Learning to support co-production
Approaches for practical collaboration and learning between at risk groups, humanitarian and development practitioners, policymakers, scientists and academics.
How can your community become more resilient?
The BRACED Myanmar Alliance aims to build the resilience of 350,000 people across Myanmar to climate extremes
The inclusion of climate change dimensions in Communal Development Plans
The case study of Hamdallaye
Climate extremes and poverty reduction: Development designed with uncertainty in mind
Building resilience to climate extremes and disasters will help ensure the success of global efforts to eliminate extreme poverty. Reaching and sustaining zero extreme poverty, the first of the SDGs, requires a燾ollective effort to manage the risks of current climate extremes and projected climate change.