Update on the GCCASP: Focus on Malawi
The Gender Climate Change and Agriculture Support Programme (GCCASP) was designed to enhance resilience of rural women.
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The Gender Climate Change and Agriculture Support Programme (GCCASP) was designed to enhance resilience of rural women.
The argument for girls’ education is both simple and powerful. However, it isn’t as it appears. Here are 3 reasons why.
A gendered approach to understand the impact of climate change is crucial to appropriate mitigation & response strategies.
Rising sea levels, hotter temperatures and stronger currents along this coast are some of the changes divers are seeing.
Women must be at the table when climate change issues come to the table: This is the view of Director of Forestry Stella Gama.
Climate change is driving gender-based violence among rural communities in the breakaway region of Somaliland, Oxfam reports.
Peer learning has helped organisations, such as in India and Kenya, learn about climate adaptation and land management.
Journalists Neha Wadekar and Will Swanson travel to northern Kenya to explore this story in a multimedia project.
Across the world, women are actively protecting the natural environment. In Latin America, women have taken a leadership role.
Women Wetem Weta (Women’s Weather Watch) in Vanuatu helps keep rural and remote women and communities informed.
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