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Here you can find publications on the subject of climate change adaptation in different languages. Please use the filter option to select your preferred language.
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Kampala is responding to rising climate‑related migration with a four‑pillar city plan linking livelihoods, services, planning, and policy.
In seven Kenyan cities and counties, the Disaster Displacement Addendum helps local governments assess risks, identify policy gaps, and integrate displacement into disaster risk reduction planning.
In Tanay Municipality, the digital Registry of Barangay Inhabitants and Migrants (RBIM) strengthens migration data management, enabling local governments to better understand mobility patterns and integrate them into climate adaptation and development planning
Through a community-led relocation process, Hargeisa Municipality helped highly vulnerable households move from a flood-prone camp near Daami Dam to a safer neighborhood.
Fiji shows that mobility in the context of climate change is not gender-neutral, and that relocation processes must consider gendered roles, responsibilities, and access to resources.
With many cities serving as migration hotspots, local authorities are not only at the frontlines of reducing risk and responding to but also receiving people who have been displaced. This publication highlights three examples of how cities integrated climate and human mobility in their urban planning.
Le Programme global HMCCC II soutient les acteurs locaux et nationaux dans la mise en œuvre d’approches sensibles au genre, aux conflits et résilientes au climat pour faire face à la mobilité liée aux changements climatiques, en mettant particulièrement l’accent sur les groupes marginalisés et l’intégration de la mobilité humaine dans la planification du développement. 
GP HMCCC II supports local and national actors in addressing climate-related mobility through gender-responsive, conflict-sensitive, and climate-resilient approaches - with a particular focus on marginalized groups and the integration of human mobility into development planning.
GP HMCCC II supports local and national actors in addressing climate-related mobility through gender-responsive, conflict-sensitive, and climate-resilient approaches - with a particular focus on marginalized groups and the integration of human mobility into development planning.
Indigenous Communities in Fiji have a long history of migration and adaptation, deeply rooted in living with nature. Today, climate change forces communities to relocate, risking the loss of cultural identity. Drawing on oral traditions and decolonizing approaches can help shape relocation strategies that respect and strengthen Indigenous Resilience.