A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy

Women and girls are disproportionately affected by global crises such as climate change and environmental degradation. Moreover, the key role of women in agriculture and in sustaining the livelihoods and food security of their households in low-income countries, emphasises the need to address the gender gap. Therefore, gender transformative research that informs policy makers and improves the design of innovative and equitable climate laws and policies and adaptation and mitigation strategies is needed. This document presents a synthesis of the work of CCAFS in integrating a gender perspective into climate change policies and agreements at global, national and subnational levels in the last ten years (2010-2020). A contribution analysis (CA) based on the Theory of Change (ToC) of the Gender and Social Inclusion (GSI) Strategy was carried out. We collected the evidence through deep dives in the Outcome Impact Case Reports (OICRs) and interviews with key stakeholders working in each region where CCAFS has developed activities related with gender and policies. Our preliminary results show that, by using a multilevel governance approach to policy processes, the CCAFS program has contributed to anticipated outcomes and that it has played a key role in raising awareness about GSI and gender-transformative approaches in agriculture and climate policy agenda. However, all the efforts have proved insufficient to achieve the transformation that women and girls throughout the world need to see in international and national debates, policies, and practices concerning climate crisis. Therefore, our suggestion is to involve civil organizations and invest more in strengthening institutions for gender-transformative societies.

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Main Authors: Chaves, Paola, Thornton, Philip K., Cramer, Laura K.
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security 2021-12-16
Subjects:climate change, agriculture, food security, policies, gender,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116800
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1168002023-08-03T08:11:23Z A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy Chaves, Paola Thornton, Philip K. Cramer, Laura K. climate change agriculture food security policies gender Women and girls are disproportionately affected by global crises such as climate change and environmental degradation. Moreover, the key role of women in agriculture and in sustaining the livelihoods and food security of their households in low-income countries, emphasises the need to address the gender gap. Therefore, gender transformative research that informs policy makers and improves the design of innovative and equitable climate laws and policies and adaptation and mitigation strategies is needed. This document presents a synthesis of the work of CCAFS in integrating a gender perspective into climate change policies and agreements at global, national and subnational levels in the last ten years (2010-2020). A contribution analysis (CA) based on the Theory of Change (ToC) of the Gender and Social Inclusion (GSI) Strategy was carried out. We collected the evidence through deep dives in the Outcome Impact Case Reports (OICRs) and interviews with key stakeholders working in each region where CCAFS has developed activities related with gender and policies. Our preliminary results show that, by using a multilevel governance approach to policy processes, the CCAFS program has contributed to anticipated outcomes and that it has played a key role in raising awareness about GSI and gender-transformative approaches in agriculture and climate policy agenda. However, all the efforts have proved insufficient to achieve the transformation that women and girls throughout the world need to see in international and national debates, policies, and practices concerning climate crisis. Therefore, our suggestion is to involve civil organizations and invest more in strengthening institutions for gender-transformative societies. 2021-12-16 2021-12-16T15:06:13Z 2021-12-16T15:06:13Z Working Paper Chaves P, Thornton P, Cramer L. 2021. A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy. CCAFS Working Paper no. 411. Wageningen, the Netherlands: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116800 en CCAFS Working Papers CC-BY-NC-4.0 Open Access 35 p. application/pdf CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security
institution CGIAR
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country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic climate change
agriculture
food security
policies
gender
climate change
agriculture
food security
policies
gender
spellingShingle climate change
agriculture
food security
policies
gender
climate change
agriculture
food security
policies
gender
Chaves, Paola
Thornton, Philip K.
Cramer, Laura K.
A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy
description Women and girls are disproportionately affected by global crises such as climate change and environmental degradation. Moreover, the key role of women in agriculture and in sustaining the livelihoods and food security of their households in low-income countries, emphasises the need to address the gender gap. Therefore, gender transformative research that informs policy makers and improves the design of innovative and equitable climate laws and policies and adaptation and mitigation strategies is needed. This document presents a synthesis of the work of CCAFS in integrating a gender perspective into climate change policies and agreements at global, national and subnational levels in the last ten years (2010-2020). A contribution analysis (CA) based on the Theory of Change (ToC) of the Gender and Social Inclusion (GSI) Strategy was carried out. We collected the evidence through deep dives in the Outcome Impact Case Reports (OICRs) and interviews with key stakeholders working in each region where CCAFS has developed activities related with gender and policies. Our preliminary results show that, by using a multilevel governance approach to policy processes, the CCAFS program has contributed to anticipated outcomes and that it has played a key role in raising awareness about GSI and gender-transformative approaches in agriculture and climate policy agenda. However, all the efforts have proved insufficient to achieve the transformation that women and girls throughout the world need to see in international and national debates, policies, and practices concerning climate crisis. Therefore, our suggestion is to involve civil organizations and invest more in strengthening institutions for gender-transformative societies.
format Working Paper
topic_facet climate change
agriculture
food security
policies
gender
author Chaves, Paola
Thornton, Philip K.
Cramer, Laura K.
author_facet Chaves, Paola
Thornton, Philip K.
Cramer, Laura K.
author_sort Chaves, Paola
title A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy
title_short A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy
title_full A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy
title_fullStr A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy
title_full_unstemmed A synthesis of the work of CCAFS and partners on gender and social inclusion (GSI) and climate policy
title_sort synthesis of the work of ccafs and partners on gender and social inclusion (gsi) and climate policy
publisher CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security
publishDate 2021-12-16
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116800
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