Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa

Despite its low carbon emission, Africa is one of the regions most impacted by the adverse effects of climate change. Because of its impacts on health, infrastructure, settlements, agriculture and food security, and forest ecosystems, climate change is an additional burden to sustainable development in Central Africa. As such, there is an urgent need to transfer lifesaving information about the environment and especially the effects and adaptation to climate change in the region. However, in a region where there is still a relatively high incidence of illiteracy, very localized languages and dialects and remote settlements, communicating information can be a challenge. In addition, communication schools and journalists are insufficiently equipped to respond to this demand. A survey in Cameroon revealed that journalists are faced with some challenges (such as lack of training and lack of resource persons) in covering environment topics, especially those related to forest and climate change adaptation. In order to address these challenges and contribute to the improvement of the journalistic style of reporting topics on forest and climate change adaptation with more scientific knowledge and to create a stronger scientific base of event coverage, pilot capacity-building initiatives were initiated with the specific objectives as follows: (1) training of journalists during workshops; (2) fellowships award for research activities to communication master students; (3) mentoring of senior and junior journalists and (4) open reflection on how to mainstream forests and adaptation to climate change in curricula of communication schools in Central Africa. This last initiative of mainstreaming forests and adaptation to climate change in the school curricula was seen as a possible sustainable way to promote scientific and environmental communication in Central Africa. These activities initiated by CIFOR (Center for International Forestry Research) under the framework of CoFCCA project (Congo Basin Forest and Climate Change Adaptation) were pilot initiatives aiming to inspire others on capacity building and research related to scientific and environmental communication in Central Africa.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sonwa, D.J., Mbede, E., Bele, M.Y., Abilogo, E., Ngaunkam, P.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Intellect 2022-10-01
Subjects:climate change, adaptation, mass communication,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127843
https://doi.org/10.1386/jem_00070_1
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1278432023-03-18T05:16:28Z Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa Sonwa, D.J. Mbede, E. Bele, M.Y. Abilogo, E. Ngaunkam, P. climate change adaptation mass communication Despite its low carbon emission, Africa is one of the regions most impacted by the adverse effects of climate change. Because of its impacts on health, infrastructure, settlements, agriculture and food security, and forest ecosystems, climate change is an additional burden to sustainable development in Central Africa. As such, there is an urgent need to transfer lifesaving information about the environment and especially the effects and adaptation to climate change in the region. However, in a region where there is still a relatively high incidence of illiteracy, very localized languages and dialects and remote settlements, communicating information can be a challenge. In addition, communication schools and journalists are insufficiently equipped to respond to this demand. A survey in Cameroon revealed that journalists are faced with some challenges (such as lack of training and lack of resource persons) in covering environment topics, especially those related to forest and climate change adaptation. In order to address these challenges and contribute to the improvement of the journalistic style of reporting topics on forest and climate change adaptation with more scientific knowledge and to create a stronger scientific base of event coverage, pilot capacity-building initiatives were initiated with the specific objectives as follows: (1) training of journalists during workshops; (2) fellowships award for research activities to communication master students; (3) mentoring of senior and junior journalists and (4) open reflection on how to mainstream forests and adaptation to climate change in curricula of communication schools in Central Africa. This last initiative of mainstreaming forests and adaptation to climate change in the school curricula was seen as a possible sustainable way to promote scientific and environmental communication in Central Africa. These activities initiated by CIFOR (Center for International Forestry Research) under the framework of CoFCCA project (Congo Basin Forest and Climate Change Adaptation) were pilot initiatives aiming to inspire others on capacity building and research related to scientific and environmental communication in Central Africa. 2022-10-01 2023-01-23T08:23:44Z 2023-01-23T08:23:44Z Journal Article Sonwa, Denis Jean, Mbede, Emmanuel, Bele, Mekou Youssoufa, Abilogo, Edith and Ngaunkam, Precilia (2022), ‘Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa’, Journal of Environmental Media, 3:1, pp. 11–32, https://doi.org/10.1386/jem_00070_1 2632-2463 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127843 https://doi.org/10.1386/jem_00070_1 en Copyrighted; all rights reserved Limited Access 11-32 Intellect Journal of Environmental Media
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region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic climate change
adaptation
mass communication
climate change
adaptation
mass communication
spellingShingle climate change
adaptation
mass communication
climate change
adaptation
mass communication
Sonwa, D.J.
Mbede, E.
Bele, M.Y.
Abilogo, E.
Ngaunkam, P.
Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa
description Despite its low carbon emission, Africa is one of the regions most impacted by the adverse effects of climate change. Because of its impacts on health, infrastructure, settlements, agriculture and food security, and forest ecosystems, climate change is an additional burden to sustainable development in Central Africa. As such, there is an urgent need to transfer lifesaving information about the environment and especially the effects and adaptation to climate change in the region. However, in a region where there is still a relatively high incidence of illiteracy, very localized languages and dialects and remote settlements, communicating information can be a challenge. In addition, communication schools and journalists are insufficiently equipped to respond to this demand. A survey in Cameroon revealed that journalists are faced with some challenges (such as lack of training and lack of resource persons) in covering environment topics, especially those related to forest and climate change adaptation. In order to address these challenges and contribute to the improvement of the journalistic style of reporting topics on forest and climate change adaptation with more scientific knowledge and to create a stronger scientific base of event coverage, pilot capacity-building initiatives were initiated with the specific objectives as follows: (1) training of journalists during workshops; (2) fellowships award for research activities to communication master students; (3) mentoring of senior and junior journalists and (4) open reflection on how to mainstream forests and adaptation to climate change in curricula of communication schools in Central Africa. This last initiative of mainstreaming forests and adaptation to climate change in the school curricula was seen as a possible sustainable way to promote scientific and environmental communication in Central Africa. These activities initiated by CIFOR (Center for International Forestry Research) under the framework of CoFCCA project (Congo Basin Forest and Climate Change Adaptation) were pilot initiatives aiming to inspire others on capacity building and research related to scientific and environmental communication in Central Africa.
format Journal Article
topic_facet climate change
adaptation
mass communication
author Sonwa, D.J.
Mbede, E.
Bele, M.Y.
Abilogo, E.
Ngaunkam, P.
author_facet Sonwa, D.J.
Mbede, E.
Bele, M.Y.
Abilogo, E.
Ngaunkam, P.
author_sort Sonwa, D.J.
title Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa
title_short Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa
title_full Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa
title_fullStr Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa
title_full_unstemmed Mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: Some initiatives from Central Africa
title_sort mainstreaming communication of adaptation to climate change: some initiatives from central africa
publisher Intellect
publishDate 2022-10-01
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127843
https://doi.org/10.1386/jem_00070_1
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