Practitioner Brief 4: Strengthening Adaptive Capacity to Climate Change
Strengthening Adaptive Capacity to Climate Change: Learning from Practice
Practitioner Brief 4
Drawing on ALP’s community based adaptation work with vulnerable communities in southern Niger and northern Ghana, the brief explores the dynamic interplay between social processes and tangible adaptation options. It unpacks the concepts and demonstrates how strengthening people’s absorptive, adaptive and anticipatory capacities leads to more flexible, responsive and locally determined adaptation choices which contribute to greater resilience in the face of changing conditions. Through the lens of ALP’s practical experiences, the brief provides useful learning for actors in adaptation, disaster risk reduction, development, and humanitarian action, including NGOs, local government institutions, researchers, donors, sectoral ministries and policymakers across Africa.
There is a general recognition that adaptive capacity is an effective way of building people’s ability to prepare for, withstand, and respond to the impacts of climate change. But what does it really look like in practice, how can it be strengthened, and how can its contribution to resilience be measured? Based on more than five years of learning on community based adaptation across four countries, the Adaptation Learning Programme (ALP) has produced four practitioner briefs that attempt to address these issues.