Publication

24 Aug 2016

This report examines how local governments, agricultural advisory services, natural resource management agencies and farmers’ organizations are responding to climate change in rural Nepal, Uganda, Vietnam and Zambia. The text’s authors particularly focus on four key aspects of climate change adaptation – 1) adjusting the global climate change agenda to fit national and sub-national processes; 2) the frequent disconnects that exist between national climate change policies and sub-national practices; 3) how climate change might be transforming the bases for social contracts and state legitimacy; and 4) how climate change is emerging as an arena for struggles over authority and resources.

Download english (PDF, 72 pages, 341 KB)
Author Ian Christoplos, Charles Aben, Bernard Bashaasha, Hari Dhungana, Esbern Friis-Hansen, Mikkel Funder, Nguyen Thi Thanh Huong, Dil Bahadur Khatri, Lily Salloum Lindegaard, Carol Emma Mweemba, Le Duc Ngoan, Imasiku Nyambe, Hermant R Ojha, John James Okiro
Series DIIS Reports
Issue 5
Publisher Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS)
Copyright © 2016 the Authors and DIIS
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser