Authors
Matthew I England, Andrew J Dougill, Lindsay C Stringer, Katharine E Vincent, Joanna Pardoe, Felix K Kalaba, David D Mkwambisi, Emilinah Namaganda, Stavros Afionis
Publication date
2018/10
Journal
Regional Environmental Change
Volume
18
Pages
2059-2071
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Description
To be effective, climate change adaptation needs to be mainstreamed across multiple sectors and greater policy coherence is essential. Using the cases of Malawi, Tanzania and Zambia, this paper investigates the extent of coherence in national policies across the water and agriculture sectors and to climate change adaptation goals outlined in national development plans. A two-pronged qualitative approach is applied using Qualitative Document Analysis of relevant policies and plans, combined with expert interviews from non-government actors in each country. Findings show that sector policies have differing degrees of coherence on climate change adaptation, currently being strongest in Zambia and weakest in Tanzania. We also identify that sectoral policies remain more coherent in addressing immediate-term disaster management issues of floods and droughts rather than longer-term strategies for …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MI England, AJ Dougill, LC Stringer, KE Vincent… - Regional Environmental Change, 2018