After the UN Water conference: Examining the global dissonance
How did the latest UN Water Conference influence the progress of global water governance? Join us in a hybrid discussion of what...
Showing 21–30 of 333 results
How did the latest UN Water Conference influence the progress of global water governance? Join us in a hybrid discussion of what...
Questions of justice are relevant to all aspects of climate and environmental change, from how and where the impacts are felt the most,...
Questions of justice are relevant to all aspects of climate and environmental change, from how and where the impacts are felt the most,...
Published by: Berghahn Books
Pastoralists must continuously confront uncertainties, responding to high levels of vari- ability and volatility where the future is...
Published by: University of Bristol
Millions of children throughout Africa undertake many forms of farm and domestic work. Some of this work is for wages, some is on their...
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
Many countries in the global South declare regions to be open defecation free, but they must still address significant sanitation, wastewater, and faecal sludge management challenges. Climate uncertainty, water shortages, and weak infrastructure mean that ‘flush and forget’ systems are not always possible or desirable.
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
This briefing describes how art interventions can help people reimagine alternative sanitation futures. Drawing on research in Nepal, it describes how activities such as dance workshops, humanure planting, song competitions, and radio jingles can generate new knowledge about sanitation challenges and faecal sludge re-use, showing that ‘brown’ can be ‘gold’!
This event examines the progress and challenges that have shaped water and development from Mar-del- Plata (1977) to the upcoming UN...
In January 2021, the Great Green Wall Accelerator was announced at the third One Planet Summit in Paris. Based on the notion of acceleration developed by Harmut Rosa and using the idea of conflicting temporalities in the study of social-ecological systems, this article analyzes how the political will to accelerate the Great Green Wall reveals power dynamics between Western and Sahelian countries.