Record Details

Do national and international policies undermine climate security?

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Field Value
 
Title Do national and international policies undermine climate security?
 
Creator Schapendonk, Frans
Caroli, Giulia
Pacillo, Grazia
Läderach, Peter
 
Subject agriculture
food security
climate change
 
Description Coherence between different policy and programming objectives, instruments, and implementation has long been an important goal of multilateral governance and development efforts. Policy coherence – as defined by the OECD – can be understood as the systematic promotion of mutually reinforcing policy actions across government departments and agencies, creating synergies towards achieving agreed objectives (Trinity Dublin College, 2017). Perhaps the most well-known methodological framework to assess and help improve cross-sectoral policy coherence is the OECD’s Policy Coherence for Sustainable Development (PCSD), which provides practical guidance, self-assessment checklists, good practice examples, and tools to analyse, enhance, and track progress on policy coherence in the implementation of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) (OECD, 2021). Ensuring alignment across both sectors and administrative scales is therefore identified as crucial to prevent unintended consequences and minimise the effects of potentially conflicting agendas, particularly when tackling complex issues such as climate change, of which full and exact impacts remain unpredictable.
 
Date 2021-12-21
2021-12-21T20:02:47Z
2021-12-21T20:02:47Z
 
Type Brief
 
Identifier Schapendonk F, Caroli G, Pacillo G, Läderach P. 2021. Do national and international policies undermine climate security?. CGAIR FOCUS Climate Security.
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116947
 
Language en
 
Rights Other
Open Access
 
Format 11 p.
application/pdf
 
Publisher CGIAR FOCUS Climate Security