UNDP/GEF supported CBA Community Based Adaptation Project Pilot Sites: Onamulunga School Garden Project

Summary:

The Community-Based Adaptation Programme (CBA) is a five-year United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) global initiative funded by the Global Environmental Facility (GEF). UNDP works with a number of partners including the United Nations Volunteers and the GEF Small Grants Programme (SGP). Initial CBA investments have been made in 20 communities in the northern parts of Namibia (i.e. Omusati, Oshana, Ohangwena, Oshikoto and Kavango Regions). Climate models suggest that these areas are particularly vulnerable and face significant climate change risks, both at present and in future. To facilitate uptake of CBA strategies the Onamulunga Combined School project is focused on integrating adaptation to climate change into school curriculum. The pilot programme at Onamulunga Combined School in the Oshikoto region involves training grade 9 and 10students in adaptation farming methods such as conservation tilling, water harvesting, and micro-drip irrigation and planting drought resistant crops. These methods are subsequently taken up by the students’ native communities. This project directly contributes towards Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 2 and 7 and, through a special focus on the inclusion of young women and girls, to MDG 3.The project also indirectly contributes to the realization of other MDGs.

Adaptation Experience:

There are various Community Based Adaptation projects in Namibia. The particular project discussed here is implemented by an NGO called Creative Entrepreneurs Solutions (CES) that applies CBA measures through self-help groups. At the Onamulunga Combined School in the Oshikoto region, grade 9 and 10 students receive practical lessons in how to implement improved farming methods for a future affected by climate change.

Results and Learning:

According to a recent field visit by an independent assessor, the Onamulunga Garden project has achieved many of the intended results. Various sites at the school have been prepared for crop agriculture using the latest conservation tilling methods for dry land crops and micro-drip irrigation for vegetables. The project coordinator is Agriculture and Life Science teacher, Johannes Nelongo, who has provided inspirational leadership for 87 grade 9 and 10 students to put the theory they learn in the classroom in practice in the field, growing maize, sunflowers, cow peas, spinach, carrots, onions and other vegetables.They apply conservation furrowing and ripping, water saving techniques, mulching, application of organic and chemical fertilising, crop rotation and alternative growing methods. As such, the project provides learners with practical adaptation techniques. “Practical exercises make it easier for learners to interpret theoretical information. It thus gives them wisdom and insight and teaches them how to apply these methods at home,” says Nelongo.[Refer to the attached document for further details.]

Sustainability:

The project has built adaptive capacity for almost ninety learners, with the intention that they take these skills forward and apply them in the decades to come. Already a multiplier effect is noticeable in the children and teachers’ home communities. The project focuses on establishing a strong foundation for the application of adaptation mechanisms in farming practices rather than creating dependency through aid. “Because the programme demonstrates tangible benefits for the communities involved, it is sustainable,” says Marie Johansson from CES. “It will continue even if donor support stops tomorrow. It is important to start with educating kids. Young people, especially girls, pick the skills up quickly. From there on it is easier to integrate the community. Later on, many kids will migrate to urban areas and unfortunately fall in the trap of unemployment. But with the skills they learn here, there is an alternative way to make a living off the two hectares or so near their homestead. In this way even small farmers can become commercial farmers.”

Replication:

The project has been so successful that it has grabbed the attention of other schools. Four nearby schools are interested and have been invited to participate. As such, Onamulunga can become a centre of learning for the community. This is compounded by the multiplier effect already mentioned, with children introducing the new methods to their parents and villagers coming to the school to see the improved cropping system with their own eyes. “As a school we need to involve communities and share the skills and knowledge that we have,” says Onamulunga principal Immanuel Namupolo. “Now the community helps us to look after the project when the school is closed. We also give parents our surplus maize, so they can sell it. In doing so, the project reaches out to parents. We give them a role to play, so that they are involved in the process of adaptation.”The experiment teaches children to adapt to a situation where fertile land and water are becoming increasingly scarce resources. But the initiative also has a wider effect within the surrounding communities, with children applying their newly acquired skills in the household farm setting. Enthused by the Onamulunga success story, parents and teachers have also started their own gardens. “The proceeds from the garden save people a lot of money. Sometimes you don’t even have to go to the market for a whole month,” one teacher remarks. 

Image(s):
Funding Source:
GEF-SPA

Onamulunga School Garden Project

  • Project details

  • Implementing Agency and Partnering Organizations:
    Onamulunga Combined School; Creative Entrepreneurs Solutions (CES). Other stakeholders include: the Ministry of Environment and Tourism, the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Fisheries, the Ministry of Agriculture, the Namibia Agronomic Board, GEF through its Strategic Priority on Adaptation (SPA) programme, UNDP; Small Grants Programme and all its delivery partners.
    Summary:

    The Community-Based Adaptation Programme (CBA) is a five-year United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) global initiative funded by the Global Environmental Facility (GEF). UNDP works with a number of partners including the United Nations Volunteers and the GEF Small Grants Programme (SGP). Initial CBA investments have been made in 20 communities in the northern parts of Namibia (i.e. Omusati, Oshana, Ohangwena, Oshikoto and Kavango Regions). Climate models suggest that these areas are particularly vulnerable and face significant climate change risks, both at present and in future.

    Project Components:

    There are various Community Based Adaptation projects in Namibia. The particular project discussed here is implemented by an NGO called Creative Entrepreneurs Solutions (CES) that applies CBA measures through self-help groups. At the Onamulunga Combined School in the Oshikoto region, grade 9 and 10 students receive practical lessons in how to implement improved farming methods for a future affected by climate change. Through equipping the students with relevant agricultural adaptation skills, the pilot programme is designed to sow the seeds for uptake and wider spread of adaptation measures throughout the community.

    Expected Outputs:
    • Outcome 1: Enhanced adaptive capacity allows communities to reduce their vulnerability to adverse impacts of future climate hazards.
    • Outcome 2: National policies and programmes promote replication of best practices derived from CBA projects.
    • Outcome 3: Cooperation among member countries promotes innovation in adaptation to climate change including variability.
       
    Contacts:

    SGP-CBA: Contact Nickey //Gaseb
    E-mail: NickeyG@unops.org

    CES: Contact Marie Johansson
    E-mail: info@ces.org.na

    Onamulunga Combined School: Mr. Nelongo: +264 81 69 66700
    AAP-NAM: Contact Ernst Mbangula
    Email: embangula@met.na
     

    Project Status:
    Under Implementation
    Primary Beneficiaries:
    Major stakeholders are: the Onamulunga Combined School; Creative Entrepreneurs Solutions (CES). Primary beneficiaries are the grade 9 and 10 students, their families and the communities living within the pilot areas, as well as other schools in the wider area.
    Project Details
    Funding Source:
    GEF-SPA
    Financing Amount:
    GEF (SPA): US$960,000 GEF (SPA) through a UNDP/GEF CBA Project in Namibia: US$ 413,189 Total GEF Grant: $1,000,000, CES budget is US$ 312,000
    Cofinancing Total:
    US$5,795,806
    Total Amounts:
    US$6,795,806

UNDP/GEF supported CBA Community Based Adaptation Project Pilot Sites: University of Namibia – Ogongo Campus: The Sweet-stem Sorghum Research

Summary:

The Community-Based Adaptation Programme (CBA) is a five-year United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) global initiative funded by the Global Environmental Facility (GEF). UNDP works with a number of partners including the United Nations Volunteers and the GEF Small Grants Programme (SGP). Initial CBA investments have been made in 20 communities in the northern parts of Namibia (i.e. Omusati, Oshana, Ohangwena, Oshikoto and Kavango Regions). Climate models suggest these areas are particularly vulnerable and face significant climate change risks,both at present and in future. To facilitate uptake of CBA strategies, one project focuses on research into sweet-stem sorghum varieties that are better suited to altered climatic conditions. The purpose is to cultivate one variety that is not only stronger, but also presents the ideal mix of multi-purpose applications, such as food, fodder/silage and sugar extract for ethanol (biofuel). The project pursues multifaceted objectives of food security, environmental sustainability and universal education. These objectives address the three Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 1, 2, and 7. Now entering its final stage, the researchers are focusing on three remaining sorghum varieties. One successful variety will be commercially distributed in the SGP-CBA pilot areas in Namibia.

Adaptation Experience:

There are various Community Based Adaptation (CBA) projects in Namibia. The particular project discussed here uses a non-governmental organisation called Creative Entrepreneurs Solutions to implement CBA measures through self-help groups.

Results and Learning:

According to a recent field visit by an independent documenter, the research into sweet-stem sorghum varieties at the Ogongo Campus achieved numerous intended results. On one tenth of a hectare, eight sweet-stem sorghum varieties were grown to select one variety that has the optimal balance of grain, bio-mass and sugar content. The research established that not all varieties were suitable for uptake as multi-purpose crop. Yet, the trial delivered three varieties with a promising combination of grain, biomass and sugar, and also endurance to withstand heavy rain. These three varieties were part of an on-farm trial, specifically focusing on the successful delivery of silage. The farmers involved received training at the University of Namibia (UNAM) on how to farm these varieties. Subsequently, the farmers would produce silage and feed a control group of goats to test results. This trial, however, failed because of this year’s extreme floods. However, the three varieties will be tested further and will form part of new on-farm trials. Ultimately, one crop variety will be selected for distribution within the SGP-CBA and the wider northern area of Namibia, to plant at the household level. This crop will make a simple, but significant contribution towards food security, poverty alleviation and a reduction of carbon dioxide emissions. The different purposes of the crop are: food, fodder for livestock, chicken feed, and silage for the dry season and sugar extract for ethanol/biofuel. Another possible use for the sugar extract is in fruit juices. The project demonstrates a need for training of farmers in processing for these different applications.[Refer to the attached document for full Results and Learning.]

Sustainability:

The results will be sustainable once the best variety is selected. First, future trials and subsequent cultivation of such a variety will provide evidence to support the hypothesis that multi-purpose crops can augment household income and sustainability on various levels and strengthen the climate change response, as well as other national development objectives. Once successfully tested, the small-scale farmers will continue to plant or cultivate the best variety.

[Refer to the attached document for further details.]

Replication:

Replicability is ensured by distributing the seeds of the successful variety across the Northern regions for free, and subsequently at a subsidized price. The research also ties in with an Africa-wide trial including countries like Zambia and Kenya. It could, therefore be replicated in other areas or on other crops. Multi-disciplinary cooperation through ICRISAT, which is kept abreast of developments in Ogongo, will aid this purpose. ICRISAT currently looks at multiplying the seeds of multi-purpose crops so that they do not become hybrid and infertile. Namibia, as an advanced country, has the potential to serve as a replication model. The results of the trial can be shared with countries with similar climatic conditions, which could duplicate the outcomes. Finally increased yields and income could facilitate further cultivation and initiate the long-awaited ‘green revolution’ in Africa. An agreement over REDD Plus could further enhance agro forestry.

Funding Source:
GEF-SPA

National Climate Risk Management Capacity Development Plan

  • Project details

  • Implementing Agency and Partnering Organizations:
    UNDP, Ministry of Environment and Tourism Namibia, Intergrated Environmental Consultants Namibia (www.iecn-namibia.com)
    Summary:

    The Africa Adaptation Programme Namibia Project (AAP-NAM) facilitated the development of a national Climate Risk Management (CRM) Capacity Development Plan (CDP) for Namibia. A practical and detailed 5 year strategy and a longer-term vision for addressing climate change adaptation needs in Namibia were developed based on the consultation of 60 individuals from public and private sector institutions, covering a wide range of economic and development sectors in Namibia.

    Project Components:

    The Africa Adaptation Programme Namibia Project (AAP-NAM) implemented by the Ministry of Environment and Tourism (MET) facilitated the development of a national Climate Risk Management (CRM) Capacity Development Plan (CDP) for Namibia – targeting technical staff in the private and public sectors. A practical and detailed 5 year strategy and a longer-term vision for addressing climate change adaptation needs in Namibia was to be developed, as well as a costed CDP.

    Expected Outputs:

    The main outputs to be delivered under this package include:

    • (i) capacity assessment report per sector;
    • (ii) brief workshop report, per workshop;
    • (iii) detailed capacity development plan; and a
    • (iv) summary report that documents the activities carried out under this consultancy and summarizes the activities and outcomes of the workshops, and materials produced.

    The finally produced deliverables were summarized into a CRM CDP (addressing outputs i and ii) and a process report (addressing outputs ii and iv).

    Contacts:
    • Dr. Juliane Zeidler
    • Integrated Environmental Consultants Namibia (IECN)
    • Ugab Street 9
    • Eros, Windhoek
    Project Status:
    Completed
    Primary Beneficiaries:
    Planners in Ministries and in private institutions, as well as technocrats
    Project Details
    Funding Source:
    Government of Japan
    Cofinancing Total:
    0

To promote the implementation of national and transboundary integrated water resource management that is sustainable and equitable given expected climate change

  • Project details

  • Implementing Agency and Partnering Organizations:
    UNDP, Department of Water Affairs, Ministry of Natural Resources and Energy, with Ministry of Tourism and Environment (Dept of Meteorology), and Ministry of Agriculture (SWADE)
    Summary:

    The Fourth Assessment report shows that the long-term trend 1900 – 2005 shows drying (longer dry seasons and more uncertain rainfall) over Southern Africa. The IPCC Third Assessment report indicates that by 2050 temperatures and rainfall over southern Africa will be 2 – 4°C higher and 10 – 20% lower than the 1961-90 baseline, respectively. Projections made in recent modelling by the University of Cape Town, South Africa (2006) coincides with this rainfall projection over most of Southern Africa.

    Project Components:
    1. Promoting informed and inclusive national dialogue around water needs, vulnerability to climate change and water allocation in Swaziland among productive and domestic uses.
    2. Integrating climate risk management into the implementation of national policies and programmes relevant to integrated water resource management.
    3. Informed negotiations on transboundary water resources management.
    Expected Outputs:
    • Information on community views on water needs and vulnerabilities with regards to climate change gathered in a coordinated manner by Ministry of Agriculture and NGOs under SWADE coordination, as national service delivery agent for designated areas.
    • Information developed and disseminated to raise awareness of communities to expected impacts of climate change and to solicit information on preferred adaptation responses.
    • Policy analysis generated on CC impacts in the water and agricultural sectors and potential response options, and implications for transboundary water management.
    • National platform/coordinating mechanism established to disseminate and discuss bottom-up and top-down analysis.
    • National policy dialogues raise awareness of the potential climate change risks reduction benefits of the draft National Water Policy to promote the adoption of the draft National Water Policy.
    • Knowledge products for policy makers developed and disseminated on potential climate change risks and response options in the water and agricultural sector.
    • Collaborative partnerships between MET Service and policy makers established to ensure updated climate information informs national policy dialogues on water management, agriculture and disaster risk management.
    • Design of guidelines, tools and instruments adjusted to take into account climate change eg on: water permit allocation (allocation to user groups and adaptive management, flood zoning), flood disaster management, building specifications for dams/water harvesting/hydro-electric structures.
    • Investments plans implemented by Ministry of Natural Resources and Energy (Water Affairs), and Ministry of Agriculture (SWADE) adjusted to take into account climate change risks.
    • Swaziland delegations to transboundary water resources management negotiations are briefed on implications of climate change on transboundary water allocation.
    • Knowledge products on climate change impacts on transboundary water resources management and water allocation disseminated.
    Contacts:

    Akiko Yamamoto
    Regional Technical Advisor UNDP/GEF
    +27 12 3548125
    akiko.yamamoto@undp.org

    Project Status:
    Council Approved
    Primary Beneficiaries:
    The Swazi population of the Komati and Usuthu River Basins
    Project Details
    Funding Source:
    GEF-SCCF
    Cofinancing Total:
    6,100,000 US$ (as of 05-18-2010)
    Total Amounts:
    7,821,500 US$ (as of 05-18-2010)

Approaching community adaptation to climate change holistically by using multiple coping strategies

  • Project details

  • Implementing Agency:
    Creative Entrepreneurs Solutions (CES)
    Implementing Agency and Partnering Organizations:
    UNDP, the Small Grants Programme (SGP), UN Volunteers, Other partners include Green Life Trust, Ministry of Agriculture, Water, and Forestry, Agronomic Board, Royal Institute of Technology (Sweden).
    Summary:

    Background

    Project Components:

    This CBA project’s goal is the pilot implementation of six coping strategies to climate change vulnerability that can be duplicated on a large scale in other similar communities. It has been prepared by a small NGO, Creative Entrepreneurs Solutions (CES), through a participatory process involving different sectors of the communities.:

    1. Water security (flood and rain water harvesting for irrigation, livestock and fish farming); Food security (sustainable agricultural practices and land degradation combating) such as:
    2.  Irrigated vegetable production 9using harvested flood and rain water), and
    3. Improved dry land crop production through soil improving management strategies such as composting, bio char, crop rotation and conservation agriculture;
    4. Flood and drought resistant crops (improved drought resistant mahangu varieties, mushroom, rice and sweet stem sorghum) for human nutrition sources as well as fodder security for livestock/chicken/fish fodder to boos availability of protein nutrition and incomes;
    5. Energy efficient stoves and renewable energy in combination with agro forestry/general reforestation and improved natural resource management;
    6. Awareness building interventions on climate change, coping strategies, global warming and nutrition needs.
       

     

    Expected Outputs:

    The project seeks to achieve its goal through the following activities:

    • Building awareness of climate change, coping strategies and nutrition needs whilst supporting the social mobilization of community members into Self Help Groups
    • Ensuring water security with flood and rain water harvesting for agricultural irrigation, livestock and fish farming
    • Ensuring food security by using sustainable agricultural practices and methods that protect against land degradation such as irrigated vegetable production (supporting HIV/AIDS affected families) using harvested flood and rain water
    • Improved dry land crop production through the introduction of improved soil conservation methods such as composting (rehabilitation of degraded soil by using natural fertilizer), bio char, crop rotation and conservation agriculture such as CONTILL
    • Increased usage of improved drought and flood resistant crops such as pearl millet varieties (the national staple food referred to locally as ‘mahangu’), rice, mushroom and sweet stem sorghum for human nutrition and fodder security for livestock, chicken and fish to boost availability of protein nutrition and incomes
    • Energy efficient stoves and agroforestry in combination with general reforestation techniques

    From the above activities, the proposed project will contribute to the development of adaptive strategies in response to climate change. They will help sustain food security and income generation with no adverse impacts to the land or other natural resources.

    Contacts:

    CBA Project Management Unit:

    Charles Nyandiga, Email: charles.nyandiga@undp.org

    Anna Lisa Jose, Email: annalisa.jose@undpaffiliates.org, 220 East 42nd St, 21st Floor NY, NY 10017,Tel: 646-781-4402

    SGP National Coordinator: Nickey Gasseb, Email: nickeyg@unops.org, Tel: +264 61 248 345

    Project Status:
    Under implementation
    Project Details
    Funding Source:
    GEF-LDCF
    Cofinancing Total:
    n/a

Adapting to Water Shortages in Arid Namibia

Summary:

Adapting to Water Shortages in Arid Namibia

By Servaas van den Bosch

“Normally it rains this time of year, but not a drop has fallen,” complains farmer Paulus Amutenya. “My crops are burning on the field.” It’s mid‐November in Outapi, a small farming town in Northern Namibia, not far from the Angolan border. Outapi is always hot, but this year the rains that cool the soil and allow crops to germinate are exceptionally late. For weeks now farmers have been praying for clouds to appear in the clear blue sky.

‘Tate’ Paulus wipes the sweat of his face and overlooks his few hectares of wilting crops. Groups of women dot the field, weeding between the tomatoes or watermelons. Unlike most subsistence farmers in the area Amutenya employs around a hundred casual workers who depend on him, and he is worried if he will be able to continue to employ them. “Without rain, plants are more susceptible to pests and eventually they succumb to heat stress.” He points to a watermelon with scorched yellow patches. “These melons are naturally covered by their leaves so they ripen nice and evenly, but now the leaves are burnt and the melons are ripe on the top, but not at the bottom.”

He blames the changes in climate.

“Temperatures are rising and rains are becoming more and more unpredictable over the years, but what can I do,” he shrugs.

Farming in Namibia, where the Namib and Kalahari deserts meet, has never been easy. The driest country in sub‐Saharan Africa receives a pitiful 270 millimetres of downpour per year on average. Of this 83 percent evaporates as soon as it hits the ground. Climatologists predict temperatures in the country will rise with 1 to 6 degree in the next several decades, while rainfall could drop another 200 millimetres. Already, in the past few years, rains have been erratic leading to alternating heavy floods and dry spells.

The consequences are devastating for a country where 70 percent of the people to some extent depend on agriculture.

To help farmers adapt to climate change, the Country Pilot Partnership (CPP), an alliance of seven Ministries in Namibia supported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Global Environment Facility (GEF), has started a three year adaptation pilot project in the area.

Click here for the full story.

Adaptation Experience:
Results and Learning:

Click here for the full story.

Sustainability:

Click here for the full story.

Replication:

Click here for the full story.

Funding Source:
GEF

'At first they laughed at Me'

Summary:

‘At first they laughed at Me’

By Servaas van den Bosch

“The neighbours asked me why I am playing with my land,” recalls Fukuile Tashiya laughing. “They said the field looked excavated. ‘Can you even grow plants in these big holes?’ they teased me. It’s not hard to see why Tashiya draws the ire of his fellow farmers. The 30 by 40 metre plot directly in front of his homestead vaguely resembles a playground for elephants. However, a closer look reveals a coordinated plan in the ripped earth. Deep furrows, alternated with dark heaps of freshly dug up earth, run over the length of the plot. Although the field looks out of place among the sandy top soils of Namibia’s Omusati region, Tashiya knows that at the end of the growing season he will be the one laughing.

“Instead of just planting the crops on top like we always do, last year I sowed my mahangu (pearl millet) in these lines and the result was great,” he explains. “My yield was much better and the size of the grain was big compared to other plots,” says the old farmer. Tashiya, whose gathering of clay and straw huts is situated some thirty kilometers up the road from the northern town of Outapi, is one of the farmers that took part in a conservation agriculture pilot project.

Through the Climate Change Adaptation project (CCA) of the Country Pilot Partnership (CPP) hundred demonstration plots were ploughed all over the region to show farmers how they can have a better yield while using less water and saving on labour.

In Tashiya’s case the project assisted him with ploughing and weeding and with fertilizer and seeds. “Also the project explained to us the benefits to farm in this way. It sounded  interesting, but I wanted to start with a small plot first because I did not know if this new method was going to work,” says Tashiya. After overcoming the initial skepticism, the  CCA pilot project under the Country Pilot Partnership (CPP), an alliance of seven Ministries in Namibia supported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Global Environment Facility (GEF), farmers are warming up to the idea, says project manager Andreas Shilomboleni.

“Instead of conventional disc plows, rippers are used,” he explains. “These dig narrow and deep furrows. The project has one mechanized ripper available that farmers can use. The only disadvantage is that they need a tractor. In the future we plan to distribute animal‐drawn rippers because many small‐scale farmers don’t have access to tractors.”

For the full story read the attached document.

Adaptation Experience:

Through the CCA project Paavo’s family who lives in a homestead of straw huts and small cement buildings, received a plastic granary which is more resistant to floods and pests and as such helps her adapt to the changed climatic conditions. As an experiment, the CCA distributed seven of these improved granaries to households in the region to see how they boost resilience against climate change.

Results and Learning:

Refer to attached document.

Sustainability:

Refer to attached document.

Replication:

Refer to attached document.

Image(s):
Funding Source:
GEF

Improve your Goat and beat climate change

Summary:

Improve your Goat and beat climate change

By Servaas van den Bosch

The shadows are already getting longer as we head off to tate Reinhard’s homestead deep in the mopane woodlands of northern Namibia. Andreas Shilomboleni, coordinator of the Country Pilot Partnership’s (CPP) Climate Change Adaptation (CCA) project guns the Landcruiser over sandy roads that meander between the thousands of oshana’s ‐ open spaces that get flooded in the rainy season.

Adaptation Experience:
Results and Learning:

Refer to attached document.

Sustainability:

Refer to attached document.

Replication:

Refer to attached document.

Funding Source:
GEF

A Micro Level Analysis of Violent Conflict - MICROCON

  • Project details

  • Implementing Agency and Partnering Organizations:
    European Commission and several other partnering organizations
    Summary:

     MICROCON   is a five-year research programm

    Project Components:

     Mainly qualitative approaches following anthropological research methods have been applied: household questionnaires, PRA tools, group discussion, expert & in-depth interviews, group and personal network analysis, conflict and stakeholder mappings.

    Expected Outputs:

     The programme aims to promote understanding of individual and group interactionsleading to and resulting from violent mass conflicts , with the purpose of uncovering much-needed fundamentals for better informed domestic, regional and international conflict policy, which places individuals and groups at the centre of their interventions.

    It takes an innovative micro level, multidisciplinary approach to conflict, and aims to go beyond merely reactive theorisations of conflict to look at the complete dynamics (across intensities, actors, triggers and effects) of violent mass conflicts.

    Contacts:

    Lars Wirkus
    Tel.: + 49-228-815-0209
    e-mail: wirkus@ehs.unu.edu

    Project Status:
    Under Implementation (2007-2012)
    Project Details
    Funding Source:
    European Commission (EC)
    Cofinancing Total:
    N/A