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Showing 1–12 of 12 results
Advanced filters: Author: Saleemul Huq Clear advanced filters
  • Policymakers have committed to tackling loss and damage as a result of climate change across three high-profile international processes. Framing post-2015 development as a means to address loss and damage can synergize these agendas.

    • Erin Roberts
    • Stephanie Andrei
    • Lawrence Flint
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 5, P: 1024-1025
  • Compensating for the devastating impacts of heatwaves, hurricanes and floods after they occur is too slow. With climate risks accelerating, the world must predict who needs funds and when.

    • Richard H. Clarke
    • Noah J. Wescombe
    • Domenico Lombardi
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 623, P: 689-692
  • Loss and damage is a relative newcomer to the climate change agenda. It has the potential to reinvigorate existing mitigation and adaptation efforts, but this will ultimately require leadership from developed countries and enhanced understanding of several key issues, such as limits to adaptation.

    • Saleemul Huq
    • Erin Roberts
    • Adrian Fenton
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 3, P: 947-949
  • Those concerned with human responses to climate-related impacts increasingly use resilience as a framing concept. This Perspective critiques dominant approaches to resilience building and advocates a human livelihoods-based path.

    • Thomas Tanner
    • David Lewis
    • Frank Thomalla
    Reviews
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 5, P: 23-26
  • Slow progress in scaling-up climate finance has emerged as a major bottleneck in international negotiations. Debt relief for climate finance swaps could provide an alternative source for financing mitigation and adaptation action in developing countries.

    • Adrian Fenton
    • Helena Wright
    • Saleemul Huq
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 4, P: 650-653
  • Knowledge could represent both a powerful determinant and indicator of adaptive capacity.

    • Casey Williams
    • Adrian Fenton
    • Saleemul Huq
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 5, P: 82-83
  • The concept of resilience, once meaning the ability to ‘bounce back’ to the status quo, now refers to the capacity to live and develop with change. A mismatch between the latest science of resilience and the talk of resilience recovery after COVID-19 requires resilience thinking to be aligned with sustainable development.

    • Johan Rockström
    • Albert V. Norström
    • Deon Nel
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 6, P: 897-907
  • The Paris Agreement places new emphasis on the need to take stock of adaptation progress. This Perspective discusses the conceptual and methodological challenges associated with monitoring adaptation and provides a comprehensive framework for tracking progress among governments.

    • Lea Berrang-Ford
    • Robbert Biesbroek
    • S. Jody Heymann
    Reviews
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 9, P: 440-449