Operationalizing Loss & Damage Financing for Marginalised Urban Communities
Sandholz, Simone, Klause, Kai, Mirwald, Magdalena, Van Schie, Douwe, Turmena, Lucas, Abbas, Syed Muhammad Jaffar, Bananayo, Phillip Bonera, van der Geest, Kees, Kibii, Caroline, Perennia, Nabiyya, Schroeder, Anika, Ramos-Galvez, Alejandra and Kreft, Soenke (2024). Operationalizing Loss & Damage Financing for Marginalised Urban Communities. T20 Brasil.
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Sub-type Policy brief Author Sandholz, Simone
Klause, Kai
Mirwald, Magdalena
Van Schie, Douwe
Turmena, Lucas
Abbas, Syed Muhammad Jaffar
Bananayo, Phillip Bonera
van der Geest, Kees
Kibii, Caroline
Perennia, Nabiyya
Schroeder, Anika
Ramos-Galvez, Alejandra
Kreft, SoenkeTitle Operationalizing Loss & Damage Financing for Marginalised Urban Communities Publication Date 2024-09 Place of Publication Rio de Janeiro Publisher T20 Brasil Pages 17 Language eng Abstract While the adverse impacts of the climate crisis intensify, global urbanisation is taking place at an unprecedented scale and pace. Today, one in three urban habitants in the Global South already lives in informal settlements, whose dwellers could rise to well over three billion in less than 30 years (UN 2023), including due to migration in the context of disasters and climate change. Marginalised urban communities have contributed little to the climate crisis, yet they are highly vulnerable due to their poor economic situation and exclusion from public services. As a consequence, they are most critically affected by its impacts, including on health, livelihoods and access to functioning basic services. The Loss & Damage Fund and Funding Arrangements established during COP28 offer immense opportunities to operationalise climate justice by developing more equitable development pathways for the most vulnerable urban groups, and this is much needed given the intensifying climate hazards. Yet, there is a high risk that those who need it most will only have limited access to its technical and financial resources, if at all. This is especially true for residents of informal settlements, who are often not taken sufficiently into account in formal governance schemes. This policy brief therefore specifically addresses the question of how a climate justice perspective can be applied to the creation of appropriate mechanisms for access to the Fund and Funding Arrangements. This concerns the architecture of the Fund in general, and the facilitation of access by developing adequate mechanisms at the urban level in particular. The challenge here is to operationalise formal mechanisms for parts of urban society living in informal and marginalised conditions. The much-needed immediate support after disaster events must address existing multiple vulnerabilities and contribute to the long-term transformation towards more just, equitable resilient and climate– friendly cities. Keyword Loss and damage
Informal urban settlements
Vulnerability reduction
Climate justiceCopyright Holder T20 Brasil Copyright Year 2024 Copyright type Creative commons -
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