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A systematic review of climate adaptation planning in African cities

In recent years the need for climate change adaptation has become increasingly important. Adaptation planning is understood to be the process by which actors identify, develop, test, and prioritise strategies and measures to reduce climate risk. In Africa, climate projections predict higher temperat...

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Main Author: Madhi, Yasirah
Other Authors: Taylor, Anna
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Madhi, Yasirah
author2 Taylor, Anna
author_browse Madhi, Yasirah
Taylor, Anna
author_facet Taylor, Anna
Madhi, Yasirah
author_sort Madhi, Yasirah
collection Thesis
description In recent years the need for climate change adaptation has become increasingly important. Adaptation planning is understood to be the process by which actors identify, develop, test, and prioritise strategies and measures to reduce climate risk. In Africa, climate projections predict higher temperature increases than the rest of the globe. Africa is a rapidly urbanizing continent and its urban population is expected to rise to 59% by 2050. Thus, reducing climate risks and leveraging any emerging climate-related opportunities in cities will be a key component of tackling climate change across the continent. In the last few decades, the number of publications on climate adaptation has been increasing considerably. This growing body of climate adaptation research is in need of consolidation in order to draw meaningful lessons from place-specific and hazard-specific studies. This study aimed to collate and review peer-reviewed literature on climate adaptation planning in African cities in order to consolidate fragmented information and establish what is known about how climate adaptation is occurring at the urban scale. Using the systematic review process, relevant documents on the topic were identified and extracted using specific inclusion and exclusion criteria to delimit and broadly characterize the body of literature focusing on climate adaptation planning in an urban African context. Due to the scope and constraints of a minor dissertation, only a sub-set of documents underwent full-text review using thematic content analysis. The code used for thematic analysis was developed through an abductive process using Hunter et al. (2020) and Ford et al. (2015)'s coding categories as a framework. A total of 84 papers were considered suitable for inclusion. The geographical distribution of urban adaptation planning literature was established with most papers stemming from southern Africa (56), followed by East (19), West (17), and North Africa (5). No publications dealt with urban climate adaptation in Central Africa. The country with an overwhelming number of publications was South Africa (40). The majority of the literature was authored by researchers based in institutions outside of Africa (54%). Papers were broadly categorised into articles that tested, developed, prioritised, or identified strategies to reduce climate risk. The papers testing strategies to reduce climate risk were chosen for full-text analysis. South Africa was excluded from the final sub-set in order to focus on assimilating knowledge from elsewhere across the continent. 11 papers underwent the coding processes. Flooding was identified as the main climatic driver of adaptation and most papers emphasized the need for stakeholder engagement and communication. This study showed the value of applying a systematic review methodology to identify trends and consolidate research on the planning aspects of climate adaptation in African cities. It argues for extending the full-text thematic analysis to the entire set of literature identified to strengthen theory development based on empirical knowledge from urban African contexts.
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language Eng
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39610 A systematic review of climate adaptation planning in African cities Madhi, Yasirah Taylor, Anna Environmental and Geographical Science In recent years the need for climate change adaptation has become increasingly important. Adaptation planning is understood to be the process by which actors identify, develop, test, and prioritise strategies and measures to reduce climate risk. In Africa, climate projections predict higher temperature increases than the rest of the globe. Africa is a rapidly urbanizing continent and its urban population is expected to rise to 59% by 2050. Thus, reducing climate risks and leveraging any emerging climate-related opportunities in cities will be a key component of tackling climate change across the continent. In the last few decades, the number of publications on climate adaptation has been increasing considerably. This growing body of climate adaptation research is in need of consolidation in order to draw meaningful lessons from place-specific and hazard-specific studies. This study aimed to collate and review peer-reviewed literature on climate adaptation planning in African cities in order to consolidate fragmented information and establish what is known about how climate adaptation is occurring at the urban scale. Using the systematic review process, relevant documents on the topic were identified and extracted using specific inclusion and exclusion criteria to delimit and broadly characterize the body of literature focusing on climate adaptation planning in an urban African context. Due to the scope and constraints of a minor dissertation, only a sub-set of documents underwent full-text review using thematic content analysis. The code used for thematic analysis was developed through an abductive process using Hunter et al. (2020) and Ford et al. (2015)'s coding categories as a framework. A total of 84 papers were considered suitable for inclusion. The geographical distribution of urban adaptation planning literature was established with most papers stemming from southern Africa (56), followed by East (19), West (17), and North Africa (5). No publications dealt with urban climate adaptation in Central Africa. The country with an overwhelming number of publications was South Africa (40). The majority of the literature was authored by researchers based in institutions outside of Africa (54%). Papers were broadly categorised into articles that tested, developed, prioritised, or identified strategies to reduce climate risk. The papers testing strategies to reduce climate risk were chosen for full-text analysis. South Africa was excluded from the final sub-set in order to focus on assimilating knowledge from elsewhere across the continent. 11 papers underwent the coding processes. Flooding was identified as the main climatic driver of adaptation and most papers emphasized the need for stakeholder engagement and communication. This study showed the value of applying a systematic review methodology to identify trends and consolidate research on the planning aspects of climate adaptation in African cities. It argues for extending the full-text thematic analysis to the entire set of literature identified to strengthen theory development based on empirical knowledge from urban African contexts. 2024-05-14T12:18:17Z 2024-05-14T12:18:17Z 2023 2024-05-14T12:07:19Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39610 Eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Environmental and Geographical Science
Madhi, Yasirah
A systematic review of climate adaptation planning in African cities
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A systematic review of climate adaptation planning in African cities
title_full A systematic review of climate adaptation planning in African cities
title_fullStr A systematic review of climate adaptation planning in African cities
title_full_unstemmed A systematic review of climate adaptation planning in African cities
title_short A systematic review of climate adaptation planning in African cities
title_sort systematic review of climate adaptation planning in african cities
topic Environmental and Geographical Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39610
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AT madhiyasirah systematicreviewofclimateadaptationplanninginafricancities