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contribute to a population’s resilience. Measuring resilience also contributes to
measuringpeople’s ability to respond to and accommodate adverse events.3
IsioloCountyislocatedinuppereasternKenyacoveringanareaof25,336.1km2.
Most of the county is a flat low lying plain. Isiolo is regarded as one of the arid
counties and is hot anddry formost of theyearwith two rainy seasons; short rains
(October and November) and long rains (March–May) with average rainfall of
580 mm. The main ethnic groups found in the county are Borana, Turkana,
Samburu, Somali andMeru. Themain economic activities practiced in the county
include pastoralism, subsistence agriculture, small-scale trade, and limited
harvesting ofGumArabica resin.Over the years, its communities have continued
to feel the increasing impacts of climatevariabilitydue to the increasing frequency
of drought episodes and their negative impacts.4 These impacts include: longer
trekking distances for women and girls, over dependence on humanitarian aid,
infrastructuredestructionduetoflashflooding,changinglivelihoodsascommunities
are unable to recover from the increasing frequency of drought episodes amongst
others.
The county was chosen for the TAMD feasibility testing, as it was the first
county to receive climate financing from theDepartment for International Devel-
opment (DFID) for the establishment of a CountyAdaptation Fund (CAF).5 The
objectiveof theCAFis tofinancepublicgood investments for improved resilience
toclimatechangethroughtheCountygovernmentandsixwardadaptationplanning
committees (CAPCs andWAPCs respectively) through the Adaptation Consor-
tium.6The sixwards areKinna,Garbatulla, Sericho,Oldonyiro,Merti andChari.
Resilience in Isiolo, according to the resident communities is equated to long
termdevelopmentoutcomes suchas sustainable livelihoodsdue tobetter livestock
production which leads to increased incomes, improved human health, access to
natural resources/pasture, food security and access to education.
Thus themainquestionwaswhether investing climatefinance in public invest-
ment goodswas going to elicit resiliencemeasures as described by the communi-
ties.For this theTAMDframeworkdevelopedbyBrooksandothers7waschosenas
the tool that would be used to test whether resilience measures defined by the
3Bene, C. 2013. Towards a Quantifiable Measure of Resilience. Brighton, UK: Institute of
DevelopmentStudies.
4Republic of Kenya (2013). Isiolo County: First County integrated development plan
(2013–2017).Kenya,Nairobi:Government of theRepublic ofKenya.
5This fund is managed under the DFID’s Strengthening Adaptation and Resilience to Climate
Change inKenya (STARCK+)with funds from the InternationalClimateFund.
6Adaptation Consortium (2014). Adaptation consortium bulletin (online newsletter). Retrieved
fromhttp://adaconsortium.org/images/publications/Briefing-Paper.pdf
7Brooks, N., Anderson, S., Burton, I., Fisher, S., Rai, N., & Tellam, I. (2013). An operational
framework for tracking adaptation andmeasuring development. Climate changeworking paper
no.5.London,UK:International InstituteforEnvironmentalDevelopment(IIED).Retrievedfrom
http://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/10038IIED.pdf
272 I.Karani andN.Kariuki
Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Titel
- Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Autoren
- Juha I. Uitto
- Jyotsna Puri
- Rob D. van den Berg
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 3.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-43702-6
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 365
- Schlagwörter
- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, Climate Change/ Climate Change Impacts, Environmental Management
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima