Resilient Urban Futures: Adapting Livelihoods to Climate Change

East African cities face growing climate-related challenges, exacerbated by rapid urbanisation. Issues such as rising temperatures, erratic rainfall, droughts, and flooding put significant pressure on infrastructure, livelihoods, and social well-being. The Leiden-Delft-Erasmus East Africa Research Network (LEARN) convened a policy dialogue involving policymakers, academics, researchers, and community leaders from Uganda, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda and Kenya to explore strategies for addressing these challenges the dialogues focussed on climate impacts on livelihoods in East African cities. Key findings highlight physical, socio-economic and socio-cultural vulnerabilities to climate change in cities across the regions.

The dialogue proposes practical climate resilience strategies such as enhancing community-based adaptation and developing sub-national climate financing mechanisms among others. The recommendations provided offer a roadmap for policymakers, urban practitioners, and other stakeholders to foster sustainable, climate-resilient futures for East African cities. As a call to action, the dialogue emphasised the need for a paradigm shift in tackling climate challenges by breaking away from pipeline process conditioning, promoting local leadership and ownership of climate initiatives, reframing Africa’s climate narrative, and reducing dependency on donor funding. 

Author: By Alice Menya, Stephen Nyagaya and Bosibori Barake 


Scaling up local actions shaping climate trajectories in East African Cities

Climate change in East Africa has far-reaching effects that manifest both in large-scale disruptions and in smaller, daily inconveniences that often go unnoticed. Locally Led Adaptation (LLA) emphasises the importance of local people having control over the adaptation process, leveraging their knowledge and experiences to manage climate risks in ways that are embedded in their local context. This policy brief takes a deep dive into LLA actions in East Africa focussing on their significance, showcasing successful examples in different cities across East Africa and highlighting the challenges faced. 

The LEARN Cross-city Policy Dialogue webinar, “Scaling up Local Actions Shaping Climate Trajectories in East African Cities,” held in July 2024, gathered climate practitioners from urban areas across East Africa (Tanzania, Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda, Ethiopia and Kenya) to share their experiences in climate adaptation. The discussions centred around presentations and evaluations of LLA initiatives in East Africa and examined the policy and practice environment surrounding these efforts. 

Author: By Bosibori Barake, Alice Menya, Diana Mwau & Stephen Nyagaya