Themes
Gender and social inclusion
To achieve a resilient Malawi, women and other traditionally marginalised groups, including people of different ages, ethnic groups, disability status, and sexual minorities, need to be fully involved in and to benefit from resilience programming. The BRACC programme looks at how cultural norms, the challenges faced by disadvantaged groups, and system and intervention design affect outcomes, and aims to ensure that programme activities meet the needs of diverse people.
Why invest in resilience?
Malawi Clean Cooking Fund: Applications now open
Cash boost to people facing hunger in Malawi
Future climate projections for Malawi
This brief provides an overview of future climate change in Malawi, using results from the latest available climate model simulations.
Projecting future water availability in Lake Malawi and the Shire River basin
Gender, agriculture and climate change in Malawi
Agriculture is essential to the Malawian economy and is a key livelihood activity – but it is vulnerable to climate change.
How to understand and interpret global climate model results
Climate modelling approaches projecting future changes to the Earth’s climate vary widely, generating different types of dataset.
PROSPER newsletter - September 2020
The first issue of the Promoting Sustainable Partnerships for Empowered Resilience (PROSPER) Semi-Annual Newsletter shares some of the key achievements and innovations of our first year of operatio