Inequality, agriculture and climate change: from a vicious to a virtuous circle
- From
-
Published on
02.07.19
- Impact Area

A new urgency is being felt on climate change. Schoolchildren are striking, there are protests in the streets, and politicians across the world, including the UK, are pushing to call climate change a national emergency.
A cruel irony is that climate change will not be felt equally by all—those who have contributed the least to rising temperatures are set to suffer the most.
Read the full op-ed authored by Elwyn Grainger-Jones, Executive Director, CGIAR System Organization, in Diplomatic Courier’s special G20 Edition.
Related news
-
In the field: Listening to Adaptation Pioneers
CGIAR Initiative on Livestock and Climate27.06.24-
Adaptation
Field days are events that bring people together. In this case, adaptation pioneers, other farmers,…
Read more -
-
Supporting sustainable livestock value chains to restore large rangelands
CGIAR Initiative on Livestock and Climate27.06.24-
Adaptation
Rangelands are critical for biodiversity, ecosystem services, and the livelihoods of millions of pas…
Read more -
-
In solidarity with refugees on World Refugee Day
CGIAR Initiative on Fragility, Conflict, and Migration27.06.24-
Climate adaptation & mitigation
-
Gender equality, youth & social inclusion
A week on from World Refugee Day, explore IWMI's work to support refugees and refugee…
Read more -