WATER RESILIENCE
FOSTERING INTEGRATED APPROACHES AT THE REGION, CITY, AND SETTLEMENT SCALES
WATER RESILIENCE
FOSTERING INTEGRATED APPROACHES AT THE REGION, CITY, AND SETTLEMENT SCALES
Advocacy: Global Goals on Adaptation and New Collective Quantified Goals
ISSUES
PUBLIC | POLICY | WATER | ECOSYSTEMS | RESILIENCE | GOVERNANCE
KEY ASPECTS
RESEARCH | DIALOGUE
INDIA URBAN LAB
RANCHI WORKSHOP
The India Urban Lab (IUL) is an endeavour to collaborate with communities, institutions, organizations, individuals, and governments to debate, discuss and arrive at solutions addressing “wicked problems” experienced by rapidly urbanizing geographies in India. The lab aims to initiate positive change across geographies through collaboration. The previous labs were conducted in Bengaluru (2015) and in Goa (2018). The next lab in the series will be conducted in Ranchi in July 2022.
With a thematic focus on water resilience, the upcoming Lab at Ranchi Lab will comprise of expert lectures, group discussions, site visits, and hands-on workshops to encourage innovative and multi-disciplinary perspectives to emerge.
The Ranchi Urban Lab anchors itself in the conceptual philosophy of Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) and Integrated Urban Water Management (IUWM) to promote water resilience at the regional, city-settlement, and settlement scales. The Lab aspires to become a platform for participants from diverse backgrounds to co-produce water resilient approaches and solutions that combine traditional knowledge and lived experiences at the grass root level with policy and technical knowledge.
The Ranchi Urban Lab is organised by INDE in collaboration with Mahila Housing Trust (MHT).
ISSUES
PUBLIC | POLICY | WATER | ECOSYSTEMS | RESILIENCE | GOVERNANCE
KEY ASPECTS
RESEARCH | DIALOGUE
INDIA URBAN LAB
RANCHI WORKSHOP
The India Urban Lab (IUL) is an endeavour to collaborate with communities, institutions, organizations, individuals, and governments to debate, discuss and arrive at solutions addressing “wicked problems” experienced by rapidly urbanizing geographies in India.
The lab aims to initiate positive change across geographies through collaboration.
The previous labs were conducted in Bengaluru (2015) and in Goa (2018). The next lab in the series will be conducted in Ranchi in July 2022.
With a thematic focus on water resilience, the upcoming Lab at Ranchi Lab will comprise of expert lectures, group discussions, site visits, and hands-on workshops to encourage innovative and multi-disciplinary perspectives to emerge.
The Ranchi Urban Lab anchors itself in the conceptual philosophy of Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) and Integrated Urban Water Management (IUWM) to promote water resilience at the regional, city-settlement, and settlement scales.
The Lab aspires to become a platform for participants from diverse backgrounds to co-produce water resilient approaches and solutions that combine traditional knowledge and lived experiences at the grass root level with policy and technical knowledge.
The Ranchi Urban Lab is organised by INDE in collaboration with Mahila Housing Trust (MHT).
ISSUES
PUBLIC POLICY | DEVELOPMENT
KEY ASPECTS
DIALOGUE | RESEARCH
Resilience Blueprint : For and from the Asia Pacific
This intervention aimed to co-create a Regional Adaptation and Resilience Blueprint for the Asia-Pacific region through stakeholder consultations and workshops. It supported the Adaptation Research Alliance (ARA) in representing regional perspectives at the global level. The initiative focused on influencing the New Collective Quantifiable Goal on Climate Finance (NCQG) and the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA) under the UNFCCC’s Dubai-Belém Work Programme.
The initiative involved both ARA and non-ARA regional stakeholders in online and in-person discussions, gathering diverse perspectives from grassroots to policy levels. It also led to the co-creation of advocacy materials that highlighted regional experiences and challenges in climate adaptation, amplifying the voices of high-risk, climate-vulnerable regions that have historically had limited representation in global forums.