An article consists of content (e.g. research paper, report, brief, toolkit, guidance document etc.) that is broadly relevant to the climate change adaptation community. As opposed to a Case Study, it is not specific to a community, city, region or country (not geo-localised), but can cover multiple locations.
A case study is any type of content that can be viewed in the weADAPT’s Case Study map. Case Studies can include (but are not limited to) adaptation stories from communities and insights from and examples of adaptation measures in specific locations. Case Studies tend to be shorter summaries of work and must relate to a specific location, identifiable with a longitude and latitude.
A blog post is an entry written by one or multiple authors which is usually short and uses a more personal tone. Whereas articles and case studies should generally follow the scientific method and a review process, blogs can be more informal and display a personal opinion. However, the arguments and messages shared in blogs pieces should be grounded in scientific and/or verifiable information and will follow the same internal review process as other pieces of content. Blogs are especially effective when used to respond to or reflect on recent political, social, economic or scientific issues and developments (related to climate adaptation), or share learnings from major events such as COP. Note: we currently only cross-post blogs, which means that we will only be able to publish your blob on weADAPT if it has first been published somewhere else (and we would make this clear in the blog itself)
Our ‘Event’ page includes two types of content:
If you are planning to submit content to weADAPT, please make sure it follows our publishing criteria first.
Further information:
Do you have a climate adaptation action, initiative or case study to share, do you want to learn from other’s experiences, or are you hoping to connect, discuss and collaborate with others?
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