The intersection of climate change and gender inequality is one of the most urgent and most underfunded areas in the development sector. Women and marginalised communities bear disproportionate climate burdens while being systematically excluded from decision-making. Our climate and gender practice addresses this directly.
We integrate gender analysis into climate vulnerability assessments, program design, and MEL frameworks to ensure that climate responses are equitable, not just environmentally effective. Our work draws on our broader expertise in political economy and conflict sensitivity to account for the socio-political dimensions of climate adaptation and mitigation.
We support donors, NGOs, and governments in designing and evaluating climate programs that centre justice, inclusion, and local agency moving beyond technical compliance towards transformative environmental programming.