Intended impact

K4GGWA enables sustainable land management and livelihoods in support of the Great Green Wall initiative, and accelerates progress towards its objectives.

Resources

What is the Great Green Wall?

News

Strategic Objectives

Enhanced uptake and effectiveness of sustainable land management, land restoration and integrated landscape management practices within the broader Great Green Wall area – focusing on improving regional, national and subnational actors’ capacities to share lessons learned, co-develop and access learning products, and engage stakeholders in practice-based learning trajectories.

Improved land health and vegetation monitoring and intervention targeting within the broader Great Green Wall area – focusing primarily on the development and application of frameworks/tools for monitoring changes in land health (including land degradation status and vegetation compositions) that result from land restoration interventions implemented more effectively under the GGW.

Enhanced policy and institutional enabling environment for sustainable management and livelihoods within the broader Great Green Wall area – addressing gaps highlighted in the GGW status report from 2020, with a particular emphasis on the need to improve its institutional, governance, advocacy and awareness dimensions.

Relevant links

  • Regreening Africa’s work on the GGW

    Regreening Africa’s work on the GGW

  • The Great Green Wall

    The Great Green Wall

Videos

Events

Unpacking Farmer-Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) as a Land Restoration Approach

In this interactive cross-learning event, we tackle one of the world’s most urgent challenges: land degradation, which affects 30% of global land and 3.2 billion people – with Africa’s productive land among the hardest hit.

Unpacking Farmer-Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) as a Land Restoration Approach
Unpacking Farmer-Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) as a Land Restoration Approach

Unpacking Farmer-Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) as a Land Restoration Approach

In this interactive cross-learning event, we tackle one of the world’s most urgent challenges: land degradation, which affects 30% of global land and 3.2 billion people – with Africa’s productive land among the hardest hit.

The Land-Peace Nexus: Advancing Restoration for Peacebuilding, Resilience, and Stability
World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought

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Implemented by

Funded by

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