Inès Bakhtaoui

Inès Bakhtaoui
  • Master of Science
  • PhD Student at University of Bonn

About

6
Publications
1,915
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41
Citations
Introduction
Current research interests cover climate finance applied to loss and damage and climate adaptation; local-level funding needs assessments; climate governance; effectiveness of development finance; Currently working on a systematic review of the effectiveness of public adaptation finance in SSA; on designing a L&D fund, and on exploring options for and feasibility of a digital COP26.
Current institution
University of Bonn
Current position
  • PhD Student

Publications

Publications (6)
Technical Report
Full-text available
This report contributes to making just resilience operational by stocktaking and structuring the knowledge on just resilience in climate adaptation, with a specific focus on providing relevant information towards measuring progress on just resilience in the European context, including the identification of potential indicators.
Article
Full-text available
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) global stocktake tracks progress towards achieving the three global goals of the Paris Agreement — mitigation, adaptation and support. The global goal on adaptation is to enhance adaptive capacity, strengthen resilience and reduce vulnerability to climate change, with a view to cont...
Technical Report
Full-text available
International climate finance plays a key role in enabling the implementation of adaptation measures. However, while there is a common metric for gauging the effectiveness of finance for mitigation – greenhouse gas emission reduction per unit of funding – no corresponding metric exists for adaptation. Instead, assessments of what works best in adap...
Technical Report
Full-text available
After 25 years of regular and ever-growing climate talks under the UNFCCC, COVID-19 brought in-person meetings to a halt. However, even before the pandemic, there were concerns that COP sessions were no longer fit for purpose. Progress in the negotiations had slowed, particularly after the adoption of the 2015 Paris Agreement. When the climate talk...
Article
This paper discusses and rebuts McKenna et al.'s (2020, hereinafter M20) critique of the European wind power potential analysis of Enevoldsen et al. (2019, hereinafter E19). This paper rebuts M20's five claims regarding 1) potential definitions and conceptualizations of sociotechnical systems, 2) incomplete literature review, 3) opaque and incorrec...

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