189 Appendixes A Appendix 3.1 Document analysis of anticipation processes and their intended role in decision-making Statements in anticipation process reports Country What type of anticipation process was held? Who initiated and/or funded it? How did the anticipation process inform policy? Senegal Climate models and policy fora that include changes in the production system in response to changes in the biophysical and economic environment until 2050 (Amma2050, n.d.; Future Climate for Africa, n.d.; Hartley et al., 2016) Initiated under the Africa Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis Program. Funded by the UK Department for International Development (DFID) and Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Future Climate for Africa (FCFA) program. A forum was conducted with national and regional decision-makers in Dakar to inform adaptation plans and NDCs but not specified policy outcome formulated in the documents assessed Ordered probit model estimating the simultaneous probabilities of sustainable and unsustainable adaptation practices to capture how future adaptation planning depends on the way in which SMEs deal with climate stress (Crick et al., 2018) London School of Economics, Kingston University and IED AFRIQUE-Innovation, Environnement, Développement en Afrique. Financial support from the UK Government’s Department for International Development (DfID) and the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) Policy recommendations were clearly listed, no explicit policy outcomes formulated in the document assessed Ghana Participatory scenarios workshop to address future climate uncertainty until 2050 with MoFA representatives, the Ghana Science-Policy Platform and CGIAR researchers, and stakeholders from the rural private sector and civil society of Ghana (CCAFS Livestock Policy Report Ghana, 2017) Initiated by CCAFS based on a request of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, funded by CCAFS Scenario-guided recommendations were used to reformulate the National Livestock Policy of Ghana Downscaled climate change scenarios for the Wa District generated by the Model for the Assessment of Greenhouse-Gas Induced Climate Change (MAGICC) under IPCC A12 SRES. Scenarios were conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Ghana Meteorological Agency (GMet) University of Cape Town, University Ghana, Environmental Protection Agency Objective is to guide local medium-term development plans, no explicit policy outcome formulated in the document assessed
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