Ye ZouBoughlala, MohamedChambwera, Muyeye2011-11-252011-11-252011http://hdl.handle.net/10625/47650The table of contents for this item can be shared with the requester. The requester may then choose one chapter, up to 10% of the item, as per the Fair Dealing provision of the Canadian Copyright ActCost-benefit analyses can provide information on the financial feasibility and economic efficiency of a given policy. However, such methods fail to capture the non-monetary benefits of adaptation, which can be more important than the monetary ones. Ongoing work in Morocco shows how cost-benefit analysis combined with participatory stakeholder analysis can support effective decision making, by identifying cross-sector benefits, highlighting areas of mutual interest among different stakeholders, and more effectively assessing impacts on adaptive capacity. The most important benefits from adaptive irrigation in Morocco are non-monetary, for farmers and public sector stakeholders alike.application/pdfenCLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATIONCOST BENEFIT ANALYSISCLIMATE CHANGE POLICYSTAKEHOLDER PARTICIPATIONENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICSINCLUSIVE GROWTHINCOME GENERATIONADAPTIVE CAPACITYMOROCCONORTH OF SAHARABetter economics : supporting adaptation with stakeholder analysisIDRC-Related Report