de Araújo Barbosa, CaioAhmadnia, Shaadee2024-09-102024-09-102024-09-10https://hdl.handle.net/10986/42139Low- and middle-income geographies affected by fragility, conflict, and violence (FCV) are confronted with major development challenges, which threaten their efforts to end extreme poverty M]Q produce a more equitable future. At least two-thirds of the global extreme poor will be living in fragile and conflict-affected situations (FCS) by 2030. Geographies dominated by latent, manifest, and escalating violent conflict receive 80 percent of all financing available to humanitarian organizations globally. Violent conflict has spiked dramatically in the last decade, and the global fragility footprint continues to grow and is followed by increasing complexity. The latest global developments add to a multitude of risks and long-lasting impacts on FCV, and these are linked and/or exacerbated by variability and climate change (e.g., food insecurity, environmental degradation, inequalities in access to natural resources, and migration).en-USCC BY-NC 3.0 IGOCLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATIONCONFLICT AND VIOLENCEFRAGILITY, CONFLICT AND VIOLENCETRANSPORT GOVERNANCEURBAN TRANSPORT POLICY AND PLANNINGLOW-EMISSIONS TRANSPORTTRANSPORT ECONOMICSTRANSPORT POLICYCLIMATE CHANGEURBAN TRANSPORTURBAN DEVELOPMENTTRANSPORT IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENTTRANSPORT AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATIONTRANSPORTTRANSPORT AND CLIMATE CHANGESUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIESSDG 11CLIMATE ACTIONSDG 13PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONSSDG 16Assessing Climate Change Risks in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Situations - Insights and Recommendations from a Global AnalysisReportWorld Bank10.1596/42139