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Dive into the research topics where Ana Maria Loboguerrero is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ana Maria Loboguerrero.


Ecology and Society | 2018

The climate-smart village approach : framework of an integrative strategy for scaling up adaptation options in agriculture

Pramod K. Aggarwal; Andrew Jarvis; Bruce M. Campbell; Robert B. Zougmoré; Arun Khatri-Chhetri; Sonja J. Vermeulen; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Leocadio S. Sebastian; James Kinyangi; Osana Bonilla-Findji; Maren A.O. Radeny; John W.M. Recha; Deissy Martinez-Baron; Julian Ramirez-Villegas; Sophia Huyer; Philip K. Thornton; Eva Wollenberg; James Hansen; Patricia Alvarez-Toro; Andrés Aguilar-Ariza; David Arango-Londoño; Victor Patiño-Bravo; Ovidio Rivera; Mathieu Ouedraogo; Bui Tan Yen

Increasing weather risks threaten agricultural production systems and food security across the world. Maintaining agricultural growth while minimizing climate shocks is crucial to building a resilient food production system and meeting developmental goals in vulnerable countries. Experts have proposed several technological, institutional, and policy interventions to help farmers adapt to current and future weather variability and to mitigate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. This paper presents the climate-smart village (CSV) approach as a means of performing agricultural research for development that robustly tests technological and institutional options for dealing with climatic variability and climate change in agriculture using participatory methods. It aims to scale up and scale out the appropriate options and draw out lessons for policy makers from local to global levels. The approach incorporates evaluation of climate-smart technologies, practices, services, and processes relevant to local climatic risk management and identifies opportunities for maximizing adaptation gains from synergies across different interventions and recognizing potential maladaptation and trade-offs. It ensures that these are aligned with local knowledge and link into development plans. This paper describes early results in Asia, Africa, and Latin America to illustrate different examples of the CSV approach in diverse agroecological settings. Results from initial studies indicate that the CSV approach has a high potential for scaling out promising climate-smart agricultural technologies, practices, and services. Climate analog studies indicate that the lessons learned at the CSV sites would be relevant to adaptation planning in a large part of global agricultural land even under scenarios of climate change. Key barriers and opportunities for further work are also discussed.


Climate Policy | 2018

Informing climate policy through institutional collaboration: reflections on the preparation of Colombia’s nationally determined contribution

Alessandro De Pinto; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Mario Londoño; Katherine Ovalle Sanabria; Rodrigo Suarez Castaño

ABSTRACT The 2015 Paris Agreement was adopted at the twenty-first session of the Conference of the Parties (COP 21) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). In the run-up to COP 21, most UNFCCC Parties put forward intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs), containing mitigation pledges. These INDCs are now being confirmed as nationally determined contributions (NDCs), as governments formally ratify the Paris Agreement. NDCs are supposed to provide transparent, quantifiable, comparable, and verifiable mitigation objectives. However, there is neither methodological nor data consistency in the way Parties have prepared their NDCs. This article showcases recent collaboration among research, government, and private institutions that contributed to the Colombian NDC. While documenting the novel research, data, and rich web of collaboration that helped the Colombian government prepare the country’s NDC, this article links this specific case with the challenges of policy-oriented and interactive models of research. Our experience confirms previous research on the importance of stakeholder interaction, transparency and openness of processes, and willingness to break disciplinary and institutional barriers. In addition, the experience points to the importance of having appropriate available resources and a local institution acting as champion for the project. POLICY RELEVANCE The lack of methodological and data consistency in the way parties have prepared their nationally determined contributions (NDCs) can significantly slow down the progress toward limiting global warming below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels. In the meantime, calls for scientists to provide ‘usable’ information are increasing and the importance of close collaboration between scientists, end-users, and stakeholders is also increasingly acknowledged. In this article we make explicit the process and research challenges faced during what was, in the authors’ opinion, the successful collaboration among scientists, governmental, and private institutions that led to the formulation of an essential component of the Colombian NDC. As policy makers move forward with the implementation of their plans and as scientists become increasingly engaged with government planning, it is essential that they are aware of the needs and demands in terms of collaborations, data, resources, and type of results necessary to produce analyses that can be made fully public and can withstand international scrutiny.


Global Food Security | 2016

Reducing risks to food security from climate change

Bruce M. Campbell; Sonja J. Vermeulen; Pramod K. Aggarwal; Caitlin Corner-Dolloff; Evan H. Girvetz; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Julian Ramirez-Villegas; Todd S. Rosenstock; Leocadio S. Sebastian; Philip K. Thornton; Eva Wollenberg


Energy Economics | 2016

Achieving CO2 reductions in Colombia: Effects of carbon taxes and abatement targets

Silvia Calderón; Andrés Álvarez; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Santiago Arango; Katherine Calvin; Tom Kober; Kathryn Daenzer; Karen Fisher-Vanden


Agricultural Systems | 2017

Costs and benefits of climate-smart agriculture: The case of the Dry Corridor in Guatemala

Gustavo Sain; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Caitlin Corner-Dolloff; Miguel Lizarazo; Andreea Nowak; Deissy Martinez-Baron; Nadine Andrieu


Archive | 2015

Progress on agriculture in the UN climate talks: How COP21 can ensure a food-secure future

Merylyn Hedger; Bruce M. Campbell; George Wamukoya; James Kinyangi; Louis Verchot; Lini Wollenberg; Sonja J. Vermeulen; Peter A. Minang; Henry Neufeldt; Alain Vidal; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Anette Friis; Alberto Millan


Archive | 2015

Climate-smart agriculture investment prioritization framework

Caitlin Corner-Dolloff; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Andy Jarvis; Andreea Nowak; Miguel Lizarazo; Mario Fuentes; Rado Barzev; Carlos Ardila; Osana Bonilla-Findji; Deissy Martínez Barón; Jorge Maldonado; John Gomez; Jeimar Tapasco; David Abreu; Todd S. Rosenstock; Evan H. Girvetz


Archive | 2014

Estado del Arte en Cambio Climático, Agricultura y Seguridad Alimentaria en Costa Rica

Seble Gameda; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; María Boa; Deissy Martínez Barón; Martiz G; Sierra Y; Vanegas L


Archive | 2014

The Role of Agriculture in the UN Climate Talks

Bruce M. Campbell; George Wamukoya; James Kinyangi; Louis Verchot; Lini Wollenberg; Sonja J. Vermeulen; Peter A. Minang; Henry Neufeldt; Alain Vidal; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Merylyn Hedger


Sustainability | 2018

Sustainable and Low Greenhouse Gas Emitting Rice Production in Latin America and the Caribbean: A Review on the Transition from Ideality to Reality

Ngonidzashe Chirinda; Laura Arenas; María Cristina Katto; Sandra Loaiza; Fernando Correa; Manabu Isthitani; Ana Maria Loboguerrero; Deissy Martinez-Baron; Eduardo Graterol; Santiago Jaramillo; Carlos Felipe Torres; Miguel Arango; Myriam Guzmán; Ivan Avila; Sara Hube; Ditmar Bernardo Kurtz; Gonzalo Zorrilla; José Terra; Pilar Irisarri; Silvana Tarlera; Gabriel LaHue; Walkyria Bueno Scivittaro; Aldo Noguera; Cimelio Bayer

Collaboration


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Caitlin Corner-Dolloff

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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Andreea Nowak

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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Miguel Lizarazo

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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Andy Jarvis

University of Copenhagen

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Nadine Andrieu

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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Osana Bonilla-Findji

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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Evan H. Girvetz

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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Deissy Martinez-Baron

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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Fanny C. Howland

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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