.- Introduction: Agricultural and food systems, contributors, victims of climate change and bearers of solutions.
.- Agricultural, food and forestry issues in international climate negotiations: setting the agenda and challenges.
.- Tensions and Synergies Between the Concepts of Climate-Smart Agriculture, Agroecology, and Nature-Based Solutions.
.- Atlas of World Agriculture and Food Systems in the Face of Climate Change.
.- Family farming in the face of climate change: potential for adaptation through agroecology.
.- Climate change, (im)mobility and land tenure: challenges for family farming in the Global South.
.- Water, agriculture and climate change: global perspectives.
.- Food systems: Both responsible for and victims of climate change.
.- Forests and Climate Change.
.- Agriculture and Climate Change Debates: The Case of Livestock Production.
.- Agriculture, health and climate change: towards a "one health" vision.
.- What pastoralism tells us about climate change.
.- Major crops and climate change: the cases of rice, sorghum, sugarcane and cotton.
.- Oil palm: building climate resilience.
.- Horticultural Production in the Face of Climate Change.
.- Livestock systems facing the challenges of climate change.
.- Soil carbon sequestration: a solution to mitigate and adapt to climate change?.
.- What solutions for agricultural water management in the face of climate change?.
.- Energy production in agriculture to tackle climate change.
.- Adapting to climate change: what innovative practices in tropical production systems?.
.- Adapting and innovating in terms of cultivated species and varieties: a key role for cultivated and natural diversity? AFS.
.- Territorializing climate action.
.- Food systems and climate change: mitigation and adaptation in agri-food chains and consumption.
.- Agricultural Methane: A Lever for Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions to Comply with the Paris Agreement.
.- The Heterogeneity of Institutionalization Pathways for Climate Policies and Instruments in Agriculture: A Comparative Analysis of Senegal, Colombia, Brazil, and France.
.- Finance, Agriculture and Climate.
.- The interfaces between science and policy-making in the face of the climate change challenge.
.- Conclusion.