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Post‐disaster development policies, such as resettlement, can have major impacts on communities. This paper examines how and why people's livelihoods change as a result of resettlement, and relocated people's views of such changes, in the context of natural disasters. It presents two historically‐grounded, comparative case studies of post‐flood resettlement in rural Mozambique. The studies demonstrate a movement away from rain‐fed subsistence agriculture towards commercial agriculture and non‐agricultural activities. The ability to secure a viable livelihood was a key determinant of whether resettlers remained in their new locations or returned to the river valleys despite the risks posed by floods. The findings suggest that more research is required to understand i) why resettlers choose to stay in or abandon designated resettlement areas, ii) what is meant by ‘voluntary’ and ‘involuntary’ resettlement in the realm of post‐disaster reconstruction, and iii) the policy drivers of resettlement in developing countries. 相似文献
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There has been increasing recognition within systematic conservation planning of the need to include social data alongside
biophysical assessments. However, in the approaches to identify potential conservation sites, there remains much room for
improvement in the treatment of social data. In particular, few rigorous methods to account for the diversity of less-easily
quantifiable social attributes that influence the implementation success of conservation sites (such as willingness to conserve)
have been developed. We use a case-study analysis of private conservation areas within the Little Karoo, South Africa, as
a practical example of the importance of incorporating social data into the process of selecting potential conservation sites
to improve their implementation likelihood. We draw on extensive data on the social attributes of our case study obtained
from a combination of survey questionnaires and semi-structured interviews. We discuss the need to determine the social attributes
that are important for achieving the chosen implementation strategy by offering four tested examples of important social attributes
in the Little Karoo: the willingness of landowners to take part in a stewardship arrangement, their willingness to conserve,
their capacity to conserve, and the social capital among private conservation area owners. We then discuss the process of
using an implementation likelihood ratio (derived from a combined measure of the social attributes) to assist the choice of
potential conservation sites. We conclude by summarizing our discussion into a simple conceptual framework for identifying
biophysically-valuable sites which possess a high likelihood that the desired implementation strategy will be realized on
them. 相似文献
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Lindsay C. Stringer Jen C. Dyer Mark S. Reed Andrew J. Dougill Chasca Twyman David Mkwambisi 《Environmental Science & Policy》2009,12(7):748-765
The impacts of climate change, drought and desertification are closely interlinked, and most acutely experienced by populations whose livelihoods depend principally on natural resources. Given the increases in extreme weather events projected to affect the Southern Africa region, it is essential to assess how household and community-level adaptations have been helped or hindered by institutional structures and national policy instruments. In particular, there is a need to reflect on efforts related to the United Nations’ environmental conventions to ensure that policies support the maintenance of local adaptations and help retain the resilience of socio-economic and environmental systems. This paper examines three interlinked drivers of adaptation: climate change, desertification and drought, assessing the extent to which international and national policy supports local adaptive strategies in three countries in southern Africa. We show that while common ground exists between desertification and climate change adaptations at the policy level, they are insufficiently mainstreamed within broader development approaches. Similarly, there are some overlaps between policy-driven and autonomous local adaptations, but the mutually supportive links between them are poorly developed. Further efforts to integrate local adaptation strategies within policy could increase local resilience to environmental change, while also contributing to wider development goals. 相似文献
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This paper examines a community grazing project to rehabilitate degraded land in Swaziland. Using data from interviews, questionnaires, and focus groups, we show that the ways in which participatory, decentralized approaches to natural resource management play out at the local level are closely linked to national-level power structures. The successes and issues that emerge at different stages of the grazing project reflect local socioeconomic priorities and show how people manage their time and labor according to household livelihood goals. However, the project favored the interests of cattle owners who were already the more socially and politically powerful members of the community. We argue that for participatory natural resource management to be more meaningful to communities, projects should focus on local ecological priorities, rather than addressing the environmental concerns that are rooted within existing dominant power structures. This requires change to social and political relationships across levels and the building of new institutions. 相似文献
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