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“In common nature”: an ethnography of climate adaptation in the Lesotho Highlands
Authors:Andrea Palframan
Institution:School of Communication and Culture, Royal Roads University, 147-1 Charlesworth Road, Salt Spring Island, BC V8K 2J8, Canada
Abstract:In Lesotho, climate change adaptation funding is being managed and distributed by the same mechanisms which have traditionally operationalised humanitarian aid and international development assistance in the country. Lessons from the HIV/AIDS disaster, along with insights into the value of participatory approaches foregrounding the expertise of indigenous communities, must be heeded in order to ensure that those most affected by climate change have a say in how adaptation is carried out. This paper proposes that indigenous people have developed and actively maintained resilience strategies, encoded in social practices and farming techniques, designed out of long experience with climatic variability. Through case studies, indigenous resilience strategies are explored, with emphasis on the anarchistic, improvisational nature of traditional ecological knowledge. Future directions for policy-makers and practitioners dealing with climate change adaptation are suggested, namely the need to foreground indigenous knowledge and the experiences of frontlines experts in key policy arenas.
Keywords:climate change adaptation  Machobane  Lesotho  climate change  Black Jesus  indigenous ecological knowledge  panarchy  traditional ecological knowledge  Southern Africa  resilience  ecological resilience
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