2019
DOI: 10.3390/su11113100
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A Resilience Approach to Community-Scale Climate Adaptation

Abstract: Climate risk is expected to impact rural communities in West Africa in multiple ways. However, most current research addresses resilience and climate adaptation at either the national or the household scale; very little is known about community-scale interventions. We interviewed 934 community members in six communities in southeastern Nigeria about sources of climate risk and community-based actions for climate change adaptation. We found these communities contained multiple active and engaged groups that hav… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…One of our key ndings is that community resilience was not de ned in terms of transformative capacity by the experts. The understanding of community resilience in terms of transformative capacity as a concept is very important as it would give direction and provide a long-term structure for preparedness for communities to reach a sustainable future (Chung, 2017;Choko et al 2019). Society needs to move towards transformative capacity that involves robust re ective learning in the face of climate change (Otoara-Ha'apio et al 2018).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of our key ndings is that community resilience was not de ned in terms of transformative capacity by the experts. The understanding of community resilience in terms of transformative capacity as a concept is very important as it would give direction and provide a long-term structure for preparedness for communities to reach a sustainable future (Chung, 2017;Choko et al 2019). Society needs to move towards transformative capacity that involves robust re ective learning in the face of climate change (Otoara-Ha'apio et al 2018).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, the focus was on the capacity of individual dairy farms to persist or continue (i.e., maintain their identity) rather than assess the capacity for transformation (e.g., conversion from dairy to another land use or activity). Second, although the focus was at the farm scale, resilience is multiscalar, i.e., influenced by activities, actors, and actions at multiple scales (Walker et al 2004, Choko et al 2019. Finally, the focus was on the generic attributes of resilience or adaptive capacities, that enhance capability and capacity to respond to a range of stressors (Darnhofer et al 2010) as opposed to specified resilience, which might enable farm systems to respond to a specific threat (e.g., biosecurity incursion, or invasive pest such as clover root weevil; Carpenter et al 2012).…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While robustness can be covered quite well with secondary (geo-)data, the adaptiveness concept is mostly seen through a more qualitative lens and therefore challenging to manage in GIS-based analysis. Currently, this primary data can be assessed by volunteered geographic information (VGI), household surveys or interviews on topics like active climate adaptation strategies and masterplans [45,52]. On the other hand, if not integrated into existing surveys, such primary data collection may be very time and cost consuming.…”
Section: A Brief Review Of Understanding and Measuring Climate Resilimentioning
confidence: 99%