Impacts of Climate Change and Variability on Pastoralist Women in Sub Saharan Africa

Impacts of Climate Change and Variability on Pastoralist Women in Sub Saharan Africa
Author: Melese Getu,Munyae M. Mulinge
Publsiher: African Books Collective
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2013
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9789970252367

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The term climate change is used to denote any significant but extended change in the measures of climate. The changes could be due to natural variability or as a result of human activities, such as the burning of fossil fuels to produce energy, deforestation, industrial processes, and some agricultural practices. Such activities release large amounts of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere that hang like a blanket around the earth, thus trapping energy in the atmosphere and causing it to warm up. This results increasingly in climate variability, which is characterised by extreme seasonal, annual, temporal and non-spatial variability in temperature, vagaries of precipitation (rainfall patterns and amounts) and/or wind patterns occurring over a prolonged period of time. The last decade (2001 - 2010) has been the warmest on record; with the average temperatures reaching 0.46∞C, above the 1961 - 1990 mean, and 0.21∞C warmer than the 1991 - 2000 period. It has been proved that the African continent is warming up faster, all year-round, than the global avera≥ a trend that is likely to continue. By the year 2100, it is predicted that temperature changes will fall into ranges of about 1.4∞C to nearly 5.8∞C increase in mean surface temperature compared to 1990, and the mean sea level will rise between 10cm to 90 cm (AMCEN 2011). The interior of semiarid margins of the Sahara and central southern Africa will be the most affected by such warming (AMCEN 2011). To tackle the phenomenon of climate change effectively, human societies have put in place a combination of mitigation and adaptation mechanisms and strategies. Whereas mitigation aims at avoiding or lessening the impacts of the unmanageable, the goal of adaptation is to manage the unavoidable. That men and women are affected differently by climate change suggests that they also differ in terms of the adaptation mechanisms they employ. Despite the existence of gender-based differences in the effects of climate change and in adaptation and coping strategies, studies on the gender differential impacts of climate change and variability on women in general and pastoralist women in particular in sub-Saharan Africa are limited. This volume offers insights and knowledge that pastoralist women developed on climate change adaptation through their experiences in their households and communities and thereby tries to narrow this gap.

Pastoralism and Climate Change in East Africa

Pastoralism and Climate Change in East Africa
Author: Zebhe Yanda,Gasper Mung'ong'o
Publsiher: African Books Collective
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2016-12-29
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9789987083923

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Pastoralism and Climate Change in East Africa provides systematic and robust empirical investigations on the impact of climate change on pastoral production systems, as well as participating in the ongoing debate over the efficacy of traditional pastoralism. This book is an initial product of the Project Building Knowledge to Support Climate Change Adaptation for Pastoralist Communities in East Africa implemented by the Centre for Climate Change Studies of the University of Dar es Salaam with support from the Open Society Initiative for Eastern Africa. Traditional pastoralism has proved to be a resilient and unique system of adaptations in a dynamic process of unpredictable climatic variability and continuous human interactions with the natural environment in dryland ecosystems. Pastoral adaptations and climate-induced innovative coping mechanisms have strategically been embedded in the indigenous social structures and resource management value systems. Pastoral livelihoods have, nevertheless, become increasingly vulnerable to climate change impacts as a result of prolonged marginalization and harmful external interventions. The negative effect of global climate change has been an added dimension to the already prevailing crisis in the pastoral livelihood system, which is substantially driven by non-climatic factors of internal and external pressures of change such as population growth, bad governance and shrinking rangelands lost to competing activities.

Beyond Agricultural Impacts

Beyond Agricultural Impacts
Author: Nkulumo Zinyengere,Theobald Frank Theodory,Million Gebreyes,Chinwe Ifejika Speranza
Publsiher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2017-06-20
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9780128126257

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Beyond Agricultural Impacts: Multiple Perspectives on Climate Change in Africa presents the theories and methods commonly applied in climate change assessment from various locations in Africa, also inspiring further research that addresses the broad spectrum of societal impacts that result from altered climate status. Using case studies, the work provides insights into climate change impacts and adaptation with a lens on vulnerable groups in African agriculture, e.g. smallholder crop and livestock farmers, women and youth. The book also highlights areas of further interest in climate change and agriculture research in Africa, all done through views from multiple disciplines in the agriculture and climate change nexus. Presents themes, theories, tools and methods for mitigating the impact of climate change in African agriculture Highlights the research gaps and opportunities in research on climate change and agriculture Uses examples and cases to provide insights into shaping future research Provides insights from African countries, including Lesotho, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Uganda, Ghana and Cameroon

Indigenous Knowledge and Climate Governance

Indigenous Knowledge and Climate Governance
Author: Eromose E. Ebhuoma,Llewellyn Leonard
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2022-06-04
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9783030994112

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This book investigates indigenous knowledge systems (IKS) in sub-Saharan Africa, thereby highlighting its role in facilitating adaptation to climate variability and change, and also demystifying the challenges that prevent it from being integrated with scientific knowledge in climate governance schemes. Indigenous people and their priceless knowledge rarely feature when decision-makers prepare for future climate change. This book showcases how Indigenous knowledge facilitates adaptation to climate change, including how collaborations with scientific knowledge have cascaded into building people’s resilience to climatic risks. This book also pays delicate attention to the factors fueling epistemic injustice towards Indigenous knowledge, which hampers it from featuring in climate governance schemes across sub-Saharan Africa. The key insights shared in this book illuminate the issues that contribute meaningfully towards the actualisation of the UN SDG 13 and promote mechanisms for raising capacity for effective climate change-related planning and management in sub-Saharan Africa.

Climate change land water and food security Perspectives from sub saharan africa

Climate change  land  water and food security  Perspectives from sub saharan africa
Author: Mulala Danny Simatele,Felix Kwabena Donkor,Henry Bikwibili Tantoh
Publsiher: Frontiers Media SA
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2023-06-22
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9782832524954

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Survival of the Fittest Pastoralism and climate change in East Africa

Survival of the Fittest  Pastoralism and climate change in East Africa
Author: Mary Kirkbride
Publsiher: Oxfam
Total Pages: 47
Release: 2008
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9781848146327

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Supporting the vulnerable Increasing adaptive capacities of agropastoralists to climate change in West and southern Africa using a transdisciplinary research approach

Supporting the vulnerable  Increasing adaptive capacities of agropastoralists to climate change in West and southern Africa using a transdisciplinary research approach
Author: Steeg, J. van de, Herrero, M., Notenbaert, A.
Publsiher: ILRI (aka ILCA and ILRAD)
Total Pages: 65
Release: 2013-12-31
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9789291463237

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Climate Change and Food Security

Climate Change and Food Security
Author: Elizabeth Thomas Hope
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2016-12-08
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781315469713

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Global climatic change has resulted in new and unpredictable patterns of precipitation and temperature, the increased frequency of extreme weather events and rising sea levels. These changes impact all four aspects of food security – availability, accessibility, stability of supply and appropriate nourishment – as well as the entire food system – food production, marketing, processing, distribution and prices. Climate Change and Food Security focuses on the challenge to food security posed by a changing climate. The book brings together many of the critical global concerns of climate change and food security through local cases based on empirical studies undertaken in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Caribbean. Focusing on risk reduction and the complex nature of vulnerability to climate change, the book includes chapters on the responsiveness of farmers based on traditional knowledge, as well as the critical phenomenon of food insecurity in the urban setting. Other chapters are devoted to efforts made to strengthen resilience through long-term development, with interventions at the regional and national levels of scale. It also examines cross-cutting themes that underlie the strategies employed to achieve food security, including equity, gender, livelihoods and governance. This edited volume will be of great interest to students and scholars of climate change, food security, environmental management and sustainable development.