Perceived Stressors Of Climate Vulnerability Across Scales In The Savannah Zone Of Ghana: A Articipatory Approach
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Springer
Abstract
Smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa are
confronted with climatic and non-climatic stressors.
Research attention has focused on climatic stressors, such as
rainfall variability, with few empirical studies exploring
non-climatic stressors and how these interact with climatic
stressors at multiple scales to affect food security and
livelihoods. This focus on climatic factors restricts understanding
of the combinations of stressors that exacerbate the
vulnerability of farming households and hampers the
development of holistic climate change adaptation policies.
This study addresses this particular research gap by adopting
a multi-scale approach to understand how climatic and nonclimatic
stressors vary, and interact, across three spatial
scales (household, community and district levels) to influence
livelihood vulnerability of smallholder farming
households in the Savannah zone of northern Ghana. This
study across three case study villages utilises a series of
participatory tools including semi-structured interviews, key
informant interviews and focus group discussions. The
incidence, importance, severity and overall risk indices for
stressors are calculated at the household, community, and
district levels. Results show that climatic and non-climatic
stressors were perceived differently; yet, there were a number
of common stressors including lack of money, high cost
of farm inputs, erratic rainfall, cattle destruction of crops,
limited access to markets and lack of agricultural equipment
that crossed all scales. Results indicate that the gender of
respondents influenced the perception and severity assessment
of stressors on rural livelihoods at the community level.
Findings suggest a mismatch between local and district level
priorities that have implications for policy and development
of agricultural and related livelihoods in rural communities.
Ghana’s climate change adaptation policies need to take a
more holistic approach that integrates both climatic and nonclimatic
factors to ensure policy coherence between national
climate adaptation plans and District development plans.
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