Local institutions and adaptive capacity to climate change/variability in the northern savannah of Ghana
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Ghana faces several challenges from climate change/variability. Local institutions provide the framework within which
idiosyncratic capacities of local people can be exercised in their adaptation to climate change. This paper examines the
importance of formal and informal institutions for building adaptive capacity. Both formal and informal institutions play
different but complementary roles in enabling or preventing the ability to cope, benefit and adapt to climate change.
Responses to climate change in northern Ghana are dependent on the nature of institutions that grant people access to
resources; define their exposure to climate threats; and dictate the rate of recovery from debilitating disasters. The
effectiveness of institutions is constrained by their limited spatial and temporal reach, limited financial and human
resources, and sometimes the faulty strategy designs and implementation procedures. Traditional institutions may
malfunction when modern interpretations of tradition are in the interests of custodians of tradition rather than the ordinary
poor. We emphasize the need for synergy between institutions that support adaptive capacities of the poor, and request
corrective measures to institutions that lead to maladaptation.
Description
Journal Article
Citation
Joseph Awetori Yaro, Joseph Teye & Simon Bawakyillenuo (2015) Local institutions and adaptive capacity to climate change/variability in the northern savannah of Ghana, Climate and Development, 7:3, 235-245, DOI: 10.1080/17565529.2014.951018