Adaptive lives. Navigating the global food crisis in a changing climate

Jonas Østergaard Nielsen, Henrik Erdman Vigh

    21 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Human adaptation to climate change is gaining increasing academic as well as political attention. Understanding how and what people around the world adapt to is, however, difficult. Climate change is often, if not always, only one of a multiplicity of exposures perforating local communities. In Biidi 2, a small Sahelian village in northern Burkina Faso, climate variability have had a great influence on inhabitants' lives since the major droughts of the early 1970s and 1980s. Tracing the intertwinement of drought, diminishing agricultural production and the need to buy food, this article explores how villagers attempt to attract development projects and negotiate with political parties in order to negate the impact of the global food crisis on their livelihoods. In doing so the article attempts to show how adaptation to climate variability is related to multiple, intersecting processes, and in this specific case is a matter of navigating changing socioeconomic factors. Using recent theory from social anthropology, adaptation is explored as a matter of social navigation. It is suggested that this theoretical approach might help nuance and elucidate how, and to what, local people around the world adapt.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalGlobal Environmental Change
    Volume22
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)659-669
    Number of pages111
    ISSN0959-3780
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Aug 2012

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