Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia
Resilience has traditionally been understood as a function of observable and measurable characteristics. More recently, discussions of household resilience have emphasized the need to pay attention to resilience as a set of capacities. What this paper aims to develop is a framework and a methodology...
| Autores principales: | , , , , , , |
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| Formato: | Informe técnico |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés |
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CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security
2022
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| Acceso en línea: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128277 |
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| author | Edralin, Monica Barbon, Wilson John Cabriole, Marie Aislinn Thant, Phyu Sin Phen, Bunthoeun Monville-Oro, Emilita Gonsalves, Julian Francis |
| author_browse | Barbon, Wilson John Cabriole, Marie Aislinn Edralin, Monica Gonsalves, Julian Francis Monville-Oro, Emilita Phen, Bunthoeun Thant, Phyu Sin |
| author_facet | Edralin, Monica Barbon, Wilson John Cabriole, Marie Aislinn Thant, Phyu Sin Phen, Bunthoeun Monville-Oro, Emilita Gonsalves, Julian Francis |
| author_sort | Edralin, Monica |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | Resilience has traditionally been understood as a function of observable and measurable characteristics. More recently, discussions of household resilience have emphasized the need to pay attention to resilience as a set of capacities. What this paper aims to develop is a framework and a methodology for accounting both tangible and intangible characteristics found in the household, that is, measuring assets, social capital, as well as inherent personal characteristics or traits of the household decision-maker that may or may not predispose a household to be resilient. A framework from Béné (2014) was used as an analytical framework for both quantitative and qualitative studies. The quantitative study consists of surveying households (n=623) across six climate-smart villages (CSVs) in Myanmar, Cambodia, and the Philippines. Three dimensions of household resilience were identified: resilience capacities, subjective resilience, and intra-household gender relations. Each dimension of resilience is envisioned to complement the other in order to better understand household level resilience. The dimensions are consolidated in order to construct a Household Resilience Score (HRS). The study confirms that there are strong links found among relationships between the use of CSA initiatives and resilience capacities. The study also revealed that subjective resilience is equally important in understanding household resilience. There is a strong relationship in how households think they can recover from a shock in relation to specific psychosocial traits such as perseverance, self-efficacy, and conscientiousness. |
| format | Informe técnico |
| id | CGSpace128277 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 2022 |
| publishDateRange | 2022 |
| publishDateSort | 2022 |
| publisher | CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security |
| publisherStr | CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace1282772024-01-17T12:58:34Z Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia Edralin, Monica Barbon, Wilson John Cabriole, Marie Aislinn Thant, Phyu Sin Phen, Bunthoeun Monville-Oro, Emilita Gonsalves, Julian Francis climate-smart agriculture food security agriculture Resilience has traditionally been understood as a function of observable and measurable characteristics. More recently, discussions of household resilience have emphasized the need to pay attention to resilience as a set of capacities. What this paper aims to develop is a framework and a methodology for accounting both tangible and intangible characteristics found in the household, that is, measuring assets, social capital, as well as inherent personal characteristics or traits of the household decision-maker that may or may not predispose a household to be resilient. A framework from Béné (2014) was used as an analytical framework for both quantitative and qualitative studies. The quantitative study consists of surveying households (n=623) across six climate-smart villages (CSVs) in Myanmar, Cambodia, and the Philippines. Three dimensions of household resilience were identified: resilience capacities, subjective resilience, and intra-household gender relations. Each dimension of resilience is envisioned to complement the other in order to better understand household level resilience. The dimensions are consolidated in order to construct a Household Resilience Score (HRS). The study confirms that there are strong links found among relationships between the use of CSA initiatives and resilience capacities. The study also revealed that subjective resilience is equally important in understanding household resilience. There is a strong relationship in how households think they can recover from a shock in relation to specific psychosocial traits such as perseverance, self-efficacy, and conscientiousness. 2022-11 2023-01-26T14:07:12Z 2023-01-26T14:07:12Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128277 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security Edralin M, Barbon WJ, Cabriole MA, Thant PS, Phen B, Monville-Oro E, Gonsalves J. 2022. Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia. CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS). |
| spellingShingle | climate-smart agriculture food security agriculture Edralin, Monica Barbon, Wilson John Cabriole, Marie Aislinn Thant, Phyu Sin Phen, Bunthoeun Monville-Oro, Emilita Gonsalves, Julian Francis Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia |
| title | Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia |
| title_full | Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia |
| title_fullStr | Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia |
| title_full_unstemmed | Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia |
| title_short | Measuring Household Resilience in the Climate Smart Villages in the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia |
| title_sort | measuring household resilience in the climate smart villages in the philippines myanmar and cambodia |
| topic | climate-smart agriculture food security agriculture |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128277 |
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