Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands

This paper aligns current thinking on transboundary climate risk pathways with research on climate risk for pastoralists in African rangelands. Four pathways for transboundary transmission of climate risk were used as a framework for a narrative review of research literature on pastoralism and clima...

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Main Author: Baker, Derek
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135837
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author Baker, Derek
author_browse Baker, Derek
author_facet Baker, Derek
author_sort Baker, Derek
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper aligns current thinking on transboundary climate risk pathways with research on climate risk for pastoralists in African rangelands. Four pathways for transboundary transmission of climate risk were used as a framework for a narrative review of research literature on pastoralism and climate change. Selected cases were presented to highlight conclusions and recommendations. Pastoralism research reflects many aspects of risk management, particularly its relationship to mobility and the development of appropriate non-equilibrium models of pastoralist decision-making. However, the research contains limited probability-based analysis that aligns with formal risk pathways that link risk triggers to impact by way of interacting and cascading systemic risk. Impacts of climate change on pastoralists and rangeland functions have been extensively researched, but links to formal treatment of risk has been limited. Although international transboundary risk management has not been widely addressed with respect to rangelands, a number of related topics are suited to the risk analysis discussed. Research identified in the literature review primarily has adoption of technology and other interventions as its focus. Consistent results emerged from factors predisposing to adaptation behaviour and enhanced vulnerability of pastoralists. These were able to be linked to the five risk pathways identified but with limited formal treatment of risk. Research gaps were identified, primarily surrounding definitional and quantitative advances, and the opportunity to better inform policy and the design of interventions.
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spelling CGSpace1358372024-01-08T18:54:14Z Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands Baker, Derek rangelands climate change resilience pastoralism livestock This paper aligns current thinking on transboundary climate risk pathways with research on climate risk for pastoralists in African rangelands. Four pathways for transboundary transmission of climate risk were used as a framework for a narrative review of research literature on pastoralism and climate change. Selected cases were presented to highlight conclusions and recommendations. Pastoralism research reflects many aspects of risk management, particularly its relationship to mobility and the development of appropriate non-equilibrium models of pastoralist decision-making. However, the research contains limited probability-based analysis that aligns with formal risk pathways that link risk triggers to impact by way of interacting and cascading systemic risk. Impacts of climate change on pastoralists and rangeland functions have been extensively researched, but links to formal treatment of risk has been limited. Although international transboundary risk management has not been widely addressed with respect to rangelands, a number of related topics are suited to the risk analysis discussed. Research identified in the literature review primarily has adoption of technology and other interventions as its focus. Consistent results emerged from factors predisposing to adaptation behaviour and enhanced vulnerability of pastoralists. These were able to be linked to the five risk pathways identified but with limited formal treatment of risk. Research gaps were identified, primarily surrounding definitional and quantitative advances, and the opportunity to better inform policy and the design of interventions. 2023-12-19 2023-12-22T08:56:55Z 2023-12-22T08:56:55Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135837 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Baker, D. 2023. Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands. Policy Paper. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle rangelands
climate change
resilience
pastoralism
livestock
Baker, Derek
Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands
title Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands
title_full Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands
title_fullStr Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands
title_full_unstemmed Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands
title_short Climate change and transboundary risks in African rangelands
title_sort climate change and transboundary risks in african rangelands
topic rangelands
climate change
resilience
pastoralism
livestock
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135837
work_keys_str_mv AT bakerderek climatechangeandtransboundaryrisksinafricanrangelands