Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions

The Honduras dry corridor, located in Central America’s Pacific region, has high natural climatevariability. Nearly half of the Honduran population depends on socio-economic activities linkedto agriculture, making climate-change adaptation crucial for the agricultural sector to ensure foodand nutrit...

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Autores principales: Gonzalez, Carlos Eduardo, Ayes-Rivera, Irma, Le-Coq, Jean-francois, Renteria-Ramos, Rafael, Castillo-Rivera, Johana Marcela
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163069
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author Gonzalez, Carlos Eduardo
Ayes-Rivera, Irma
Le-Coq, Jean-francois
Renteria-Ramos, Rafael
Castillo-Rivera, Johana Marcela
author_browse Ayes-Rivera, Irma
Castillo-Rivera, Johana Marcela
Gonzalez, Carlos Eduardo
Le-Coq, Jean-francois
Renteria-Ramos, Rafael
author_facet Gonzalez, Carlos Eduardo
Ayes-Rivera, Irma
Le-Coq, Jean-francois
Renteria-Ramos, Rafael
Castillo-Rivera, Johana Marcela
author_sort Gonzalez, Carlos Eduardo
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Honduras dry corridor, located in Central America’s Pacific region, has high natural climatevariability. Nearly half of the Honduran population depends on socio-economic activities linkedto agriculture, making climate-change adaptation crucial for the agricultural sector to ensure foodand nutrition security. This research analyzes how institutional structures function and interact asa network to investigate the spatial coherence and relevance of public- and private-sector in-terventions related to agriculture, climate change, and food security in 153 municipalities ofHonduras’ dry corridor. We employed a Social Network Analysis (SNA) approach to examinethese interactions over the territories, revealing two network patterns: the first favors a singlemunicipality, observed only in the Central District where Honduras’ capital is located; the secondis an egocentric network, favoring a single institution, observed in four cases, particularly inmunicipalities bordering with El Salvador and Guatemala. The SNA results reveal a spatialmisalignment, where only 9% of interventions linked to climate-change adaptation are conductedin the highly vulnerable, outlying zones located farthest from the capital. The study highlights theneed for improved coordination and strategic prioritization of interventions in the most vulner-able municipalities within the Honduras dry corridor, specifically improvement in collaborativeactions, use of resources, and setting strategic priorities in regions where future demand willrequire progressively mobilizing institutional capabilities. By identifying the current gaps andmisalignments in institutional actions, this research provides valuable insights for policymakersand stakeholders to enhance collaborative efforts to ensure that climate-change adaptationmeasures effectively target the most vulnerable areas.
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spelling CGSpace1630692025-11-11T17:39:53Z Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions Gonzalez, Carlos Eduardo Ayes-Rivera, Irma Le-Coq, Jean-francois Renteria-Ramos, Rafael Castillo-Rivera, Johana Marcela climate change cambio climático social network analysis análisis de redes sociales The Honduras dry corridor, located in Central America’s Pacific region, has high natural climatevariability. Nearly half of the Honduran population depends on socio-economic activities linkedto agriculture, making climate-change adaptation crucial for the agricultural sector to ensure foodand nutrition security. This research analyzes how institutional structures function and interact asa network to investigate the spatial coherence and relevance of public- and private-sector in-terventions related to agriculture, climate change, and food security in 153 municipalities ofHonduras’ dry corridor. We employed a Social Network Analysis (SNA) approach to examinethese interactions over the territories, revealing two network patterns: the first favors a singlemunicipality, observed only in the Central District where Honduras’ capital is located; the secondis an egocentric network, favoring a single institution, observed in four cases, particularly inmunicipalities bordering with El Salvador and Guatemala. The SNA results reveal a spatialmisalignment, where only 9% of interventions linked to climate-change adaptation are conductedin the highly vulnerable, outlying zones located farthest from the capital. The study highlights theneed for improved coordination and strategic prioritization of interventions in the most vulner-able municipalities within the Honduras dry corridor, specifically improvement in collaborativeactions, use of resources, and setting strategic priorities in regions where future demand willrequire progressively mobilizing institutional capabilities. By identifying the current gaps andmisalignments in institutional actions, this research provides valuable insights for policymakersand stakeholders to enhance collaborative efforts to ensure that climate-change adaptationmeasures effectively target the most vulnerable areas. 2024 2024-12-05T09:39:02Z 2024-12-05T09:39:02Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163069 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Gonzalez, C.E.; Ayes-Rivera, I.; Le-Coq, J.; Renteria-Ramos, R.; Castillo-Rivera, J.M. (2024) Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions. Climate Risk Management 46: 100664. ISSN: 2212-0963
spellingShingle climate change
cambio climático
social network analysis
análisis de redes sociales
Gonzalez, Carlos Eduardo
Ayes-Rivera, Irma
Le-Coq, Jean-francois
Renteria-Ramos, Rafael
Castillo-Rivera, Johana Marcela
Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions
title Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions
title_full Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions
title_fullStr Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions
title_full_unstemmed Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions
title_short Using social-network analysis to map institutional actors’ links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in Honduras’ dry corridor. Pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions
title_sort using social network analysis to map institutional actors links with vulnerable municipalities under climate change in honduras dry corridor pathways towards improved cooperation and territorial interventions
topic climate change
cambio climático
social network analysis
análisis de redes sociales
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163069
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