Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe

This study is poised to explore the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience. The study was conducted against the backdrop that the frequency and intensity of climate change and its associated extreme weather events and hazards necessitate resilience building f...

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Main Author: Nyahunda, L.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2025
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/173331
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author Nyahunda, L.
author_browse Nyahunda, L.
author_facet Nyahunda, L.
author_sort Nyahunda, L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study is poised to explore the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience. The study was conducted against the backdrop that the frequency and intensity of climate change and its associated extreme weather events and hazards necessitate resilience building for at-risk communities to protect the lives, livelihoods, economic, social and environmental assets. As rural communities endeavour to build resilience against climate change and disasters, they are confronted by a plethora of barriers that make disaster and climate resilience aspirations untenable. The study adopted the qualitative research approach within the exploratory research design. Community members, disaster risk reduction and climate change practitioners and traditional leaders were purposively sampled to share their insights on the subject matter. A total of 32 respondents participated in the study. Focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews were used as data collection methods. Soaring poverty levels, weak and uncoordinated local institutions, recurring exposure to natural hazards and extreme weather events, limited community participation and inequalities emerged as barriers to disaster and climate resilience building in Zimbabwe's rural communities. The study provides nuanced empirical perspectives on barriers to disaster and climate resilience building to propose ways of dealing with them. The study sets pathways for policy reform at national and subnational levels and paradigm shifts where collective or individual efforts, changed ways of thinking, reprioritisation of resources, institutional support and political will can assist at-risk communities overcome the identified barriers.
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spelling CGSpace1733312025-10-26T13:02:35Z Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe Nyahunda, L. This study is poised to explore the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience. The study was conducted against the backdrop that the frequency and intensity of climate change and its associated extreme weather events and hazards necessitate resilience building for at-risk communities to protect the lives, livelihoods, economic, social and environmental assets. As rural communities endeavour to build resilience against climate change and disasters, they are confronted by a plethora of barriers that make disaster and climate resilience aspirations untenable. The study adopted the qualitative research approach within the exploratory research design. Community members, disaster risk reduction and climate change practitioners and traditional leaders were purposively sampled to share their insights on the subject matter. A total of 32 respondents participated in the study. Focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews were used as data collection methods. Soaring poverty levels, weak and uncoordinated local institutions, recurring exposure to natural hazards and extreme weather events, limited community participation and inequalities emerged as barriers to disaster and climate resilience building in Zimbabwe's rural communities. The study provides nuanced empirical perspectives on barriers to disaster and climate resilience building to propose ways of dealing with them. The study sets pathways for policy reform at national and subnational levels and paradigm shifts where collective or individual efforts, changed ways of thinking, reprioritisation of resources, institutional support and political will can assist at-risk communities overcome the identified barriers. 2025-03 2025-02-21T09:10:10Z 2025-02-21T09:10:10Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/173331 en Open Access Nyahunda, L. 2025. Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe. Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management, 33(1):e70014. [doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-5973.70014]
spellingShingle Nyahunda, L.
Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe
title Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe
title_full Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe
title_short Diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in Zimbabwe
title_sort diagnosing the barriers faced by rural communities in building disaster and climate resilience in zimbabwe
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/173331
work_keys_str_mv AT nyahundal diagnosingthebarriersfacedbyruralcommunitiesinbuildingdisasterandclimateresilienceinzimbabwe