Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi

Data from rural Malawi are used to assess the role of forests in rural household adaptation to climate variability, and to examine implications for adaptation to future climate change. Although forests do not currently play a role in anticipatory adaptation by rural households, they do appear import...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Fisher, M., Chaudhury, M., McCusker, B.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20609
_version_ 1855542314152230912
author Fisher, M.
Chaudhury, M.
McCusker, B.
author_browse Chaudhury, M.
Fisher, M.
McCusker, B.
author_facet Fisher, M.
Chaudhury, M.
McCusker, B.
author_sort Fisher, M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Data from rural Malawi are used to assess the role of forests in rural household adaptation to climate variability, and to examine implications for adaptation to future climate change. Although forests do not currently play a role in anticipatory adaptation by rural households, they do appear important for reactive coping: providing food during shortages, and a source of cash for coping with weather-related crop failure. We find households most reliant on forests have low income per person, are located close to forest, and are headed by individuals who are older, more risk averse, and less educated than their cohorts
format Journal Article
id CGSpace20609
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2010
publishDateRange 2010
publishDateSort 2010
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace206092025-05-01T21:01:59Z Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi Fisher, M. Chaudhury, M. McCusker, B. climate change adaptation forests poverty Data from rural Malawi are used to assess the role of forests in rural household adaptation to climate variability, and to examine implications for adaptation to future climate change. Although forests do not currently play a role in anticipatory adaptation by rural households, they do appear important for reactive coping: providing food during shortages, and a source of cash for coping with weather-related crop failure. We find households most reliant on forests have low income per person, are located close to forest, and are headed by individuals who are older, more risk averse, and less educated than their cohorts 2010 2012-06-04T09:15:00Z 2012-06-04T09:15:00Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20609 en Fisher, M., Chaudhury, M., McCusker, B. 2010. Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi. World Development 38 (9) :1241-1250. ISSN: 0305-750X.
spellingShingle climate change
adaptation
forests
poverty
Fisher, M.
Chaudhury, M.
McCusker, B.
Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi
title Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi
title_full Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi
title_fullStr Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi
title_short Do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability: evidence from southern Malawi
title_sort do forests help rural households adapt to climate variability evidence from southern malawi
topic climate change
adaptation
forests
poverty
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20609
work_keys_str_mv AT fisherm doforestshelpruralhouseholdsadapttoclimatevariabilityevidencefromsouthernmalawi
AT chaudhurym doforestshelpruralhouseholdsadapttoclimatevariabilityevidencefromsouthernmalawi
AT mccuskerb doforestshelpruralhouseholdsadapttoclimatevariabilityevidencefromsouthernmalawi