Risk perception and decision-making: do farmers consider risks from climate change?

Small-scale farmers are highly threatened by climate change. Experts often base their interventions to support farmers to adapt to climate change on their own perception of farmers’ livelihood risks. However, if differences in risk perception between farmers and experts exist, these interventions mi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eitzinger, Anton, Binder, Claudia R., Meyer, Markus A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98216
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author Eitzinger, Anton
Binder, Claudia R.
Meyer, Markus A.
author_browse Binder, Claudia R.
Eitzinger, Anton
Meyer, Markus A.
author_facet Eitzinger, Anton
Binder, Claudia R.
Meyer, Markus A.
author_sort Eitzinger, Anton
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Small-scale farmers are highly threatened by climate change. Experts often base their interventions to support farmers to adapt to climate change on their own perception of farmers’ livelihood risks. However, if differences in risk perception between farmers and experts exist, these interventions might fail. Thus, for effective design and implementation of adaptation strategies for farmers, it is necessary to understand farmers’ perception and how it influences their decision-making. We analyze farmers’ and experts’ systemic view on climate change threats in relation to other agricultural livelihood risks and assess the differences between their perceptions. For Cauca, Colombia, we found that experts and farmers perceived climate-related and other livelihood risks differently. While farmers’ perceived risks were a failure in crop production and lack of access to health and educational services, experts, in contrast, perceived insecurity and the unreliable weather to be the highest risks for farmers. On barriers that prevent farmers from taking action against risks, experts perceived both external factors such as the national policy and internal factors such as the adaptive capacity of farmers to be the main barriers. Farmers ranked the lack of information, especially about weather and climate, as their main barrier to adapt. Effective policies aiming at climate change adaptation need to relate climate change risks to other production risks as farmers often perceive climate change in the context of other risks. Policymakers in climate change need to consider differences in risk perception.
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spelling CGSpace982162025-03-13T09:45:26Z Risk perception and decision-making: do farmers consider risks from climate change? Eitzinger, Anton Binder, Claudia R. Meyer, Markus A. climate change cambio climático agriculture farmers livelihoods climate change adaptation Small-scale farmers are highly threatened by climate change. Experts often base their interventions to support farmers to adapt to climate change on their own perception of farmers’ livelihood risks. However, if differences in risk perception between farmers and experts exist, these interventions might fail. Thus, for effective design and implementation of adaptation strategies for farmers, it is necessary to understand farmers’ perception and how it influences their decision-making. We analyze farmers’ and experts’ systemic view on climate change threats in relation to other agricultural livelihood risks and assess the differences between their perceptions. For Cauca, Colombia, we found that experts and farmers perceived climate-related and other livelihood risks differently. While farmers’ perceived risks were a failure in crop production and lack of access to health and educational services, experts, in contrast, perceived insecurity and the unreliable weather to be the highest risks for farmers. On barriers that prevent farmers from taking action against risks, experts perceived both external factors such as the national policy and internal factors such as the adaptive capacity of farmers to be the main barriers. Farmers ranked the lack of information, especially about weather and climate, as their main barrier to adapt. Effective policies aiming at climate change adaptation need to relate climate change risks to other production risks as farmers often perceive climate change in the context of other risks. Policymakers in climate change need to consider differences in risk perception. 2018-12 2018-11-14T13:17:20Z 2018-11-14T13:17:20Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98216 en Open Access Springer Eitzinger, Anton; Binder, Claudia R & Meyer, Markus A. (2018). Risk perception and decision-making : do farmers consider risks from climate change ? Climatic Change, 1–18 p.
spellingShingle climate change
cambio climático
agriculture
farmers
livelihoods
climate change adaptation
Eitzinger, Anton
Binder, Claudia R.
Meyer, Markus A.
Risk perception and decision-making: do farmers consider risks from climate change?
title Risk perception and decision-making: do farmers consider risks from climate change?
title_full Risk perception and decision-making: do farmers consider risks from climate change?
title_fullStr Risk perception and decision-making: do farmers consider risks from climate change?
title_full_unstemmed Risk perception and decision-making: do farmers consider risks from climate change?
title_short Risk perception and decision-making: do farmers consider risks from climate change?
title_sort risk perception and decision making do farmers consider risks from climate change
topic climate change
cambio climático
agriculture
farmers
livelihoods
climate change adaptation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98216
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