Climate change, culture and health: Indigenous resilience, a study from Turkana County, Kenya.

IF 1.3 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Jamba-Journal of Disaster Risk Studies Pub Date : 2024-08-13 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.4102/jamba.v16i1.1647
Christian Muragijimana, Theoneste Ntakirutimana, Sohaib Khan
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Abstract

Climate change and recurring droughts-induced effects on health are becoming an increasingly main global, cultural and public health burden. The heaviest health burden leans on the fragile socio-economic systems among the remote agro-pastoral communities, living in the arid and semi-arid lands (ASALs). Previous studies underlined the indispensability of indigenous knowledge (IK) for resilience-driven disaster risk reduction (DRR) strategies. However, more attention has been drawn towards the necessity of IK in weather forecasts, with less emphasis on its indispensability to alleviate health burden associated with climate change and droughts. We explored the contextual application of IK-based adaptation and related complementarity aspects for culturally relevant and sustainable DRR strategies for the nomadic agro-pastoral communities in Lopur, Turkana, Kenya. Relying on a descriptive qualitative study in phenomenological approach, purposive sampling and focus group discussions with key community influencers, a thematic analysis was conducted for an in-depth understanding and interpretation of data patterns. The contextualised insights revealed the growing vulnerability as a result of the disconnect between modern interventions, IK and the newly adopted environmental degrading coping tactics. Policy-wise, the findings portrayed the necessity for cultural integration and incorporation of indigenous knowledge-based strategies and systems for reinforced information dissemination, accessibility and acceptability for droughts preparedness and response.

Contribution: This study underlined the existing room for scientific exploration of the already existing indigenous knowledge-based solutions for food and water insecurity, towards improved resilience for the vulnerable communities experiencing inequitable climate change calamities in the ASALs.

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气候变化、文化与健康:肯尼亚图尔卡纳县的本土复原力研究。
气候变化和经常性干旱对健康造成的影响正日益成为全球、文化和公共卫生的主要负担。生活在干旱和半干旱地区(ASALs)的偏远农牧社区脆弱的社会经济体系承受着最沉重的健康负担。以往的研究强调,本土知识(IK)对于以抗灾能力为导向的减少灾害风险(DRR)战略是不可或缺的。然而,人们更多关注的是本土知识在天气预报中的必要性,而较少强调本土知识在减轻气候变化和干旱带来的健康负担方面的不可或缺性。我们探讨了肯尼亚图尔卡纳州洛普尔游牧农牧社区基于知识库的适应性和相关互补性在文化相关性和可持续减灾战略中的应用。通过现象学方法进行描述性定性研究、有目的的抽样以及与主要社区影响者进行焦点小组讨论,进行了专题分析,以深入理解和解释数据模式。对背景的深入了解揭示了现代干预措施、知识库和新采用的环境退化应对策略之间的脱节所导致的日益严重的脆弱性。在政策方面,研究结果表明有必要进行文化融合,并纳入以本土知识为基础的战略和系统,以加强干旱防备和应对方面的信息传播、可获取性和可接受性:本研究强调了对现有的基于本土知识的粮食和水不安全解决方案进行科学探索的空间,以提高亚高沙干旱地区遭受不公平气候变化灾害的弱势社区的抗灾能力。
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来源期刊
Jamba-Journal of Disaster Risk Studies
Jamba-Journal of Disaster Risk Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
7.10%
发文量
37
审稿时长
37 weeks
期刊最新文献
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