Title: Sustainable Livelihood approach for assessing community
1Sustainable Livelihood approach for assessing
communitys resilience to climate variability and
change /A case study from Sudan
Second International Conference on Climate
Impacts Assessment (SICCIA) June 28-July 2,
2004Grainau, Germany
- By
- Dr.Balgis Osman Elasha
- PI AIACC-AF 14 Project
- The Higher Council for Environment Natural
Resources - (HCENR) Sudan Stockholm Environment Institute
- Boston Center (SEI_B)
2Overview
- Why SL?
- Sustainable livelihood (SL)
- conceptual framework
- Basic definitions
- SL assessment
- Connection to adaptation
- SL and Environmental management measures
- An example from Sudan case studies conducted by
AIACC AF14 project.
3Why talk about Sustainable Livelihoods?
- Urgent adaptation needs of most vulnerable groups
- Existence of local coping strategies
- Hard-won lessons from other (non-climate)
disciplines (e.g. disaster mitigation, natural
resource management) - No-regrets options
- Lack of connection between community needs and
the policy process
4Basic Definitions
1.Livelihoods are the ways people make a living,
including how they distribute their productive
resources and the types of activities in which
they are engaged
- 2. Sustainable Livelihood
- The Brundtland Commission in 1987Intrdoduced SL
in terms of resources ownership, access to basic
needs and livelihood security - The IISD SL concerned with people's capacities
to generate maintain their means of living,
enhance their well- being, and that of future
generations. - The definition used by the UK's (DFID) A
livelihood comprises the capabilities, assets
activities required for a means of living .
5Basic definitions (Cont.)
- Resilience The capacity of a population to
adapt to environmental change such as extreme
climatic events and climate variability. - Adaptation is the ability to respond and adjust
to actual or potential impacts of changing
climate conditions in ways that moderates harm or
takes advantage of positive opportunities - Coping Strategies The short-term responses to
periodic stress, such as the use of famine foods
in drought. - Adaptive Strategies Strategies that require
people to reorganize their livelihood systems in
response to long-term changes and challenges. - Security The state of a community that can
provide safeguards for itself against social,
economic and environmental change
6Livelihood assessment
- Livelihood assessment is a way of looking at how
an individual, a household or a community behaves
under specific frame conditions. - How to understand livelihood systems?
- Through analysis of the impacts of coping and
adaptive strategies pursued by individuals and
communities as a response to external shocks and
stresses such as drought, civil strife and policy
failures
7Connection to Adaptation-How?
- The SL approach helps researchers to
- Focus on most vulnerable people
- Assess their vulnerabilities and strengths
- Tap existing knowledge ongoing efforts to
determine what works - Enable community-driven strategies and actions
ensure buy-in and longevity - Ultimately fortify against future
climate-related shocks
8What types of measures are we considering?
- SL/Environmental Management Measures (SL/EM)
like rangelands management, micro-catchments
restoration, soil management, etc., each of which
involves an array of specific measures (e.g.,
water harvesting, intercropping, livestock
diversification, windbreak construction,
reforestation
9Sudans Project
- Sudan AIACC Project Environmental Strategies for
Increasing Human Resilience in Sudan Lessons for
Climate Change Adaptation in North and East
African - Goal
- to prove that certain SL/EM measures increase the
resilience of communities to climate related
shocks - establish that these measures are effective and
should be considered as climate change adaptation
options that could be included in the planning of
national adaptation strategies. - to explore what enables them to be effective
i.e., what factors (participatory implementation,
local governance, macro-economic policies, etc.)
made it possible for the measures to be
successful
10How??
- Case Studies were employed to explore example
where local knowledge (e.g. traditional,
indigenous autonomous and informal) and/ or
external knowledge (formal, technical, directed)
has been applied within a target community in the
form of SL/NRM strategy to enable the community
to cope with or adapt to climaterelated stress.
Each Case study will also provide an assessment
of the local and national policies and conditions
that support or inhibit the measures
11Sources of information
- community groups,
- local, regional and international NGOs
- government agencies
- university departments and
- bilateral and multilateral development agencies,
12Pilot Case study
- Pilot case study
- To demonstrate the use of sustainable livelihood
framework for measuring the adaptive capacity of
local communities to climate change impacts the
following pilot case study was being conducted
under the umbrella of Sudan - AIACC AF14 project
- Community-Based Rangeland Rehabilitation for
Carbon Sequestration and Biodiversity.
13Objectives
- Twofold
- a) to sequester carbon through the implementation
of a sustainable, local-level natural resources
management system that prevents degradation,
rehabilitates or improves rangelands and - b) to reduce the risks of production failure in
a drought-prone area by providing alternatives
for sustainable production, so that out-migration
will decrease and population will stabilize
14Pilot CS Cont.
- Context Villages in the drought-prone area of
Western Sudan - Approach Community-Based Rangeland
Rehabilitation - Key Actors Villages within Gireigikh rural
council, pilot project - Funding UNDP/GEF
15What happened?
- A group of villages undertook a package of SL
measures, designed to regenerate and conserve the
degraded rangelands upon which their community
depends. - Community Organization
- Alternative Livestock and Livestock Management
- Rural Energy Management
- Replanting
- Stabilization of sand dunes
- Creation of windbreaks
- Micro-lending for supplemental
- income generation
16What are the outcome of the pilot project
(results from evaluation report)
- Community institutional structure created
- land-use master plans
- oversight and mobilization structures
- Rangeland rehabilitation measures implemented
- 5 km of sand dunes re-vegetated
- 195 km of windbreaks sheltering 130 farms
- Approximately 700 ha improved
- Livestock restocking
- Community development underway
- 2 revolving funds
- 5 pastoral womens groups focused on livestock
value-adding activities - 5 new irrigated gardens and wells
- Grain storage and seed credit program
17 Primary Assessment tool
- The primary tool employed in this assessment is
the sustainable livelihood impact assessment
methods for assessing project impacts on target
communities. - Objective To measure the impact of the project
intervention on the community coping/adaptive
capacity through the employment of a range of
data collection methods, a combination of
quantitative and qualitative indicators. - Communitys coping and adaptive capacities in the
face of climatic variability and extremes is used
as proxy for its level of coping and adaptive
capacity for future climate change
18 Methods used
- Use of DFID SL model and notion of the five
capitals (natural, physical, human, social and
financial - Within the SL framework the project employed the
Livelihood Assets Tracking (LAST) system to
measure changes in coping and adaptive capacity. - Use of word pictures by household to assess
their own vulnerability ,coping and adaptive
capacity to a climate-related impact. - Consultation with communities to develop
indicators of community resilience and construct
word pictures. - Use of stratified sampling methods to ensure
representation of a range of individuals and
household circumstances
19Sustainable livelihoods capital assets
- Natural capital
- Financial capital
- Physical capital
- Human capital
- Social capital
20Word pictures
- are descriptions of HH circumstances developed in
a participatory manner with the community in
question. - -Best case
- worse case snapshot.
21Development of indicators
- Two types of indicators were identified
- 1- Short-term indicators include
- - economic - e.g., crop productivity, livestock
productivity, local grain reserves - - ecological - e.g., biomass, soil water
balance and - Social - e.g., household wealth and dislocation.
- 2- Longer-term resilience indicators which are
more qualitative, aimed at capturing intangibles
such as the level of economic, ecological and
social stability within a system or community
22Preliminary list of generic indicators includes
- Land degradation (slowed or reversed)
- Condition of the vegetation cover (stabilized or
improved) - Soil and/or crop productivity (stabilized or
increased) - Water supply (stabilized or increased)
- Average income levels (stabilized or increased)
- Food stores (stabilized or increased)
- Out-migration (slowed, stabilized, or reversed)
23Outline of qualitative quantitative indicators
for the SL
Natural Assets Rangeland productivity Rangeland carrying capacity Plant species composition Water sources, quality and use Access to Natural resources by marginal community groups ( women, minority tribes, poor)
24Productivity of Natural Assets
- Average production per unit area of rangeland
- No. of animals per unit area of rangeland Yield
from main crops - Production of vegetables and fruits from women
gardens
25Physical assets
- Management of water wells Maintenance of water
pumps - Grain stores (capacity and accessibility)
- Grain mills (capacity and accessibility)
- Energy conservation techniques (improved stoves)
- Effectiveness of management systems applied to
pasture, water, livestock etcAvailability of
spare parts
26Financial Assets
- Income generating activities
- Income levels and stability
- Revolving funds /amount of credit granted to
individuals - Savings
- Accessibility of vulnerable groups to credit
(women, poor and Kawahla
27Human (household) Assets
- Ownership of assets
- Skilled labors
- Housing type
- Access of marginal groups to education, training
and extension services
28Social Assets indicators
- Organizational set-up (local village committees)
- Role of village committees in the decision making
process. - Membership to organizations Sharing of
responsibility
29Access to services
- Extension
- Health
- Education
- Training
- Veterinary services
30Policies and Institutions
- Government institutions and polices in relation
to - Taxes
- Market prices
- Incentives
- Land tenure
- Local level institutions
- NGOs
31Risks
- Changing government policies
- Out-migration by skilled people
- Encroachment by other tribes into the project
area - Pressures on rangelands by intruding nomads
32Development of criteria and indicators around the
capital assets
33Collecting data with WPs
- Approach to survey/interviews
- Use household circumstances during signal event
as basis of comparison compare with
circumstances during recent or hypothetical event - Use assessment sheets (one for each capital) as
basis of interview questions. For example - During the signal event (e.g., 1984 drought),
what level of food stores did you have (in
months)? Were they sufficient? If not, how
great was the deficit (in months)? - During the recent drought (post-SL activity) ,
what level of food stores did you have (in
months)? Were they sufficient? If not, how
great was the deficit (in months)? - On assessment sheet, record number associated
with interviewee responses to questions - From these responses, assemble word pictures for
each interview
34Resulting Word Pictures
A word picture of households access to natural
resources (natural capital)
Pre-SL Activity Post-SL Activity
Little or no land one or two month's food available from own land quality of land is poor, having red soil with low fertility land is located on a slope in such a position that rain water washes away the seed sown and the top soil and hence reduces its fertility use of traditional seeds some have given away land as collateral no source of irrigation no land for growing fodder for livestock owns one or two livestock no milk produced low access to forest produce More of black fertile soil more land grows one's own fodder on one's own land fertile land with more moisture retention power more produce from land grows and sells cash crops grows vegetables grows high yielding variety seeds lends seeds to others irrigation facilities available round the year land is near the forest access to forest produce some have government permit to grow opium has many fruit trees availability of home grown food throughout the year many livestock, high returns from livestock
Adapted from Bond and Mukherjee (2002)
35Preparation of a livelihood assets status
framework matrixCASE STUDY ASSESSMENT SHEET
Natural Capital
Best case Moderate Worst case Indicators Criteria
Excellent gt90 rehabilitated 90 Degraded ) Area of improved/ rehabilitated rangelands Productivity Rangelands productivity
gt20 AU/ha/year 15 to 20 AU/ha/year 10 to 15 AU/ha/year 5-10 AU/ha/year AU/ha/year Carrying capacity
36ProductivityNatural capital
Sample of the results in graph form
37Financial Capital
38Human Capital
39Physical Capital
40Social Capital
41Sustainability Natural Capital
42Financial Capital
43Human Capital
44 Physical Capital
45Social Capital
46Equity
- Chances of marginalized groups (women, poor,
kawahla tribe) increased significantly
particularly with regard to - access to grazing land
- access to credit
- access to social services
- access to training
- participation in decision-making
47Overall change in the resilience of the five
capitals
48Policies and institutions
- The micro-policies in the project area were
influenced by the following bodies - (a) Committees- Sustainability of activities
- (b) NGOs (SECS CARE International)-Awareness
- (C) Traditional leaders The Traditional
administration played major role in natural
resources management for very long period in
different parts of Sudan particularly in
traditional areas (Social security , Nafir etc..)
49Conclusions
- Tapping the SL Approach What can it do for
adaptation? - Using this as a tool in adaptation assessment can
help to - Enable national planning processes to effectively
consider the most vulnerable groups articulate
unique local vulnerabilities - Identify locally-relevant resilience-building
options - Build understanding of micro- and macro-level
enabling conditions for adaptation - Build local adaptation awareness and engage local
NGOs (potential adaptation project implementers
50Thanks for your patience