A field methodology to advance social equity and transformative adaptation to climate change in smallholder communities

Global climate policies recognize the urgent need to address the inequitable impacts of climate change on smallholder agricultural communities, but there is limited understanding of how to accomplish this in practice. We contribute to closing this gap through the design of a participatory qualitativ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current research in environmental sustainability 2024, Vol.8, p.100272, Article 100272
Hauptverfasser: Petesch, Patti, Fisher, Eleanor, Almeida, Olivia Ebenstål, Hellin, Jon, Bullock, Renee
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Global climate policies recognize the urgent need to address the inequitable impacts of climate change on smallholder agricultural communities, but there is limited understanding of how to accomplish this in practice. We contribute to closing this gap through the design of a participatory qualitative methodology intended to nurture locally-led “transformative adaptation pathways” that strengthen social equity and sustainability. Our conceptual framework draws upon theories of social equity and justice rooted in participatory parity—values and norms that encourage people to interact with one another as equals and synergistically nurture recognitional, distributional, representational and intergenerational equities. Recognizing that social equity is enhanced when poor and vulnerable people gain decision-making power that expands their access to resources and opportunities, we question how people understand and experience social equity and its relationship to their capacity to adapt. We also ask how norms about gender, generation, and socio-economic status shape people's understandings and experiences of social equity and adaptation. To address these questions, we illustrate the methodological approach with evidence gathered from pilot tests conducted in smallholder communities of Kenya and Philippines. Our findings show how understandings of fairness provide a basis for learning, eliciting comparative and contextualized findings that can inform community-based adaptation. Overall, we demonstrate that in the face of social processes that typically fuel inequities, participatory tools and learning tactics can serve to empower low-income women and men to identify, contribute to, and monitor actions that nurture their community's progress towards strong and equitable climate adaptation capacity. [Display omitted] •Participatory qualitative methodology nurtures equitable climate adaptation.•Generates community learning on social equity and climate adaptation.•Builds comparative insights through multi-sited and semi-structured data collection.•Elicits knowledge on how norms shape social equity and climate adaptation.•Spotlights opportunities for collaborative action learning on transformative adaptation.
ISSN:2666-0490
2666-0490
DOI:10.1016/j.crsust.2024.100272