Vulnerability to Weather Disasters: the Choice of Coping Strategies in Rural Uganda

When a natural disaster hits, the affected households try to cope with its impacts. A variety of coping strategies, from reducing current consumption to disposing of productive assets, may be employed. The latter strategies are especially worrisome because they may reduce the capacity of the househo...

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Main Authors: Jennifer F. Helgeson, Simon Dietz, Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2013-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss2/art2/
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spelling doaj-225a0e27cbcd4491b6aa7b32952b8ad12020-11-25T00:00:26ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872013-06-01182210.5751/ES-05390-1802025390Vulnerability to Weather Disasters: the Choice of Coping Strategies in Rural UgandaJennifer F. Helgeson0Simon Dietz1Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler2London School of Economics and Political Science, Department of Geography and EnvironmentLondon School of Economics and Political Science, Department of Geography and EnvironmentIIASA - International Institute for Applied Systems AnalysisWhen a natural disaster hits, the affected households try to cope with its impacts. A variety of coping strategies, from reducing current consumption to disposing of productive assets, may be employed. The latter strategies are especially worrisome because they may reduce the capacity of the household to generate income in the future, possibly leading to chronic poverty. We used the results of a household survey in rural Uganda to ask, first, what coping strategies would tend to be employed in the event of a weather disaster, second, given that multiple strategies can be chosen, in what combinations would they tend to be employed, and, third, given that asset-liquidation strategies can be particularly harmful for the future income prospects of households, what determines their uptake? Our survey is one of the largest of its kind, containing over 3000 observations garnered by local workers using smartphone technology. We found that in this rural sample, by far, the most frequently reported choice would be to sell livestock. This is rather striking because asset-based theories would predict more reliance on strategies like eating and spending less today, which avoid disposal of productive assets. It may well be that livestock is held as a form of liquid savings to, among other things, help bounce back from a weather disaster. Although, we did find that other strategies that might undermine future prospects were avoided, notably selling land or the home and disrupting the children's education. Our econometric analysis revealed a fairly rich set of determinants of different subsets of coping strategies. Perhaps most notably, households with a more educated head are much less likely to choose coping strategies involving taking their own children out of education.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss2/art2/coping strategiescovariate riskeducationextreme weatherpoverty trapsmall-scale farmingUgandavulnerability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer F. Helgeson
Simon Dietz
Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler
spellingShingle Jennifer F. Helgeson
Simon Dietz
Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler
Vulnerability to Weather Disasters: the Choice of Coping Strategies in Rural Uganda
Ecology and Society
coping strategies
covariate risk
education
extreme weather
poverty trap
small-scale farming
Uganda
vulnerability
author_facet Jennifer F. Helgeson
Simon Dietz
Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler
author_sort Jennifer F. Helgeson
title Vulnerability to Weather Disasters: the Choice of Coping Strategies in Rural Uganda
title_short Vulnerability to Weather Disasters: the Choice of Coping Strategies in Rural Uganda
title_full Vulnerability to Weather Disasters: the Choice of Coping Strategies in Rural Uganda
title_fullStr Vulnerability to Weather Disasters: the Choice of Coping Strategies in Rural Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Vulnerability to Weather Disasters: the Choice of Coping Strategies in Rural Uganda
title_sort vulnerability to weather disasters: the choice of coping strategies in rural uganda
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2013-06-01
description When a natural disaster hits, the affected households try to cope with its impacts. A variety of coping strategies, from reducing current consumption to disposing of productive assets, may be employed. The latter strategies are especially worrisome because they may reduce the capacity of the household to generate income in the future, possibly leading to chronic poverty. We used the results of a household survey in rural Uganda to ask, first, what coping strategies would tend to be employed in the event of a weather disaster, second, given that multiple strategies can be chosen, in what combinations would they tend to be employed, and, third, given that asset-liquidation strategies can be particularly harmful for the future income prospects of households, what determines their uptake? Our survey is one of the largest of its kind, containing over 3000 observations garnered by local workers using smartphone technology. We found that in this rural sample, by far, the most frequently reported choice would be to sell livestock. This is rather striking because asset-based theories would predict more reliance on strategies like eating and spending less today, which avoid disposal of productive assets. It may well be that livestock is held as a form of liquid savings to, among other things, help bounce back from a weather disaster. Although, we did find that other strategies that might undermine future prospects were avoided, notably selling land or the home and disrupting the children's education. Our econometric analysis revealed a fairly rich set of determinants of different subsets of coping strategies. Perhaps most notably, households with a more educated head are much less likely to choose coping strategies involving taking their own children out of education.
topic coping strategies
covariate risk
education
extreme weather
poverty trap
small-scale farming
Uganda
vulnerability
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss2/art2/
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