Climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern Tibet

The Tibetan grassland social-ecological systems are widely held to be highly vulnerable to climate change. We aim to investigate livelihood adaptation strategies of herder households and the types of local institutions that shaped those adaptation strategies. We examined the barriers and opportuniti...

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Main Authors: Jun Wang, Yang Wang, Shuangcheng Li, Dahe Qin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2016-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol21/iss1/art5/
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spelling doaj-aadf779404de4046bdcdd7e838d04d8e2020-11-24T22:58:10ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872016-03-01211510.5751/ES-08170-2101058170Climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern TibetJun Wang0Yang Wang1Shuangcheng Li2Dahe Qin3Peking University Shenzhen Graduate School, Key Laboratory for Human and Environmental Science and Technology, Shenzhen, ChinaNational Climate Center, China Meteorological Administration, Beijing, ChinaCollege of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaNational Climate Center, China Meteorological Administration, Beijing, ChinaThe Tibetan grassland social-ecological systems are widely held to be highly vulnerable to climate change. We aim to investigate livelihood adaptation strategies of herder households and the types of local institutions that shaped those adaptation strategies. We examined the barriers and opportunities for strengthening adaptive capacity of local herder communities. We designed and implemented a household survey in the herder communities of northern Tibet. The survey results showed that migratory grazing has become less feasible. Storage, diversification, and market exchange have become the dominant adaptation strategies. The adaptation strategies of local herders have been reshaped by local institutional change. Local governmental and market institutions played the dominant roles in reshaping climate adaptation strategies. Although the present livelihood adaption strategies related to sedentary grazing have improved productivity and profitability of the herding livelihood, they have led to continuous deterioration of pastures. The local grazing system has become more and more dependent on artificial feeding and inputs from outside the grazing system. Purchasing forage has become one of the dominant adaptation strategies of local herder households. Multilevel regression modeling of this adaptation behavior showed that explanatory variables related to climate variability, household capital, and local institutional arrangements had statistically significant relationships with the adoption of this adaptation strategy. The results implies that building household capital and promoting the coordination among local governmental, market, and communal institutions are critical for strengthening adaptive capacity of the Tibetan herder communities.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol21/iss1/art5/climate adaptationherder communitiesinstitutional changesustainable livelihoodsTibetan Plateau
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jun Wang
Yang Wang
Shuangcheng Li
Dahe Qin
spellingShingle Jun Wang
Yang Wang
Shuangcheng Li
Dahe Qin
Climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern Tibet
Ecology and Society
climate adaptation
herder communities
institutional change
sustainable livelihoods
Tibetan Plateau
author_facet Jun Wang
Yang Wang
Shuangcheng Li
Dahe Qin
author_sort Jun Wang
title Climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern Tibet
title_short Climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern Tibet
title_full Climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern Tibet
title_fullStr Climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern Tibet
title_full_unstemmed Climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern Tibet
title_sort climate adaptation, institutional change, and sustainable livelihoods of herder communities in northern tibet
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2016-03-01
description The Tibetan grassland social-ecological systems are widely held to be highly vulnerable to climate change. We aim to investigate livelihood adaptation strategies of herder households and the types of local institutions that shaped those adaptation strategies. We examined the barriers and opportunities for strengthening adaptive capacity of local herder communities. We designed and implemented a household survey in the herder communities of northern Tibet. The survey results showed that migratory grazing has become less feasible. Storage, diversification, and market exchange have become the dominant adaptation strategies. The adaptation strategies of local herders have been reshaped by local institutional change. Local governmental and market institutions played the dominant roles in reshaping climate adaptation strategies. Although the present livelihood adaption strategies related to sedentary grazing have improved productivity and profitability of the herding livelihood, they have led to continuous deterioration of pastures. The local grazing system has become more and more dependent on artificial feeding and inputs from outside the grazing system. Purchasing forage has become one of the dominant adaptation strategies of local herder households. Multilevel regression modeling of this adaptation behavior showed that explanatory variables related to climate variability, household capital, and local institutional arrangements had statistically significant relationships with the adoption of this adaptation strategy. The results implies that building household capital and promoting the coordination among local governmental, market, and communal institutions are critical for strengthening adaptive capacity of the Tibetan herder communities.
topic climate adaptation
herder communities
institutional change
sustainable livelihoods
Tibetan Plateau
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol21/iss1/art5/
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AT yangwang climateadaptationinstitutionalchangeandsustainablelivelihoodsofherdercommunitiesinnortherntibet
AT shuangchengli climateadaptationinstitutionalchangeandsustainablelivelihoodsofherdercommunitiesinnortherntibet
AT daheqin climateadaptationinstitutionalchangeandsustainablelivelihoodsofherdercommunitiesinnortherntibet
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