Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report
Keywords
INEQUITIESNATURAL DISASTER
NATURAL RESOURCE
PRECIPITATION
PASTURES
GRAZING RESERVES
NUTRITION
INDIVIDUAL HOUSEHOLDS
VEGETATION
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
FOREST
FODDER
LIMITED RESOURCES
URBAN AREAS
LEVERAGE
BASIC NEEDS
PAMPHLET
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
HERDING
SETTLEMENTS
PRIVATE OWNERSHIP
CLIMATE CHANGE
ENVIRONMENTS
PRACTITIONERS
OVERGRAZING
CHAPTER 7
ANIMAL
NEWSLETTER
BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
RANGELAND MANAGEMENT
LIVESTOCK NUMBERS
RESPECT
GRAZING MANAGEMENT
HERD MANAGEMENT
NATIONAL GOVERNMENT
GOVERNMENT RESPONSE
FORAGE
GRAZING PRESSURE
BULLETIN
PHYSICAL HEALTH
NOMADIC PASTORALISM
FACT SHEET
HERDER ORGANIZATIONS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
DROUGHT
NATIONAL POLICIES
CAPACITY BUILDING
COMMONS
NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
HERDER
LIVESTOCK INSURANCE
BIODIVERSITY
GRASSES
GRAZING
LIVESTOCK
RESTORATION
PRIVATIZATION
PASTORAL POPULATIONS
TECHNICAL INFORMATION
REORGANIZATION
ASIAN RANGELANDS
FALL FORAGE
HERDER COMMUNITIES
NOMADIC PEOPLES
LOCAL COMMUNITY
RANGELANDS
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
HERDERS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PASTORALISTS
PASTORAL LAND
LIVESTOCK LOSS
PASTURE MANAGEMENT
BREEDING
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS
RURAL POPULATION
WELLS
USE OF PASTURES
MARKET ECONOMY
PENSIONS
SNOW
FEEDING
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
GRAZING PLANS
HERDS
FUEL
LACK OF KNOWLEDGE
LIVESTOCK MANAGEMENT
PASTORAL SYSTEMS
HEALTH STATUS
LOAN
FOOD SECURITY
LAND USE
NUTRITIONAL STATUS
PROGRESS
FEEDING ANIMALS
PASTURELAND TENURE
HERD SIZE
ANIMAL SPECIES
HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS
RANGELAND
VULNERABILITY
TITLE
PASTORAL DEVELOPMENT
ENFORCEMENT MECHANISMS
HUMAN POPULATIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
HEALTH CARE
NATIONAL LEVELS
PASTORAL SOCIETIES
MORTALITY
INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
ALCOHOL ABUSE
ECONOMIC CHANGE
WAGES
ECOSYSTEM
HUMAN SOCIETIES
SUMMER PASTURES
TITLES
POPULATION TRENDS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT
GRASS-ROOTS
ANIMALS
ASSETS
HUMAN POPULATION
POPULATION EXPLOSION
NATURAL DISASTERS
NATIONAL LEVEL
LIVING STANDARDS
MIGRATION
ECONOMIC CHANGES
PASTORAL ECONOMY
DESERT
SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
PUBLIC EDUCATION
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
COLLATERAL
WATER SOURCES
RURAL POVERTY
CLIMATE
LIVESTOCK POPULATION
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
RURAL HERDERS
COLLECTIVE ACTION
GRASSLANDS
NATURAL RESOURCES
LIVESTOCK POPULATIONS
DEPENDENT
PASTURE
PASTURE RESOURCES
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12758Abstract
This study reports on in-depth case studies of dzud (extreme cold weather during winter, subsequent to a very dry summer) impacts and responses. Focus groups, key informant interviews, a household survey, and photovoice, were used to document individual and community experiences with dzud, and identify the factors that make some households and communities more vulnerable, and some less vulnerable, to the impacts of dzud, and the strategies that were most effective in responding to dzud. It was found that dzud is a complex, social-ecological phenomenon, and vulnerability to dzud is a function of interacting physical, biological, socio-economic, and institutional factors. Vulnerability is affected by both local and cross-scale factors. Actions that are adaptive and reduce vulnerability for one group at one spatial or temporal scale, may be mal-adaptive and increase vulnerability for another group, or at a different scale. Communities that are well prepared for dzud at the household level may suffer disproportionate losses if exposure is increased by in-migrating livestock from other areas. The lessons of dzud for actors at all levels of social organization, point to the need for increased responsibility and leadership by individual actors, be they households, herder groups, or local governments, as well as the critical importance to all actors (including donor and aid organizations) of reaching out, communicating and cooperating with others within and across sectors and scales.Date
2013-03-15Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/12758http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12758
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 UnportedCollections
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