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Livelihood Dynamics Across a Variable Flooding Regime
Authors:Brian King  Kayla Yurco  Kenneth R Young  Kelley A Crews  Jamie E Shinn  Amelia C Eisenhart
Institution:1.Department of Geography,The Pennsylvania State University,University Park,USA;2.Geographic Science Program, School of Integrated Sciences,James Madison University,Harrisonburg,USA;3.Department of Geography & the Environment,University of Texas at Austin,Austin,USA;4.Department of Geology & Geography,West Virginia University,Morgantown,USA
Abstract:Variability in environmental phenomena such as fire, flooding, and weather-related events can have significant impacts for social and environmental systems and their coupled interactions. Livelihoods systems reliant on the natural environment can be disrupted or eliminated, while associated governance regimes require negotiation to ensure equitable and sustainable management responses. These patterns can be particularly pronounced within areas prone to flooding, as these sites can experience variability in the location, timing, amount, and duration of flooding events. While research within the social and natural sciences has evaluated these dynamics within flooding regimes, the coupled interactions can be underemphasized even though they are integral in producing livelihood systems and possibilities for environmental management. This paper details research conducted from 2011 to 2016 in five villages located in different locations within the Okavango Delta of Botswana. We report the findings from qualitative interviewing and livelihood mapping activities that are integrated with remote sensing analysis to provide concrete empirical detail on the variability of flooding and resulting variations in perception and livelihood responses. The paper demonstrates that flooding dynamics vary at discrete locations and produce diverse perceptions that are tied to livelihood adjustments in place-specific ways. These patterns are also embedded in regional and global processes that have significant implications for household vulnerability within socio-ecological systems strongly impacted by local and distant climatic and hydrological drivers of change.
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