Gender specific adaptation practices to the effects of climate change in Bahi and Kondoa districts, Dodoma region, Tanzania

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Date

2014

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Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SUA

Abstract

Climate change has differentiated effects between men and women, but there is scarce information on how men and women are adapting to the effects in Tanzania. The main objective of this study was to establish gender specific adaptation practices to the effects of climate change in Bahi and Kondoa districts, Dodoma Region, Tanzania. The study adopted a cross-sectional research design whereby both quantitative and qualitative data were collected from a sample of 360 respondents, 12 focus groups and 78 key informants. Focus group discussions, key informant interviews and a questionnaire survey were used to collect data. The analysis of quantitative data involved descriptive and inferential statistics using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS, Version 12.0) computer software programme. Qualitative data were summarized by using content analysis. Inferential analysis involved Chi-square test at p < 0.05 level of significance to determine relationships between study variables; F-test was used to determine the significance of the trends of anomalies of rainfall, temperature and wind speed; and a multinomial logit regression model was used to determine factors influencing choice of climate change adaptation options between men and women, using Nlogit 3.0. The indices of four climate change indicators (increase in rainfall variation, temperature, strong wind and drought) were formed to measure perception on climate change. This thesis was developed in papers format. It presents three published papers by the Journal of African Studies and Development (JASD), Research on Humanities and Social Science (RHSS) and Sustainable Development (JSD). The first paper, Swai et al. (2012a) determined the perception on climate change by sex and investigated the evidence of climate change from meteorological data. The results in this paper revealed that the majority of men and women perceived climate change. There was significant association between perception on climate change and sex of respondents. The trends of anomalies of meteorological data showed a significant decrease in rainfall amount for Bahi Districts, an increase in meaniii minimum and maximum temperature and mean wind speed for Dodoma Region, proving that climate had changed. The second paper, Swai et al. (2012b) examined the effects of climate change on agricultural production by sex and found that, men and women perceived and were affected differently by climate change. Women were more likely to perceive the severity of the effects of climate change during food shortage or hunger, water and firewood shortages and when they were subjected to bad food debts whereas, men were more likely to perceive the severely of the effects of climate change when they wasted resources including productive land, seeds and labour due to floods or drought and when they out-migrated to search for casual labour or food grains away from home. There was a significant association between perceived effects of climate change and sex of respondents. The third paper, Swai et al. (2012c) investigated adaptation practices undertaken by men and women to adapt to climate change. The results indicated that women were more devoted to adaptation practices that enabled them to adapt to or reduce effects of climate change during food shortage or hunger, water and firewood shortages; and men were more devoted to adaptation practices that enabled them to adapt to or reduce effects of climate change on crops, livestock and land and/or environment. There was a significant association between adaptation practices undertaken by respondents and sex of respondents. The results of a manuscript that evaluated determinants of climate change adaptation, which was also a gendered analysis revealed that socio-economic, cultural and demographic factors had significant effects on the choice of climate change adaption options between men and women. The factors determining the choice of climate change adaptation options between men and women were not the same. Generally, the study concludes that men and women perceived climate change differently, were affected differently, and thus adapted differently to the effects of climate change, emphasizing the need for gender differentiated interventions to promote climate change adaptation. The study recommends planners and policy makers in Agriculture, Livestock and Environment sectors, Tanzania NAPA, NGOs and other development practitioners to use genderiv sensitive interventions to manage climate change effects; and suggests a study of this kind (systematic collection of in-depth information at the community level) to be undertaken in other semi-arid areas and regions of Tanzania in order to gather more information that can justify generalization of the findings on gender and climate change. This is because climate change effects are location specific, and adaptive capacities of individuals vary across the country.

Description

PhD Thesis

Keywords

Gender, Bahi, Climate change, Specific adaptation

Citation