Increasing social-ecological resilience within small-scale agriculture in conflict-affected Guatemala

被引:0
|
作者
Hellin, Jon [1 ,2 ]
Ratner, Blake D. [3 ]
Meinzen-Dick, Ruth [4 ]
Lopez-Ridaura, Santiago [1 ]
机构
[1] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, Texcoco, Mexico
[2] Int Rice Res Inst IRRI, Philadelphia, PA USA
[3] CGIAR, WorldFish, Montpellier, France
[4] IFPRI, Washington, DC USA
来源
ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY | 2018年 / 23卷 / 03期
关键词
agriculture; climate change; collective action; conflict; Guatemala; resilience; CLIMATE-CHANGE; WESTERN HIGHLANDS; COLLECTIVE ACTION; AGRARIAN CONFLICT; MAIZE DIVERSITY; ADAPTATION; LANDRACES; LANDSCAPE; COMMUNITY; SECURITY;
D O I
10.5751/ES-10250-230305
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Climate change scenarios suggest largely detrimental impacts on agricultural production from a deterioration of renewable natural resources. Over the last 15 years, a new field of research has focused on the interactions between climate and conflict risk, particularly as it relates to competition over natural resources and livelihoods. Within this field, there has been less attention to the potential for resource competition to be managed in ways that yield greater cooperation, local adaptation capacity, social-ecological resilience, and conflict mitigation or prevention. The challenge of increasing social-ecological resilience in small-scale agriculture is particularly acute in the socioeconomically and agroecologically marginalized Western Highlands of Guatemala. Not only is climate change a threat to agriculture in this region, but adaptation strategies are challenged by the context of a society torn apart by decades of violent conflict. Indeed, the largely indigenous population in the Western Highlands has suffered widespread discrimination for centuries. The armed conflict has left a legacy of a deeply divided society, with communities often suspicious of outsider interventions and in many cases with neighbors pitted against each other. We use the example of the Buena Milpa agricultural development project to demonstrate how grassroots approaches to collective action, conflict prevention, and social-ecological resilience, linking local stakeholder dynamics to the broader institutional and governance context, can bear fruit amidst postconflict development challenges. Examples of microwatershed management and conservation of local maize varieties illustrate opportunities to foster community-level climate adaptation strategies within small-scale farming systems even in deeply divided societies.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 48 条
  • [1] A multi-method approach to study robustness of social-ecological systems: the case of small-scale irrigation systems
    Janssen, Marco A.
    Anderies, John M.
    JOURNAL OF INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS, 2013, 9 (04) : 427 - 447
  • [2] Bringing analysis of gender and social-ecological resilience together in small-scale fisheries research: Challenges and opportunities
    Kawarazuka, Nozomi
    Locke, Catherine
    McDougall, Cynthia
    Kantor, Paula
    Morgan, Miranda
    AMBIO, 2017, 46 (02) : 201 - 213
  • [3] Food security in the face of climate change: Adaptive capacity of small-scale social-ecological systems to environmental variability
    Perez, Irene
    Janssen, Marco A.
    Anderies, John M.
    GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2016, 40 : 82 - 91
  • [4] Building blocks for social-ecological transformations: identifying and building on governance successes for small-scale fisheries
    Andrachuk, Mark
    Armitage, Derek
    Hoang, Ha Dung
    Le, Nam Van
    ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2018, 23 (02):
  • [5] Social-Ecological Resilience and Sustainable Agriculture Under Water Scarcity
    Maleksaeidi, Hamideh
    Karami, Ezatollah
    AGROECOLOGY AND SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS, 2013, 37 (03) : 262 - 290
  • [6] Resilience, experimentation, and scale mismatches in social-ecological landscapes
    Cumming, Graeme S.
    Olsson, Per
    Chapin, F. S., III
    Holling, C. S.
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2013, 28 (06) : 1139 - 1150
  • [7] Resilience at the periphery: Insurgency, agency and social-ecological change under armed conflict
    Ingalls, Micah L.
    Mansfield, David
    GEOFORUM, 2017, 84 : 126 - 137
  • [8] Resilience, experimentation, and scale mismatches in social-ecological landscapes
    Graeme S. Cumming
    Per Olsson
    F. S. Chapin
    C. S. Holling
    Landscape Ecology, 2013, 28 : 1139 - 1150
  • [9] Social-ecological vulnerability to environmental extremes and adaptation pathways in small-scale fisheries of the southern California Current
    Micheli, Fiorenza
    Saenz-Arroyo, Andrea
    Aalto, Emilius
    Beas-Luna, Rodrigo
    Boch, Charles A.
    Cardenas, Juan Camilo
    De Leo, Giulio A.
    Diaz, Eduardo
    Espinoza-Montes, Antonio
    Finkbeiner, Elena
    Freiwald, Jan
    Fulton, Stuart
    Hernandez, Arturo
    Lejbowicz, Amanda
    Low, Natalie H. N.
    Martinez, Ramon
    Mccay, Bonnie
    Monismith, Stephen
    Precoma-de la Mora, Magdalena
    Romero, Alfonso
    Smith, Alexandra
    Torre, Jorge
    Vazquez-Vera, Leonardo
    Woodson, C. Brock
    FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2024, 11
  • [10] "Listen to us": small-scale farmers' understandings of social-ecological changes and their drivers in Important Agricultural Heritage Systems
    Caviedes, Julian
    Ibarra, Jose Tomas
    Calvet-Mir, Laura
    Junqueira, Andre Braga
    REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE, 2023, 23 (04)