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Impacts of Climate Change and Variability on Pastoralist Women in Sub-Saharan Africa (Paperback)
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Impacts of Climate Change and Variability on Pastoralist Women in Sub-Saharan Africa (Paperback)
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The term climate change is used to denote any significant but
extended change in the measures of climate. The changes could be
due to natural variability or as a result of human activities, such
as the burning of fossil fuels to produce energy, deforestation,
industrial processes, and some agricultural practices. Such
activities release large amounts of carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse gases into the atmosphere that hang like a blanket
around the earth, thus trapping energy in the atmosphere and
causing it to warm up. This results increasingly in climate
variability, which is characterised by extreme seasonal, annual,
temporal and non-spatial variability in temperature, vagaries of
precipitation (rainfall patterns and amounts) and/or wind patterns
occurring over a prolonged period of time. The last decade (2001 -
2010) has been the warmest on record; with the average temperatures
reaching 0.46 C, above the 1961 - 1990 mean, and 0.21 C warmer than
the 1991 - 2000 period. It has been proved that the African
continent is warming up faster, all year-round, than the global
average; a trend that is likely to continue. By the year 2100, it
is predicted that temperature changes will fall into ranges of
about 1.4 C to nearly 5.8 C increase in mean surface temperature
compared to 1990, and the mean sea level will rise between 10cm to
90 cm (AMCEN 2011). The interior of semiarid margins of the Sahara
and central southern Africa will be the most affected by such
warming (AMCEN 2011). To tackle the phenomenon of climate change
effectively, human societies have put in place a combination of
mitigation and adaptation mechanisms and strategies. Whereas
mitigation aims at avoiding or lessening the impacts of the
unmanageable, the goal of adaptation is to manage the unavoidable.
That men and women are affected differently by climate change
suggests that they also differ in terms of the adaptation
mechanisms they employ. Despite the existence of gender-based
differences in the effects of climate change and in adaptation and
coping strategies, studies on the gender differential impacts of
climate change and variability on women in general and pastoralist
women in particular in sub-Saharan Africa are limited. This volume
offers insights and knowledge that pastoralist women developed on
climate change adaptation through their experiences in their
households and communities and thereby tries to narrow this gap.
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