Migration as an adaptive strategy to climate variability: a study of the Tonga-speaking people of Southern Zambia

Type

Journal Article

Author(s)

Simatele, D.
Simatele, M.

Title

Migration as an adaptive strategy to climate variability: a study of the Tonga-speaking people of Southern Zambia

Year

2015

Journal

Disasters

Abstract

There is increasing consensus that the effects of extreme weather conditions in the form of drought, flooding and extreme temperature will have increasingly devastating impacts on those who depend on climate-sensitive resources and ecosystems for their livelihoods. The most affected will be the poor in developing countries who have a low adaptive capacity to climate change due to high poverty levels. Despite these projections, there are, to date, insufficient empirical studies linking the relationship between climate change and migration, particularly in the context of southern Africa. Using field-based data collected from two study locations in Zambia, this paper examines the complex relationship between extreme weather events and population movement. It is envisaged that the findings presented in this paper will contribute to current discussions on the complex relationship between extreme weather conditions and population movement specifically in the context of sub-Saharan Africa and other developing countries.

Citation

Simatele, D., & Simatele, M. (2015). Migration as an adaptive strategy to climate variability: a study of the Tonga-speaking people of Southern Zambia. Disasters. URL : http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/disa.12124

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