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Modeling Domestic Transitions, Climatic Change, and Livelihoods: A Case Study of Mossi Households, Burkina Faso. Colin Thor West Research Assistant Professor of Anthropology Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER) University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA).
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Modeling Domestic Transitions, Climatic Change, and Livelihoods: A Case Study of Mossi Households, Burkina Faso Colin Thor West Research Assistant Professor of Anthropology Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER) University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA)
Pugkêenga (A) and Independent (B) Mossi residence patterns Have Mossi extended households disappeared? If not, why? How do Mossi domestic transitions articulate with larger processes of climatic and social change? Desiccation, livelihood diversification, and agricultural intensification have promoted household extension Rissiam, 2002 – G. Tappan
Pugkêenga and Independent Households 30 45 Independent 50 89 Pugkêenga
Pugkêenga and independent fields Household – Unit of production, consumption, and reproduction Operationalized – A group that farms together in the same field, pools resources, eats from a common granary and recognizes the authority of single head Pugkêenga Independent
97 household surveys covering: - demographics - grain production - assets such as animals, cattle, ploughs, etc. Fieldwork conducted in 2004
Climatic change: Sahelian desiccation Annual precipitation index for the Sahel (from 11o to 18o N, west of 10o E) From Bell and Lamb 2006: 5344
Climatic change: regional desiccation WET DESICCATION famine exodus Data provided by the Direction de la Méteorologie du Burkina Faso
Social change: agricultural intensification, livelihood diversification, SWC, cattle-raising
SWC and “greening of the Sahel” Comparison of predicted v. observed NDVI for 13.3oN , -1.5oW - Analysis prepared by S. Herrmann, PhD
Pugkêenga households and social capital Mann-Whitney Z = -4.425, one-tailed p = 0.000
Chayanov consumer/producer ratios Based on Toulmin, 1992:260
Pugkêenga Pugkêenga households and Chayanov consumer/producer ratios
Pugkêenga households and grain production * * * * * * * * * one-tail p < 0.05using Mann-Whitney U test
Pugkêenga households and animal assets mean = 2.95 mean = 6.57 Mann-Whitney Z = -1.16, one-tailed p = 0.041
Pugkêenga and independent households Pukeenga_model
Conclusions: - Pugkêenga households persist - Pugkêenga households and their livelihood assets enhance their sustainability under conditions of desiccation, agricultural intensification, and livelihood diversification - Agent-based modeling is a powerful tool for exploring the contingent nature of domestic processes in terms of climatic and social change
METEO - BF Institut de la Géographie du Burkina PATECORE - BF Acknowledgements: UofA Marshall Foundation Dissertation Fellowship NOAA Global and Climate Change Post-doc Fellowship Program UofA Global Change IDP Dissertation Improvement Grant Arizona State Museum Raymond Thompson Dissertation Grant UofA Social and Behavioral Sciences Research Institute Graduate Research Grant Institut de la Démographique et de la Statistique -BF