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EGS 3021F: Vulnerability to Environmental Change Gina Ziervogel ( gina@csag.uct.ac.za ) December 2011. Section 3: Vulnerability Methods. This work by Gina Ziervogel is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
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EGS 3021F: Vulnerability to Environmental Change Gina Ziervogel (gina@csag.uct.ac.za) December 2011 Section 3:Vulnerability Methods This work by Gina Ziervogel is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
An aggregate measure of human welfare that integrates environmental, social, economic and political exposure to a range of harmful perturbations. Vulnerability is… (Bohle et al. 1994)
How do we assess vulnerability? • How do we develop a consensual definition vulnerability? • How do we measure vulnerability?
Choosing appropriate VA methods • The context should drive the choice of methodology and methods • decision goals, analytical teams, priority vulnerabilities • User orientation • An array of methods is essential: the most useful tools are those that fit the decision framework of the end-users • Scale of analysis important in selection of methods • e.g. appropriate indicators, availability of data
Initial Vulnerability Assessment questions • What hazards and stresses are systems exposed to? • e.g., economic risks (income loss, debt), natural hazards • Who/ what are the exposure units? • e.g., social groups, ecosystems, regions • Where are the vulnerable located? • When are people/systems vulnerable? • What are the specific reasons for their vulnerability? • e.g., dependence on particular resources, reliance on certain subsidies, social marginalisation
Initial Vulnerability Assessment questions • How resilient are the exposure units to current stresses? • institutional capacity, absorption capacity of ecosystems, diversity of income sources • What would be the consequences of exposure to stresses? • loss of assets, loss of livelihood, unemployment, loss of life? • What has been the impact of historical episodes or comparable events? • What indicators capture current and future vulnerability under the proposed scenarios? • What potential responses can be pursued to reduce vulnerability? • operational, strategic, policy/regulatory • scale
Synthesize existing data • Impact assessments • Strategic environmental assessments • Livelihoods based analysis • Consultations • From Expert judgement, Focus groups & Stakeholder consultation • Past trends and future scenarios work • Scenario analysis • Evaluation of existing development frameworks Establish new data needed
Tools in a VA Toolkit • Agent-based simulation modeling • Bayesian analysis • Brainstorming • Checklists/multiple attributes • Cognitive Mapping • Cost-effectiveness/Cost-benefit/Expected Value • Cost Impact Analysis • Decision conferencing • Decision/probability trees • Delphi technique • Environmental assessment/ Strategic Environmental Assessment • Expert judgment • Focus groups • Indicators/mapping • Influence diagrams/mapping tools • Multi-criterion analysis • Ranking/dominance analysis/pairwise comparisons • Risk analysis • Role-play • Scenario analysis • Stakeholder consultation • Stakeholder thematic networks • Vulnerability Profiles • Wealth ranking (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Steps in VA Assessment • Scope assessment • Decide on initial VA questions • Establish existing data • Choose appropriate tools to obtain necessary data Buzz group: What is the aim of scoping the assessment?
Tools in a VA Toolkit • Agent-based simulation modeling • Bayesian analysis • Brainstorming • Checklists/multiple attributes • Cognitive Mapping • Cost-effectiveness/Cost-benefit/Expected Value • Cost Impact Analysis • Decision conferencing • Decision/probability trees • Delphi technique • Environmental assessment/ Strategic Environmental Assessment • Expert judgment • Focus groups • Indicators/mapping • Influence diagrams/mapping tools • Multi-criterion analysis • Ranking/dominance analysis/pairwise comparisons • Risk analysis • Role-play • Scenario analysis • Stakeholder consultation • Stakeholder thematic networks • Vulnerability Profiles • Wealth ranking (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Vulnerability assessment techniques • Livelihood vulnerability • Qualitative methods • Quantitative methods • Indicators and mapping • Agent-based modelling • Scenarios (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Vulnerability of livelihoods • What is a livelihood? • Set of activities • Assets • Access Improve or continue existence
Vulnerability of livelihoods • Assets • Human • Social • Financial • Physical • Natural Improve or continue existence
Evaluating sustainable livelihoods • Sustainable Livelihoods: The capability of people to make a living and improve their quality of life without jeopardizing the livelihood options of others. • Sustainability implies: • Ability to cope with and recover from stresses and shocks • Economic effectiveness and social equity • Ecological integrity • Resilience to shocks (Rennie and Singh, 1996)
Benefits of livelihoods approach to VA An analysis of livelihoods helps VA users to: • Identify the most vulnerable groups and individuals at a community or regional scale • Emphasize the links between policy decisions and household level activities • Focus not just on incomes, but also relations, institutions, access and control of resources • Identify the sensitivity of different livelihoods to stresses, and assess their vulnerabilities and strengths • Captures lessons on how to build community resilience
Assessing the vulnerability of livelihoods • Qualitative • Participatory • Semi-structured Interviews • Quantitative • Surveys • Indicators • Mapping (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Qualitative methods • Participatory approaches • Village mapping • Seasonal calendars • Matrices • Pair-wise ranking • Venn diagrams • Time line • Wealth ranking • Semi-structured questions • Focus groups • Role-play methods • Oral histories (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Climatic calendars (Archer et al, 2008)
Climatic calendars (Archer et al, 2008)
Cognitive mapping • A cognitive model that captures diverse nature of the problem • Useful tool when: • different stakeholders have different perceptions of the problem • the options for addressing a problem are unclear (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Cognitive mapping process • State the problem • Brainstorm assumptions and solutions • Group emerging concepts • Re-illustrate the concepts so they form a conceptual model • Go back to participants • Formal cognitive model (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Multiple,inter-related and indirect impacts… By Emma Archer
Role play • To creatively remove people from their usual roles and assumptions by involving them as a group in analytic thinking and assessment (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Role play process • Open-ended story/ written case description • Describe the setting for the action • Participants asked to act out potential scenarios • Record • Tape/video • Participant feedback • Observer descriptions/notes (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Role-play in Lesotho By Gina Ziervogel By Gina Ziervogel
Lessons learnt • Role-play enabled the question to be ‘experienced’ • Lessons for seasonal forecast dissemination • Prefer receiving information from person • Above-normal forecast helpful • Resources not necessary to respond (Ziervogel, 2004)
Oral histories • Qualitative narratives of individuals’ histories and strategies • Focus: • Individual perception • Past stress and response • Used to suggest indicators • Method • Can use semi-structured interview or participatory methods to inform • Multi-stakeholder view of past (Downing and Ziervogel, 2004)
Oral history example: Rangeland quality over time • General questions about perception of past rangeland quality • Use timeline • Line with 4 ticks • Anchoring events • Add: Stones represent best and worst harvest 1980 1990 2000 2010 Great-grandmother died Mozambique floods
Validation of agent-based model output AGENT BASED MODEL OUTPUT *** TICK 189 *** person-2 (female) DIED AT AGE 62 OF AIDS was head of household-1 person-2 had 10 friends; person-2 had 29 relatives in 5 households (including own) person-7 (male, 36) becomes new head of household-1 burialSociety-0 pays out 360.0 Rand to household-1 for the death of its member person-2 By Gina Ziervogel Scenario presented for feedback at village workshop: Hilda dies of AIDS (62, HH head) Funeral cost (R4000); Burial society (R360); Honest becomes HHH (36)
Women’s responseto scenario (Funeral cost, R4000; Burial society,R360; Honest becomes HHH, 36) By Gina Ziervogel
Men’s response to scenario (Funeral cost, R4000; Burial society,R360; Honest becomes HHH, 36) By Gina Ziervogel
Wealth ranking • Stratifications of groups within a community as understood by community members • Categories • Money, availability/access to resources, health, labour • Poor, average, better-off • Represented by colours, symbols, numbers
Wealth ranking process • Establish categories • Community members place themselves/ key members place households • Consultation possible
Livelihood approaches: quantitative • Indicators • Quantitative evaluation of livelihood assets • Indices By Gina Ziervogel
Role-play example • 3 class volunteers (actors) • 1 student ‘in distress’ with injured hand • 1 friend • 1 emergency personnel • Scene 1: Student is panicky about accident, goes to friend for help, who tries to call for help • Scene 2: Student injures hand and is calm about it..
Checklist How likely are the following sources of fire to cause accidents Example from Class practical 2009
Vulnerability Metrics • Metrics • “A system or standard of measurement; a criterion or set of criteria stated in quantifiable terms” (Oxford English Dictionary) • Metrics important when questioning future states • Education; health • Identify thresholds • Doesn’t capture cause
Indicators and mapping • Indicator: single measure of a characteristic • Index: composite measure of several indicators or indices. • Purpose • Capture spatial variation in vulnerability • Used for • guiding decision-making • prioritising intervention (Miller et al. 2005)
Limitations • Caution • complex nature of vulnerability • difficulty in capturing diversity and sensitivity • Reflect explicit conceptual framework of vulnerability • Can’t compare indicators that assess different temporal and spatial scales • Units of measurement are often inconsistent (Miller et al. 2005)
Indicator methodology • First identify appropriate indicators in regards to the conceptual framework • Indicators are then transformed into standard scores for mapping • Can use aggregate measures (e.g., food security index might use crop yield, income, and nutrition measures) • Explore indicator database structure What is the range of values? Are there critical thresholds for vulnerability? Are indicators correlated with each other? (Miller et al. 2005)
Example: Households and drought in the Sahel: Vulnerability and effective adaptation measures • Who are the most vulnerable groups and what shapes their vulnerability in the face of climate variability and change? • What shapes the exposure to and ability of certain groups to rebound from drought hazards? • How does institutional capacity influence the capacity of the affected individuals and households to cope with/adapt to droughts and reduce vulnerability? • Will adaptive capacities change in the future? If so, how? (http://www.aiaccproject.org/)
Project in Nigeria and Mali: Research Design • Rapid Rural Assessment to: • Identify major livelihood systems • Identify vulnerability indicators, • Assign weights to indicators. • Methods • Preliminary Survey • Focus Group Discussion (http://www.aiaccproject.org/)