Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report
This study reports on in-depth case studies of dzud (extreme cold weather during winter, subsequent to a very dry summer) impacts and responses. Focus groups, key informant interviews, a household survey, and photovoice, were used to document indiv...
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Format: | Other Agricultural Study |
Language: | English en_US |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2013
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/05/16436665/mongolia-understanding-resilience-mongolian-pastoral-social-ecological-systems-adapting-disaster-before-during-after-2010-dzud http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12758 |
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okr-10986-12758 |
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recordtype |
oai_dc |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ALCOHOL ABUSE ANIMAL ANIMAL SPECIES ANIMALS ASIAN RANGELANDS ASSETS BASIC NEEDS BIODIVERSITY BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY BREEDING BULLETIN CAPACITY BUILDING CHAPTER 7 CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE COLLATERAL COLLECTIVE ACTION COMMONS DEPENDENT DESERT DEVELOPMENT POLICY DROUGHT ECONOMIC CHANGE ECONOMIC CHANGES ECONOMIC SHOCKS ECOSYSTEM ENFORCEMENT MECHANISMS ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENTS FACT SHEET FALL FORAGE FEEDING FEEDING ANIMALS FINANCIAL RESOURCES FODDER FOOD SECURITY FORAGE FOREST FUEL GOVERNMENT RESPONSE GOVERNMENT SUPPORT GRASS-ROOTS GRASSES GRASSLANDS GRAZING GRAZING MANAGEMENT GRAZING PLANS GRAZING PRESSURE GRAZING RESERVES HEALTH CARE HEALTH STATUS HERD MANAGEMENT HERD SIZE HERDER HERDER COMMUNITIES HERDER ORGANIZATIONS HERDERS HERDING HERDS HOUSEHOLD LEVEL HUMAN POPULATION HUMAN POPULATIONS HUMAN SOCIETIES HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS INDIVIDUAL HOUSEHOLDS INEQUITIES INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT LACK OF KNOWLEDGE LAND USE LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEVERAGE LIMITED RESOURCES LIVESTOCK LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT LIVESTOCK INSURANCE LIVESTOCK LOSS LIVESTOCK MANAGEMENT LIVESTOCK NUMBERS LIVESTOCK POPULATION LIVESTOCK POPULATIONS LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS LIVING STANDARDS LOAN LOCAL COMMUNITY LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MARKET ECONOMY MIGRATION MORTALITY NATIONAL GOVERNMENT NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL LEVELS NATIONAL POLICIES NATURAL DISASTER NATURAL DISASTERS NATURAL RESOURCE NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT NATURAL RESOURCES NEWSLETTER NOMADIC PASTORALISM NOMADIC PEOPLES NUTRITION NUTRITIONAL STATUS OVERGRAZING PAMPHLET PASTORAL DEVELOPMENT PASTORAL ECONOMY PASTORAL LAND PASTORAL POPULATIONS PASTORAL SOCIETIES PASTORAL SYSTEMS PASTORALISTS PASTURE PASTURE MANAGEMENT PASTURE RESOURCES PASTURELAND TENURE PASTURES PENSIONS PHYSICAL HEALTH POPULATION EXPLOSION POPULATION TRENDS PRACTITIONERS PRECIPITATION PRIVATE OWNERSHIP PRIVATIZATION PROGRESS PUBLIC EDUCATION PUBLIC HEALTH RANGELAND RANGELAND MANAGEMENT RANGELANDS REORGANIZATION RESPECT RESTORATION RURAL HERDERS RURAL POPULATION RURAL POVERTY SETTLEMENTS SNOW SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS SOCIAL PROBLEMS SUMMER PASTURES SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNICAL INFORMATION TITLE TITLES URBAN AREAS USE OF PASTURES VEGETATION VULNERABILITY WAGES WATER SOURCES WELLS |
spellingShingle |
ALCOHOL ABUSE ANIMAL ANIMAL SPECIES ANIMALS ASIAN RANGELANDS ASSETS BASIC NEEDS BIODIVERSITY BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY BREEDING BULLETIN CAPACITY BUILDING CHAPTER 7 CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE COLLATERAL COLLECTIVE ACTION COMMONS DEPENDENT DESERT DEVELOPMENT POLICY DROUGHT ECONOMIC CHANGE ECONOMIC CHANGES ECONOMIC SHOCKS ECOSYSTEM ENFORCEMENT MECHANISMS ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENTS FACT SHEET FALL FORAGE FEEDING FEEDING ANIMALS FINANCIAL RESOURCES FODDER FOOD SECURITY FORAGE FOREST FUEL GOVERNMENT RESPONSE GOVERNMENT SUPPORT GRASS-ROOTS GRASSES GRASSLANDS GRAZING GRAZING MANAGEMENT GRAZING PLANS GRAZING PRESSURE GRAZING RESERVES HEALTH CARE HEALTH STATUS HERD MANAGEMENT HERD SIZE HERDER HERDER COMMUNITIES HERDER ORGANIZATIONS HERDERS HERDING HERDS HOUSEHOLD LEVEL HUMAN POPULATION HUMAN POPULATIONS HUMAN SOCIETIES HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS INDIVIDUAL HOUSEHOLDS INEQUITIES INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT LACK OF KNOWLEDGE LAND USE LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEVERAGE LIMITED RESOURCES LIVESTOCK LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT LIVESTOCK INSURANCE LIVESTOCK LOSS LIVESTOCK MANAGEMENT LIVESTOCK NUMBERS LIVESTOCK POPULATION LIVESTOCK POPULATIONS LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS LIVING STANDARDS LOAN LOCAL COMMUNITY LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MARKET ECONOMY MIGRATION MORTALITY NATIONAL GOVERNMENT NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL LEVELS NATIONAL POLICIES NATURAL DISASTER NATURAL DISASTERS NATURAL RESOURCE NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT NATURAL RESOURCES NEWSLETTER NOMADIC PASTORALISM NOMADIC PEOPLES NUTRITION NUTRITIONAL STATUS OVERGRAZING PAMPHLET PASTORAL DEVELOPMENT PASTORAL ECONOMY PASTORAL LAND PASTORAL POPULATIONS PASTORAL SOCIETIES PASTORAL SYSTEMS PASTORALISTS PASTURE PASTURE MANAGEMENT PASTURE RESOURCES PASTURELAND TENURE PASTURES PENSIONS PHYSICAL HEALTH POPULATION EXPLOSION POPULATION TRENDS PRACTITIONERS PRECIPITATION PRIVATE OWNERSHIP PRIVATIZATION PROGRESS PUBLIC EDUCATION PUBLIC HEALTH RANGELAND RANGELAND MANAGEMENT RANGELANDS REORGANIZATION RESPECT RESTORATION RURAL HERDERS RURAL POPULATION RURAL POVERTY SETTLEMENTS SNOW SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS SOCIAL PROBLEMS SUMMER PASTURES SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNICAL INFORMATION TITLE TITLES URBAN AREAS USE OF PASTURES VEGETATION VULNERABILITY WAGES WATER SOURCES WELLS Fernandez-Gimenez, Maria Batjav, Batbuyan Baival, Batkhishig Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report |
geographic_facet |
East Asia and Pacific Mongolia |
description |
This study reports on in-depth case
studies of dzud (extreme cold weather during winter,
subsequent to a very dry summer) impacts and responses.
Focus groups, key informant interviews, a household survey,
and photovoice, were used to document individual and
community experiences with dzud, and identify the factors
that make some households and communities more vulnerable,
and some less vulnerable, to the impacts of dzud, and the
strategies that were most effective in responding to dzud.
It was found that dzud is a complex, social-ecological
phenomenon, and vulnerability to dzud is a function of
interacting physical, biological, socio-economic, and
institutional factors. Vulnerability is affected by both
local and cross-scale factors. Actions that are adaptive
and reduce vulnerability for one group at one spatial or
temporal scale, may be mal-adaptive and increase
vulnerability for another group, or at a different scale.
Communities that are well prepared for dzud at the household
level may suffer disproportionate losses if exposure is
increased by in-migrating livestock from other areas. The
lessons of dzud for actors at all levels of social
organization, point to the need for increased responsibility
and leadership by individual actors, be they households,
herder groups, or local governments, as well as the critical
importance to all actors (including donor and aid
organizations) of reaching out, communicating and
cooperating with others within and across sectors and scales. |
format |
Economic & Sector Work :: Other Agricultural Study |
author |
Fernandez-Gimenez, Maria Batjav, Batbuyan Baival, Batkhishig |
author_facet |
Fernandez-Gimenez, Maria Batjav, Batbuyan Baival, Batkhishig |
author_sort |
Fernandez-Gimenez, Maria |
title |
Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report |
title_short |
Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report |
title_full |
Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report |
title_fullStr |
Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report |
title_full_unstemmed |
Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report |
title_sort |
understanding resilience in mongolian pastoral social-ecological systems : adapting to disaster before, during and after 2010 dzud--year 1 report |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/05/16436665/mongolia-understanding-resilience-mongolian-pastoral-social-ecological-systems-adapting-disaster-before-during-after-2010-dzud http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12758 |
_version_ |
1764421524600651776 |
spelling |
okr-10986-127582021-04-23T14:03:04Z Understanding Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social-ecological Systems : Adapting to Disaster Before, During and After 2010 Dzud--Year 1 Report Fernandez-Gimenez, Maria Batjav, Batbuyan Baival, Batkhishig ALCOHOL ABUSE ANIMAL ANIMAL SPECIES ANIMALS ASIAN RANGELANDS ASSETS BASIC NEEDS BIODIVERSITY BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY BREEDING BULLETIN CAPACITY BUILDING CHAPTER 7 CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE COLLATERAL COLLECTIVE ACTION COMMONS DEPENDENT DESERT DEVELOPMENT POLICY DROUGHT ECONOMIC CHANGE ECONOMIC CHANGES ECONOMIC SHOCKS ECOSYSTEM ENFORCEMENT MECHANISMS ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENTS FACT SHEET FALL FORAGE FEEDING FEEDING ANIMALS FINANCIAL RESOURCES FODDER FOOD SECURITY FORAGE FOREST FUEL GOVERNMENT RESPONSE GOVERNMENT SUPPORT GRASS-ROOTS GRASSES GRASSLANDS GRAZING GRAZING MANAGEMENT GRAZING PLANS GRAZING PRESSURE GRAZING RESERVES HEALTH CARE HEALTH STATUS HERD MANAGEMENT HERD SIZE HERDER HERDER COMMUNITIES HERDER ORGANIZATIONS HERDERS HERDING HERDS HOUSEHOLD LEVEL HUMAN POPULATION HUMAN POPULATIONS HUMAN SOCIETIES HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS INDIVIDUAL HOUSEHOLDS INEQUITIES INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT LACK OF KNOWLEDGE LAND USE LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEVERAGE LIMITED RESOURCES LIVESTOCK LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT LIVESTOCK INSURANCE LIVESTOCK LOSS LIVESTOCK MANAGEMENT LIVESTOCK NUMBERS LIVESTOCK POPULATION LIVESTOCK POPULATIONS LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS LIVING STANDARDS LOAN LOCAL COMMUNITY LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MARKET ECONOMY MIGRATION MORTALITY NATIONAL GOVERNMENT NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL LEVELS NATIONAL POLICIES NATURAL DISASTER NATURAL DISASTERS NATURAL RESOURCE NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT NATURAL RESOURCES NEWSLETTER NOMADIC PASTORALISM NOMADIC PEOPLES NUTRITION NUTRITIONAL STATUS OVERGRAZING PAMPHLET PASTORAL DEVELOPMENT PASTORAL ECONOMY PASTORAL LAND PASTORAL POPULATIONS PASTORAL SOCIETIES PASTORAL SYSTEMS PASTORALISTS PASTURE PASTURE MANAGEMENT PASTURE RESOURCES PASTURELAND TENURE PASTURES PENSIONS PHYSICAL HEALTH POPULATION EXPLOSION POPULATION TRENDS PRACTITIONERS PRECIPITATION PRIVATE OWNERSHIP PRIVATIZATION PROGRESS PUBLIC EDUCATION PUBLIC HEALTH RANGELAND RANGELAND MANAGEMENT RANGELANDS REORGANIZATION RESPECT RESTORATION RURAL HERDERS RURAL POPULATION RURAL POVERTY SETTLEMENTS SNOW SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS SOCIAL PROBLEMS SUMMER PASTURES SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNICAL INFORMATION TITLE TITLES URBAN AREAS USE OF PASTURES VEGETATION VULNERABILITY WAGES WATER SOURCES WELLS This study reports on in-depth case studies of dzud (extreme cold weather during winter, subsequent to a very dry summer) impacts and responses. Focus groups, key informant interviews, a household survey, and photovoice, were used to document individual and community experiences with dzud, and identify the factors that make some households and communities more vulnerable, and some less vulnerable, to the impacts of dzud, and the strategies that were most effective in responding to dzud. It was found that dzud is a complex, social-ecological phenomenon, and vulnerability to dzud is a function of interacting physical, biological, socio-economic, and institutional factors. Vulnerability is affected by both local and cross-scale factors. Actions that are adaptive and reduce vulnerability for one group at one spatial or temporal scale, may be mal-adaptive and increase vulnerability for another group, or at a different scale. Communities that are well prepared for dzud at the household level may suffer disproportionate losses if exposure is increased by in-migrating livestock from other areas. The lessons of dzud for actors at all levels of social organization, point to the need for increased responsibility and leadership by individual actors, be they households, herder groups, or local governments, as well as the critical importance to all actors (including donor and aid organizations) of reaching out, communicating and cooperating with others within and across sectors and scales. 2013-03-15T13:26:19Z 2013-03-15T13:26:19Z 2011-05-31 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/05/16436665/mongolia-understanding-resilience-mongolian-pastoral-social-ecological-systems-adapting-disaster-before-during-after-2010-dzud http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12758 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Agricultural Study Economic & Sector Work East Asia and Pacific Mongolia |