Environmental resources as ‘last resort’ coping strategies following harvest failures in Zimbabwe

•We compare coping strategies used by Zimbabwean households in 2002 (harvest failure only) and 2008 (harvest failure and hyperinflation).•Dependence on environmental coping strategies was more common in 2008 than 2002.•Environmental coping strategies were the ‘last resort’ in 2008 because interactin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inWorld development Vol. 127; p. 104741
Main Authors Pritchard, Rose, Grundy, Isla M., van der Horst, Dan, Dzobo, Nyaradzo, Ryan, Casey M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Elsevier Ltd 01.03.2020
Pergamon Press Inc
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Summary:•We compare coping strategies used by Zimbabwean households in 2002 (harvest failure only) and 2008 (harvest failure and hyperinflation).•Dependence on environmental coping strategies was more common in 2008 than 2002.•Environmental coping strategies were the ‘last resort’ in 2008 because interacting crises made other strategies unavailable.•Environmental resources are also critical when region-wide hazards coincide with household-specific shocks.•We show the importance of considering environmental coping strategies in the broader vulnerability context. Environmental resources are often cited as important for households coping with hazards in the Global South. However, a recent large-scale analysis has challenged the narrative of ‘forest as safety net’. Clarifying this contradiction is important given the anticipated increase in the frequency of severe hazards due to climate change, and also because calls for habitat restoration may drive transformation of resource access in tropical landscapes. Here we examine the importance of environmental coping strategies to 85 households in Wedza District, Zimbabwe, exploring how the situation of households in different vulnerability contexts shapes dependence on environmental safety nets. We firstly compare recalled responses to two past hazard exposures, the drought of 2002 and the interacting harvest failure and hyperinflation crisis of 2008, to assess how exposure to multiple interacting hazards might alter the coping strategies available to and preferred by rural households. We secondly use scenario exercises to explore why households might or might not choose to adopt environmental coping strategies. We find that interactions between co-occurring covariate hazards can increase dependence on environmental resources by rendering preferred strategies unavailable, with the proportion of respondent households recalling dependence on environmental resources as a core strategy increasing from 31% in 2002 to more than 50% in 2008. We find also that the co-occurrence of covariate and idiosyncratic hazards, such as incapacitation of the primary income earner during a drought period, can increase dependence on environmental coping strategies. While respondents acknowledge the downsides of environmental safety nets, such as illegality, seasonality, and market unreliability, they still perceive environmental resources to be among the most important strategies. Our results demonstrate the importance of considering the whole vulnerability context when evaluating the importance of environmental coping strategies, in order to avoid underestimating the contribution made by environmental resources to the resilience of rural livelihoods.
ISSN:0305-750X
1873-5991
DOI:10.1016/j.worlddev.2019.104741