2006
DOI: 10.3354/cr033081
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Ethnographic and participatory approaches to research on farmers’ responses to climate predictions

Abstract: This article synthesizes the state of the art in the application of ethnographic and participatory methods in climate application research. The review focuses on 2 aspects: (1) the cognitive and cultural landscape in which farmers' understanding of climate and climate information is grounded and (2) the decision-making processes and environment which shape farmers' adaptive strategies. The first part analyzes methods to elicit how farmers perceive and predict climate events and how these perspectives relate to… Show more

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Cited by 197 publications
(136 citation statements)
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References 94 publications
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“…Roncoli, 2006) to this rather gloomy picture in terms of the effects of vulnerability on the status of married women, as Whitehead and Kabeer (2001) point out, despite women's central role in production processes in Africa, intra-household gender relations reflect a host of inequalities, taken for granted by both communities and researchers. In the context of stress and scarcity, when policy responses fail to take account of changing gender roles and domestic arrangements, it is not surprising to find women and men renegotiating marriage and kinship relations, to support processes of adaptation.…”
Section: 2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Roncoli, 2006) to this rather gloomy picture in terms of the effects of vulnerability on the status of married women, as Whitehead and Kabeer (2001) point out, despite women's central role in production processes in Africa, intra-household gender relations reflect a host of inequalities, taken for granted by both communities and researchers. In the context of stress and scarcity, when policy responses fail to take account of changing gender roles and domestic arrangements, it is not surprising to find women and men renegotiating marriage and kinship relations, to support processes of adaptation.…”
Section: 2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of seasonal climate forecasts based on indigenous knowledge is a traditional strategy of West African farmers to reduce climate risks on their crop yields (Roncoli, 2006;Nyong, Adesina, & Osman, 2007). This traditional seasonal climate forecast, operating as an endogenous system of climate information, guides farmers to make choices on plots to cultivate, types of crop varieties and planting date.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The complementarities of the two kinds of knowledge were differently explored in studies concerned with climate variability. Indeed, indigenous knowledge on climate variability was valorized rather for its prospective value in seasonal rainfall forecasting (Orlove et al 2000, Roncoli et al 2002, Vogel and O'Brien 2003, Roncoli 2006) than for its accuracy in identifying past extreme climatic events as indigenous people experienced them. However, assessing the accuracy of the indigenous climate knowledge remains a largely untapped area (Huntington et al 2004, Gearheard et al 2010.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%