Journal
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
Volume 69, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102289
Keywords
Agency; Everyday; Travel; Floods; Farming; Mozambique
Categories
Funding
- British Academy Small Research Grant [SG142248]
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This paper sheds light on the often overlooked role of human agency in the relationship between human mobility and environmental variability. It highlights the importance of perception, action, and decision-making in everyday life, showcasing how people's daily routes are shaped by encounters with physical obstacles and other individuals. Additionally, it emphasizes the challenges faced by mobile, rural livelihoods in responding to environmental change and the gradual accumulation of risks.
Despite growing interest in the relationship between human mobility and environmental variability and change in recent years, there is relatively little understanding of the role of human agency within this nexus. This paper helps to address this knowledge gap by illuminating the role of perception, action and decision-making in the everyday. Using an innovative walking methodology, it presents an empirical case study of regularised farmers' movements in and out of a floodplain during the rainy season in central Mozambique to show how people's dayto-day routes are continuously reproduced through meaningful encounters and engagements with physical obstacles and other people. The paper demonstrates how a concern with everyday mobility highlights people's dayto-day capacities to respond to environmental variability and change while also drawing attention to the challenges associated with the gradual accumulation of risk in mobile, rural livelihoods.
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