Journal
JASSS-THE JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL SOCIETIES AND SOCIAL SIMULATION
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages -Publisher
J A S S S
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3812
Keywords
Climate Change Adaptation; Agent-Based Modeling; Socio-Cognitive Behavior
Categories
Funding
- US National Science Foundation through a Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement (NSF-DDRI) grant [112348]
- Cyber-Enabled Discovery and Innovation (CDI) Program [IIS-1125171]
- Office of Naval Research (ONR) under a Multi-disciplinary University Research Initiative grant [N 00014-08-1-092]
- Center for Social Complexity at George Mason University
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Future climate change is expected to have greater impacts on societies whose livelihoods rely on subsistence agricultural systems. Adaptation is essential for mitigating adverse effects of climate change, to sustain rural livelihoods and ensure future food security. We present an agent-based model, called OMOLAND-CA, which explores the impact of climate change on the adaptive capacity of rural communities in the South Omo Zone of Ethiopia. The purpose of the model is to answer research questions on the resilience and adaptive capacity of rural households with respect to variations in climate, socioeconomic factors, and land-use at the local level. Our model explicitly represents the socio-cognitive behavior of rural households toward climate change and resource flows that prompt agents to diversify their production strategy under different climatic conditions. Results from the model show that successive episodes of extreme events (e.g., droughts) affect the adaptive capacity of households, causing them to migrate from the region. Nonetheless, rural communities in the South Omo Zone, and in the model, manage to endure in spite of such harsh climatic change conditions.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available