4.6 Article

Assessing Livelihood Vulnerability of Minority Ethnic Groups to Climate Change: A Case Study from the Northwest Mountainous Regions of Vietnam

期刊

SUSTAINABILITY
卷 13, 期 13, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13137106

关键词

livelihood vulnerability; agricultural dependency; climate change

资金

  1. USQ-VIED PhD Scholarship from the Vietnamese Government
  2. University of Southern Queensland (USQ)
  3. German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Climate variability, climate change, and extreme events can exacerbate the vulnerability of people heavily reliant on agriculture, particularly women, the poor, and ethnic minority groups. A study in Son La province, one of the poorest provinces in Vietnam, found that vulnerability among smallholder farmers from different ethnic groups varied, with two groups showing higher vulnerability in livelihood strategies, health, water resources, housing and land, and social networks. Targeted interventions are needed to address the vulnerability of these ethnic communities.
Climate variability, climate change, and extreme events can compound the vulnerability of people heavily reliant on agriculture. Those with intersecting disadvantages, such as women, the poor, and ethnic minority groups, may be particularly affected. Understanding and assessing diverse vulnerabilities, especially those related to ethnicity, are therefore potentially important to the development of policies and programs aimed at enabling adaptation in such groups. This study uses a livelihood vulnerability index (LVI) method, along with qualitative data analysis, to compare the vulnerability of different smallholder farmers in Son La province, one of the poorest provinces in Vietnam. Data were collected from 240 households, representing four minority ethnic groups. The results indicated that household vulnerability is influenced by factors such as income diversity, debt, organizational membership, support from and awareness by local authorities, access to health services, water resources, and location. Results revealed that two of the ethnic groups' households were, on average, more vulnerable, particularly regarding livelihood strategies, health, water, housing and productive land, and social network items when compared to the other two ethnic groups. The study shows the need for targeted interventions to reduce the vulnerability of these and similarly placed small ethnic communities.

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