Vulnerability of livestock farmers in Southern Kalahari : the case of Mier in Rietfontein, South Africa
Master thesis
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/187897Utgivelsesdato
2013-08-05Metadata
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ABSTRACT
Vulnerability is now highlighted globally. Poverty has been identified as a key contributor to
vulnerability but asset building increases resilience and adaptive capacity. This study examines
the root causes of vulnerability and adaptive capacity of Mier pastoralists by utilizing the
‘sustainable livelihood framework’ and ‘pressure and release’ model. The Mier community fled
British rule in 1865 and migrated from Cape Town to Northern Cape Province in Rietfontein,
south of Kalahari Desert. A mixed methods approach was adopted by utilizing survey, interview
and observation to assess the social system. Household heads were investigated to understand the
distribution and access to resources that contributed to livelihood. This study revealed that
vulnerability of the Mier pastoralist was a result of political and economic factors that reinforced
inequalities. Poor households were more vulnerable, especially women-headed households. The
main cause of vulnerability was unequal distribution of resources. Despite the effect of climate
change and variability in this community, vulnerability was a human-induced phenomenon.