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The role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change: A case study of Buffeljagsbaai, South Africa

Coastal communities are dependent on marine resources which provide their households with food and income. Fishing communities are considered the poorest of the poor and face many challenges that render them vulnerable. Climate change further exacerbates these challenges making fishing communities a...

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Main Author: Ismail, Alveena Aziz
Other Authors: Mbatha, Philile
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Ismail, Alveena Aziz
author2 Mbatha, Philile
author_browse Ismail, Alveena Aziz
Mbatha, Philile
author_facet Mbatha, Philile
Ismail, Alveena Aziz
author_sort Ismail, Alveena Aziz
collection Thesis
description Coastal communities are dependent on marine resources which provide their households with food and income. Fishing communities are considered the poorest of the poor and face many challenges that render them vulnerable. Climate change further exacerbates these challenges making fishing communities amongst the most vulnerable groups to coastalrelated risks including sea-level rise and extreme weather events. Often, these fishing communities are neglected and excluded from policies and decisions concerning coastal and fisheries management as well as climate change adaptation. Management is often fragmented across institutions that are mandated to govern coastal resources and coastal areas. The study uses Buffeljagsbaai as a case study lens to understand the nature of coastal risks faced by marginalized coastal communities on the south west coast of the Western Cape Province in South Africa. It investigates how coastal risks related to climatic, social and economic factors affect livelihoods and examines the roles of various institutions in responding to, engaging with, and supporting the Buffeljagsbaai community as they confront coastal risks. Qualitative data collection methods were used to address the objectives of this study and included semi-structured interviews with community members and officials in relevant government institutions, as well as facilitated a community focus group discussions and participant observation. The analysis revealed coastal- related risks have a major impact on the livelihoods of coastal communities. However, over time, the community has diversified their livelihoods in order to adapt to these risks. Findings reveal that women in the case study site have developed more diverse livelihoods making them more resilient to climate change than the fishermen, who are largely dependent on fishing and are consequently more vulnerable to coastal- related risks. In addition, the community has not been given access to coastal resources and where permits have been issued, these have many restrictions. As a result, the community has resorted to “poaching” to provide food and an income for their households. The government institutions that are responsible for various aspects of resource management, disaster risk reduction, poverty alleviation and socio-economic development, are largely absent in the community. The lack of government presence in and support to this community, also referred to as limited statehood, has led to distrust and the reliance on non-governmental organisations and other stakeholders to fill this gap.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36497 The role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change: A case study of Buffeljagsbaai, South Africa Ismail, Alveena Aziz Mbatha, Philile Sowman, Merle Environmental and Geographical Science Department Coastal communities are dependent on marine resources which provide their households with food and income. Fishing communities are considered the poorest of the poor and face many challenges that render them vulnerable. Climate change further exacerbates these challenges making fishing communities amongst the most vulnerable groups to coastalrelated risks including sea-level rise and extreme weather events. Often, these fishing communities are neglected and excluded from policies and decisions concerning coastal and fisheries management as well as climate change adaptation. Management is often fragmented across institutions that are mandated to govern coastal resources and coastal areas. The study uses Buffeljagsbaai as a case study lens to understand the nature of coastal risks faced by marginalized coastal communities on the south west coast of the Western Cape Province in South Africa. It investigates how coastal risks related to climatic, social and economic factors affect livelihoods and examines the roles of various institutions in responding to, engaging with, and supporting the Buffeljagsbaai community as they confront coastal risks. Qualitative data collection methods were used to address the objectives of this study and included semi-structured interviews with community members and officials in relevant government institutions, as well as facilitated a community focus group discussions and participant observation. The analysis revealed coastal- related risks have a major impact on the livelihoods of coastal communities. However, over time, the community has diversified their livelihoods in order to adapt to these risks. Findings reveal that women in the case study site have developed more diverse livelihoods making them more resilient to climate change than the fishermen, who are largely dependent on fishing and are consequently more vulnerable to coastal- related risks. In addition, the community has not been given access to coastal resources and where permits have been issued, these have many restrictions. As a result, the community has resorted to “poaching” to provide food and an income for their households. The government institutions that are responsible for various aspects of resource management, disaster risk reduction, poverty alleviation and socio-economic development, are largely absent in the community. The lack of government presence in and support to this community, also referred to as limited statehood, has led to distrust and the reliance on non-governmental organisations and other stakeholders to fill this gap. 2022-06-22T13:14:26Z 2022-06-22T13:14:26Z 2022 2022-06-22T12:53:22Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36497 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Environmental and Geographical Science Department
Ismail, Alveena Aziz
The role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change: A case study of Buffeljagsbaai, South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change: A case study of Buffeljagsbaai, South Africa
title_full The role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change: A case study of Buffeljagsbaai, South Africa
title_fullStr The role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change: A case study of Buffeljagsbaai, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change: A case study of Buffeljagsbaai, South Africa
title_short The role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change: A case study of Buffeljagsbaai, South Africa
title_sort role of institutions in supporting coastal communities at risk from climate change a case study of buffeljagsbaai south africa
topic Environmental and Geographical Science Department
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36497
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