Type | Report |
Title | Assessing women’s coping strategies with respect to water variability and vulnerability to improve water accessibility in the Oyo North region, Nigeria |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
URL | http://start.org/download/accfp/adeniji-final.pdf |
Abstract | This study aims at assessing women’s coping strategies with water variability and vulnerability with overall aim at improving access to water in Oyo North Region, Nigeria. The study made use of case study design using both socio economic characteristics and metrological data linking how low and fluctuating precipitation impacts water supply shortages for domestic purposes. A total of 397 structured questionnaires were administered in three case study communities. Key informant interviews were carried out with local institutions in the water sectors while Focus Group Discussions were also organized for men and women seperately. Descriptive and Inferential analyses are done with the use of SPSS software based on Climate Vulnerability Index (CVI) and Anova model for spatial analysis in order to detremine factors that influence the choice of coping strategies. Climate variability and its impacts on local water system is evident in reduction of number of raining days and the implication of it on climate sensitive water resources. The challenge is not about the annual mean precipitation value but the distribution of it across the seasons of the year. The research findings show that Climate Vulnerability Index in the case study communities varied in that informal neighbourhoods are more vulnerable than formal and that vulnerability increases as one move to a more densely poor populated built environment. Specifically, residents in the informal areas of Iseyin have the highest CVI value of 0.4193, followed by informal housing in Okeho with CVI of 0.4745. The least vulnerable community is the formal neighbourhood of Shaki, which has the CVI value of 0.5806. Awareness on climate change is shaped by indigenous knowledge which contributes 43.8%. The eight socio-economic (independent variables) jointly explain 20.7% (R2 ) of the total variation in the factors that influence the choice of coping strategies for water accessibility in the study area while education status alone explains 76% of factors that determine the choice of coping strategies which is followed by household size which explains only 9.7%. The calculated ANOVA (F value) of 6.002 is greater than the F table value indicates that the regression result is significant. At the institutional level, no specific documentation and policy guidelines on climate issues in terms forecast, risk assessment, warning systems and adaptation issues. Adaptive water management to improve accessibility should set priority in addressing multi dimension of developmental end environmental stressor such as poverty, bad governance, institutional failure which have the capacity to reinforce the impacts of climate variation and its impacts on local water systems. |
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