Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Doctor of Philosophy in Geography |
Title | Environmentally-induced deprivation and mitigation measures of rural dwellers in Borno state, Nigeria |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
Abstract | The aim of the study is to examine the pattern and process of environmentally-induced deprivation among rural dwellers and the policy initiatives for its mitigation in rural areas of Borno State. The specific objectives of the study are to: (i) identify the environmental factors that account for variation in rural deprivation; (ii)delineate the pattern of environmentallyinduced deprivation; (iii)explain how environmental factors engender deprivation; and (iv) identify the coping strategies of rural inhabitants for mitigating deprivation. To achieve the objectives, the major data required in addition to the socio-demographic characteristics of the respondents include the effects of physical and social elements such as temperature, high rainfall, soil fertility, electricity, health facilities, transportation on the respondents; the varied manifestation of these phenomena in different households across the sampled villages in selected local government areas; how physical and social elements interact to incite deprivation; and, the different policy intervention and rural people’s strategies for ameliorating deprivation. Primary sources of data were questionnaire survey and interview schedules and participatory rural appraisal techniques. Secondary data such as number of hospital beds, number of beneficiaries of government’s aids, numbers of wells and boreholes per LGA were extracted from Borno State statistical yearbooks and Borno State Emergency Relief Agency. The variables examined include yield of staple crops, loss of livestock, reduced fish catch, access to biomass resources, destruction from flood, destruction from storm, conflict over environmental resources, access to hygienic water supply, access to electricity, health-care and transport infrastructure. Adopting a systematic sampling technique, data were gathered from 630 respondents from 9 LGAs and 63 rural settlements using. PRA techniques were also employed with 300 participants. Focus group discussions and force-field analysis through a local game called “Na daya a tapa” were used to identify elements that provoke and mitigate deprivation. Percentage and tabulation were used for summarizing data on socioeconomic attributes and effects of environmental factors on basic needs of respondents. Factor analysis was used to reduce the dataset and the loadings used to map the pattern of deprivation based on settlements while the composite values of Z-score analysis were used to delineate the pattern of deprivation based on LGAs. iv The study reveals that the elements with significant impact on deprivation are water, soil, pest and diseases, electricity, transport facilities and health infrastructures. For instance about 80.79% of the respondents suffered hunger from reduced harvest of staple crops, while another 42.85% experience loss of shelter from ravages of flood, and 44.9% suffered deprivation from storm. As high as 77.3% of respondents did not have access to electricity, also 86.1% did not have access to 50 litres of water per capita day. Also, a high correlation was observed between ecological characteristics of rural areas such as low rainfall, rugged relief, poor soil and so on and deprivation of basic needs of life. The factor loadings revealed an interconnection between deprivation and four clusters of environmental factors labeled as natural disaster index of deprivation, population pressure and physical ecology factors, social and physical infrastructure factor and utility infrastructure index of rural deprivation. These four clusters account for 84.53% of the total variance. An observable trend is that rural dwellers in sampled settlements in Borno North are deprived suffer relative deprivation from poor harvest of staple crops, reduced fish catch, and, conflict over resources. In contrast, rural dwellers from sampled settlements in Borno South experience deprivation largely from impact of flood, rugged terrain, lack of electricity, inaccessibility to health facilities and transport infrastructure. By and large, this marked disparity underscores the explanation of political economy theory and ecological incapacity as espoused by the ecosystem theory. The major adaptive strategies were praying to God, migration, wild food harvesting and “soil on rock” farming. On the whole, deprivation suffered by rural dwellers outweighs the policy and adaptive strategies at mitigating them. Based on the findings, some of the recommendations were the need to include drought, resource depletion, and conflict over environmental resources in disasters for which government should provide relief, a complete overhauling of rural infrastructure, and empowering rural dwellers on participatory environmental management The foregoing leads to the conclusion that the environment in the diverse ways it provoke deprivation can no longer be disregarded in policies for improving the quality of life at the local level towards reducing the effects of socio-spatial disadvantages and environmental burdens borne by rural dwellers |
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