‘The weather is like the game we play’: Coping and adaptation strategies for extreme weather events among ethnic minority groups in upland northern Vietnam

Type Journal Article - Asia Pacific Viewpoint
Title ‘The weather is like the game we play’: Coping and adaptation strategies for extreme weather events among ethnic minority groups in upland northern Vietnam
Author(s)
Volume 57
Issue 3
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2016
Page numbers 351-364
URL http://wp.geog.mcgill.ca/seamassif/files/2014/09/Delisle-and-Turner-2016-The-weather-is-like-a-game-​we-play.-APV-Early-View.pdf
Abstract
The Vietnamese government, along with country-based non-government organisations, are well aware
of the vulnerability of Vietnam’s coastal and low-lying areas to extreme weather events. Yet scant attention has been
paid to extreme weather hazards affecting Vietnam’s northern mountainous regions and the livelihoods of ethnic
minority farmers residing there. Building on conceptual tools from vulnerability, food security and sustainable
livelihoods literatures, we examine the impacts of extreme weather, namely drought and severe cold spells, in
Vietnam’s northern uplands. We explore the degree to which these events impact the livelihood portfolios and food
security of ethnic minority farmers, and examine the coping strategies households initiate, based on their ecological
knowledge as well as recent market integration initiatives. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with ethnic minority
Hmong and Yao semi-subsistence households undertaken yearly from 2012 to 2014, we demonstrate that financial
capital – now more central to households’ livelihoods than ever before due to state-sponsored agricultural intensification
– is an important means for farmers to cope with extreme weather events. Yet concurrently, longstanding culturally
rooted social capital, networks and ties remain critical. Nonetheless, short- and long-term adaptation is not widespread,
leading us to investigate possible explanations.

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