Show simple item record

Increasing social-ecological resilience within small-scale agriculture in conflict-affected Guatemala

Author: Hellin, J.J.
Author: Ratner, B.D.
Author: Meinzen-Dick, R.
Author: Lopez-Ridaura, S.
Year: 2018
ISSN: 1708-3087
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10883/19662
Abstract: Climate change scenarios suggest largely detrimental impacts on agricultural production from a deterioration of renewable natural resources. Over the last 15 years, a new field of research has focused on the interactions between climate and conflict risk, particularly as it relates to competition over natural resources and livelihoods. Within this field, there has been less attention to the potential for resource competition to be managed in ways that yield greater cooperation, local adaptation capacity, social-ecological resilience, and conflict mitigation or prevention. The challenge of increasing social-ecological resilience in small-scale agriculture is particularly acute in the socioeconomically and agroecologically marginalized Western Highlands of Guatemala. Not only is climate change a threat to agriculture in this region, but adaptation strategies are challenged by the context of a society torn apart by decades of violent conflict. Indeed, the largely indigenous population in the Western Highlands has suffered widespread discrimination for centuries. The armed conflict has left a legacy of a deeply divided society, with communities often suspicious of outsider interventions and in many cases with neighbors pitted against each other. We use the example of the Buena Milpa agricultural development project to demonstrate how grassroots approaches to collective action, conflict prevention, and social-ecological resilience, linking local stakeholder dynamics to the broader institutional and governance context, can bear fruit amidst postconflict development challenges. Examples of microwatershed management and conservation of local maize varieties illustrate opportunities to foster community-level climate adaptation strategies within small-scale farming systems even in deeply divided societies.
Format: PDF
Language: English
Publisher: Resilience Alliance
Copyright: CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose.
Type: Article
Country focus: Guatemala
Place of Publication: Canada
Issue: 3, art. 5
Volume: 23
DOI: 10.5751/ES-10250-230305
Country of Focus: GUATEMALA
Country of Focus: MEXICO
Agrovoc: AGRICULTURE
Agrovoc: CLIMATE CHANGE
Agrovoc: RESILIENCE
Agrovoc: CONFLICTS
Agrovoc: COLLECTIVE ACTION
Journal: Ecology and Society


Files in this item

Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • Sustainable Intensification
    Sustainable intensification agriculture including topics on cropping systems, agronomy, soil, mechanization, precision agriculture, etc.

Show simple item record