Abstract

ABSTRACT This study investigates whether relocating rural communities from areas exposed to high climatic risks can be transformative and in what ways. Using the Rweru Model Green Village as a case study and drawing on regional political ecology and sustainable livelihoods framework, the study shows that climate-related resettlement as an act of transformation is mediated by development vision and policies, multi-scalar dynamics, and micro-politics. Our semi-structured interviews with households resettled in the Rweru village revealed the double-edged nature of transformation. Resettlement was shown to increase access to modern facilities and social services for two remote island communities. However, new and potentially severe livelihood constraints emerged due to limited natural and financial capital, intra-community inequities, and microclimate variations between the origin and resettlement sites. These findings suggest that resettlement as a form of transformative adaptation requires careful navigation of the interplay between community expectations, government development plans, and shifts in the local, regional, and global political economy.

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