Abstract

Communal cattle farming has remained the mainstay of many rural livelihoods in Zimbabwe and beyond. This was an enterprise that has stood the test of time, despite the increasing threats from drought shocks in the last two decades in Southern Africa. Prevalence of weather-related shocks was of concern, which had not galvanised communal farmers to actively engage in disaster risk reduction (DRR) initiatives in order to shield cattle from the negative effects of drought. In light of this development, this article examined the complexities of the involvement of communal farmers in DRR strategies to reduce the risk posed by drought on livestock in rural Umzingwane. This article used Arnstein’s Ladder of Participation to discern and generate insights on ways to promote the involvement of poor or vulnerable farmers or ‘have-nots’ in drought mitigation processes. This study adopted the descriptive survey design with 180 structured questionnaires administered to communal cattle farmers. Besides in-depth interviews, focus group discussions were held to examine the contributions of relevant stakeholders in driving the drought risk reduction agenda involving communal cattle farmers. This study revealed that limited investment options seriously affected farmers’ abilities to participate in drought risk reduction processes. Furthermore, farmers’ low-income levels and lack of well-defined drought risk reduction pathways did not offer the impetus to invest accordingly in drought mitigation. This article accentuated that successful drought risk reduction process were unachievable without the voice of the affected. Hence, development agencies should exceed placation and invest in strategies that propped philosophies of the vulnerable.

Highlights

  • Community renewal has generated interest in disaster risk reduction (DRR), tilting the focus towards redistributing decision-making power as a key constituent for significant participation in humanitarian and development context

  • This section focuses on gender and age of respondents as well as education, cattle sales and loss incurred by communal farmers, engagement preferences and challenges encountered in participating in drought risk reduction

  • The 41–50 group signifies the age at which farmers start to build their cattle herd and subsequently decide on DRR strategies to adopt, whilst the 81–90 age group reflects a constituency that relies heavily on previous experiences and indigenous knowledge systems and may at times be impervious to scientific DRR strategies

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Summary

Introduction

Community renewal has generated interest in disaster risk reduction (DRR), tilting the focus towards redistributing decision-making power as a key constituent for significant participation in humanitarian and development context. Whilst the study area has central government, non-governmental organisations and local institutions with a mandate to champion the drought risk reduction discourse, the communal cattle farming community remains vulnerable to drought shocks. This exposes existing gaps in promoting the championing of context-specific drought risk interventions for the affected ‘havenots’. To this end, this article sought to examine the role and participation of ‘have-nots’ in cattle drought risk reduction in Umzingwane. ‘Have-nots’ in this context entail drought-vulnerable farmers with limited space to advance their cattle management agenda, whilst communal farmer describes individuals practicing predominantly subsistence agriculture

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