Abstract

Many African countries face escalating challenges of increasing disaster risk and anticipated impacts of climate change. Although disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) are tightly linked and comprising virtually identical practices in vulnerable countries in Southern Africa, research has identified parallel governance structures across the region. This study applied comparative case study research, based on 27 semi-structured interviews, to investigate the reasons for and effects of such parallel structures for DRR and CCA in Botswana, Mozambique, the Seychelles, Tanzania and Zambia. It revealed overwhelmingly negative effects in terms of unclear mandates and leadership, uncoordinated efforts, duplication of efforts, suboptimal use of resources and competition over resources and control. The study identified both external reasons for the parallel structures, in terms of global or international initiatives or incentives, and internal reasons, with regard to the history and quality of the governance structures. Although the identified negative effects are common to a range of complex nexuses, there is a clear distinction with the DRR–CCA nexus comprising virtually indistinguishable practices in Southern Africa. There is, as such, no practical reason for keeping them apart. The parallel structures for DRR and CCA are instead the result of pervasive institutionalisation across the region, driven by coercive, mimetic and normative pressures coming from both within and abroad. Although much point to the difficulties of changing the studied institutional arrangements, these parallel structures for DRR and CCA must be addressed if the populations in Southern Africa are to enjoy safety and sustainable development.

Highlights

  • Many African countries have seen rapid development in recent decades (UNDP 2019), our oldest inhabited continent is facing mounting challenges in terms of increasing disaster risk and anticipated impacts of climate change (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPCC] 2012)

  • The first part of the results from the study concerns the reasons for establishing the parallel structures for disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) existing in the five countries at the time of data collection

  • The results suggest an important role of professional cultures in the establishment of parallel governance structures for DRR and CCA in at least two ways: firstly in the sense of emphasising the disaster response-oriented history of the governance structures for DRR, which still determined much of their current professional cultures according to some participants, and secondly in suggesting innate differences in professional cultures between DRR and CCA, in which the former is seen as hands-on and driven by local needs and the latter as more policy oriented and driven by global concerns

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Summary

Introduction

Many African countries have seen rapid development in recent decades (UNDP 2019), our oldest inhabited continent is facing mounting challenges in terms of increasing disaster risk and anticipated impacts of climate change (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPCC] 2012). The last decades have seen a sharp increase in the interest in disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) of both African governments (Van Niekerk 2015; Van Niekerk & Coetzee 2012) and the international community (Becker 2014; Schipper 2009). Influential definitions of CCA include potential benefits of climate change (IPCC 2014), adapting to the potential negative impacts of climate change is by far the main focus (Satterthwaite et al 2009), in Southern Africa (Becker, Abrahamsson & Hagelsteen 2013), making CCA more or less a part of DRR in practice (Becker 2014; Mercer 2010; Mitchell & Van Aalst 2008). Regardless of what can be described as a general but somewhat strained contemporary agreement of significant overlaps between DRR and CCA, both conceptually and practically, research shows that parallel structures have been created for the two in many countries in Southern Africa (Becker et al 2013; Nemakonde 2016; Van Niekerk 2015)

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