Wetland Management and Sustainable Livelihoods in Africa
Submitting Institution
University of WorcesterUnit of Assessment
Geography, Environmental Studies and ArchaeologySummary Impact Type
EnvironmentalResearch Subject Area(s)
Studies In Human Society: Policy and Administration, Sociology
Summary of the impact
Dr Alan Dixon's research, undertaken in East and Southern Africa, has
examined how local people develop wetland management knowledge, and how
local institutional arrangements facilitate wetland management that
balances livelihood needs with the maintenance of ecosystem services. In
Ethiopia, research findings have been applied by the Ethio-Wetlands and
Natural Resources Association, enhancing the livelihoods of 2000+
households. In Malawi and Zambia, the `Striking a Balance' project
implemented wetland-catchment management initiatives with 300+ households,
alleviating poverty amongst local communities. On-going research and field
implementation activities continue to inform the wetland-livelihoods
policy-making agenda of governments and local and international NGOs.
Underpinning research
Context
This case study is based on the work of Dr Alan Dixon (2007-present).
Dixon is a research consultant for Wetland Action, a not-for-profit
European Economic Interest Grouping established to facilitate knowledge
exchange between academic research and field implementation capacity
within the arena of sustainable wetland management. It engages in applied
research and implementation projects that seek to disseminate, integrate
and apply the lessons emerging from academic research. Some fieldwork
underpinning the research highlighted below was conducted by Dr Dixon
prior to this REF period at different academic institutions. However, it
is the continuation and extension of that research and investigation after
2007, drawing upon empirical data, that continues to generate new insights
to incorporate and apply in Wetland Action consultancy and implementation
projects up to the present day.
Research insights and findings
This area of research originated as a response to concerns about wetland
over-exploitation in Ethiopia identified by the EU-funded Ethiopian
Wetlands Research Programme (1997-2000), where wetlands play a critical
role in the development needs of local people. It explored whether these
concerns were justified by examining local peoples' understanding of
wetland management, highlighting the ways in which detailed wetland
knowledge informs sustainable management practices that balance livelihood
needs with the maintenance of ecosystem services. Subsequent research
funded by the British Academy (2001-2002) examined how wetland knowledge
evolves over time amongst local communities, and how different mechanisms
of knowledge acquisition contribute to adaptive capacity and help build
resilience within wetland socio-ecological systems. In 2003, ESRC funded
research focused specifically on the role of community-based local wetland
management institutions (a proxy for social capital) in sustaining
environmental and development benefits from wetlands. Preliminary analysis
identified the characteristics of both strong and weak local institutions,
where the former were found to be an essential prerequisite to effective
and sustainable wetland management.
Analysis of the extensive qualitative dataset provided by the original
fieldwork has continued at the University of Worcester since 2007 (References
1-4), providing new interpretations of the people-wetlands
management nexus. The ideas generated have been published widely, but have
also informed and driven a range of applied research, consultancy and
field implementation projects that have influenced wetland management
policy-making and led to improvements in the livelihoods of wetland-using
communities in Africa. In particular:
- Wetland Action's `Striking a Balance' (SAB) project in Malawi (2005 -
2008) incorporated lessons emerging from research in building local
institutional capacity for wetland management within communities
(further field research in 2008 drew out more lessons from this
practical implementation experience) (Reference 1);
- The FAO's Guidelines for Agriculture-Wetland Interactions (GAWI)
project (2008), led by Wetland Action, included a meta-analysis of the
wetland management / livelihoods literature (Reference 4, Grant a);
- Between 2008-2009, research examined the adaptive capacity of local
wetland management institutions to increasing pressure on wetland-based
livelihoods in Ethiopia caused by wild vertebrate crop raiding (Reference
2);
- University of Worcester funded research (2012) examined the
longer-term efficacy of SAB and identified local wetland institutional
capacity building initiatives which have subsequently informed DFID
DISCOVER activities in Malawi (Grant b).
References to the research
1. Wood, AP, Dixon, AB & McCartney, M (eds.) (2013) Wetland
Management and Sustainable Livelihoods in Africa. Earthscan, London.
3. Maconachie, R, Dixon, AB & Wood, AP (2009)
Decentralization and local institutional arrangements for wetland
management in Ethiopia and Sierra Leone. Applied Geography, 29, 2,
p269-279. DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2008.08.003.
4. Dixon, AB, Wood, AP, Finlayson, M & van Halsema, GE (2008)
Exploring agriculture—wetland interactions: a framework for analysis. In:
Wood, A P and van Halsema, GE (Eds.) Scoping Agriculture-Wetland
Interactions: towards a sustainable multiple response strategy. FAO,
Rome. p5-28. [ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/011/i0314e/i0314e.pdf]
Grants
a) Local institutional arrangements for wetland management in Zambia and
Malawi, 2008-2009 Wetland Action, £4421.
b) Institutional arrangements for wetland management in Malawi, 2012,
University of Worcester Project Leave Scheme, £1900.
c) Training on Principles and Practices around the Wetland Functional
Landscape Approach, 2012, Self Help Africa / Wetland Action, £4560.
The University is confident that the research meets the 2* quality
threshold. Reference 3 is returned to UoA17 in REF2014 as "Dixon1". All
references have been subject to a university review process to ascertain
their quality.
Details of the impact
Understanding the relationship between local people and wetlands
throughout Africa is a critical pre-requisite to the implementation of
effective wetland management strategies that sustain peoples' livelihood
needs alongside ecosystem services. The applied nature of the research (in
terms of identifying lessons for sustainable wetland management) has meant
that it has been conducted in consultation and collaboration with a range
of end-use stakeholders, including local and international NGOs (see
below), who have subsequently incorporated the findings and lessons
learned into their own field projects. The impact is threefold. The
research has:
- informed field project design and subsequent policy-making amongst
NGOs and government;
- had a direct impact on the livelihoods of project beneficiaries, where
applied;
- informed the broader wetlands-livelihoods policy agenda.
Three specific examples follow.
A. Community-based wetland management capacity building in Ethiopia
Dixon and Wetland Action have a long-standing collaborative relationship
with the Ethio-Wetlands and Natural Association (EWNRA). The research on
local wetland management institutions was undertaken collaboratively with
EWNRA and the findings of this research subsequently informed a range of
successive field implementation projects (Sources 1-4). In
particular, a core aim of the Wichi Integrated Wetland and Watershed
Natural Resources Management Project implemented in western Ethiopia (SIDA
funded, 2005 - 2008) was to empower community-based local institutions for
natural resource management (Sources 1, 2). The research has had
considerable significance and reach. In addition to direct livelihood
development and water security interventions that benefited over 2000
households in the area, over 50 local institution members were trained in
watershed-wetland management. An impact study report from 2009 suggested
that people have experienced a significant improvement in livelihood
security and wetland environmental conditions since the start of the
project (Source 1). Further collaborative analysis of the project
experiences (2011-2012) have recently been published in an Earthscan book
(Source 3).
B. Striking a Balance
The Striking a Balance (SAB) project was funded by Wetlands International
and implemented by Wetland Action (with local partners) between 2006-2008
in Zambia and Malawi (Source 5). The project sought to incorporate
many of the lessons and findings from the Ethiopian wetlands work relating
to local knowledge and community-based local institutions in seeking to
sustain the ecosystem and livelihood benefits from seasonal wetlands
through the implementation of a Functional Landscape Approach (FLA). Key
research impacts here include the participatory development of wetland and
catchment conservation measures, and local institutional arrangements for
managing wetlands and catchments (Village Natural Resource Management
Committees). The SAB final project report (2009: Source 6)
estimates that these have led to a significant reduction in poverty
(30-60% increase in crop yields from wetlands) among the 312 households
involved, a development which has been facilitated by the project's
investment in building social, institutional and natural capital at the
community level - a direct consequence of Wetland Action's long-term
research expertise in these areas. A one year extension to the SAB project
in Malawi, which developed the FLA further, was funded by Wetlands
International (2009-2010) and continues to be promoted as part of their
Wetlands and Poverty Reduction Project (Sources 7, 8).
In an example of the cyclical nature of research-implementation linkages,
the SAB project itself has subsequently stimulated further academic
research; in 2012 Dr Dixon received funding to explore the legacy of the
SAB intervention and, in particular, the lessons learned from the local
institutional capacity building component of the project (Source 7).
C. Wetlands-Livelihoods Policy Agenda
There is evidence of an impact of this research on the wider wetlands
policy-making agenda. For example:
- In 2012, the 11th meeting of the Conference of the
Contracting Parties to the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands of
International importance formally recognized the relevance of the GAWI
project in supporting the implementation of Resolution VIII.3. This
urges contracting parties to acknowledge the need for appropriate
implementation of agricultural practices and policies that are
compatible with wetland conservation and sustainable use goals
(Resolution XI.15) (Source 9).
- Both the Ramsar Handbook (2010) (http://www.ramsar.org/pdf/lib/hbk4-01.pdf)
and the Netherlands based NGO Wetlands International continue to cite
the SAB project as an example of how wetlands can contribute to poverty
reduction (Source 8).
- The findings and field experiences of the SAB project have been
recognised as good practice in wetland-catchment management and are
being incorporated into the work of two consortia in Malawi funded by
DFID: the Enhancing Community Resilience Programme (ECRP) led by
Christian Aid and the Developing Innovative Solutions with Communities
to Overcome Vulnerability through Enhanced Resilience (DISCOVER) led by
Concern Universal. In 2012, Dr Dixon provided consultancy services to
the latter, running a training workshop for field staff and providing an
assessment of the application of the SAB approach to field sites in
northern Malawi (Source 7, 10).
Sources to corroborate the impact
- EWNRA (2009) An Impact Study of Wichi Integrated Wetland-Watershed
Management Project, Metu Woreda, Illubabor Zone of Oromia Regional
State. Unpublished Report, EWNRA, Addis Ababa. http://www.wetlandaction.org/wp-content/uploads/EWNRA-2009-An-Impact-study-of-Wichi-integrated-wetland-watershed-management-project.pdf
- PHE Ethiopia (2012) Integrated Practical Success Stories and
Challenges from the Field: Ethio Wetlands and Natural Resources
Association. PHE Ethiopia Consortium, Addis Ababa.
http://phe-ethiopia.org/pdf/Ethio_wetlands_spotlight.pdf
- Wood, AP, Dixon, AB and McCartney, M (2013) Wetland Management
and Sustainable Livelihoods in Africa. Earthscan, London (Chapter 3:
Malawi; Chapter 4: Ethiopia)
http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9781849714129/
- Statement on research collaboration between Dr Alan Dixon and Afework
Hailu, Director of Ethio-Wetlands and Natural Resources Association,
Ethiopia.
- Dixon, AB, Thawe, P and Sampa, J (2008) Wetland institutions and
sustainable management of natural resources in Zambia and Malawi.
Unpublished Report, Wetland Action
[https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/733/1/SAB_Institutions_Guide_FINAL.pdf
- Wood, AP (2009) Striking a Balance: Maintaining Seasonal Wetlands
& their Livelihood Contributions in Central Southern Africa, Final
Technical Report (Unpublished). Wetland Action: Huddersfield and
Amsterdam. http://www.wetlandaction.org/striking-a-balance-maintaining-seasonal-wetlands-in-central-southern-africa/
- Wood, AP and Dixon, AB (2013) Functional Landscape Approach: Report of
a Training Workshop and Field Review of Sites in Karonga. Unpublished
Report, Wetland Action / University of Huddersfield / University of
Worcester. https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/2303/
- Wetlands International — Sustainable Dambo Management in Malawi
http://wetlands.org/Whatwedo/Ouractions/SustainabledambomanagementinMalawi/tabid/2371/Default.aspx
- Ramsar Convention Resolution XI.15 http://www.ramsar.org/pdf/cop11/dr/cop11-dr15-e-rice.pdf
- Statement on research collaboration between Dr Alan Dixon and Wetland
Action, from Professor Adrian Wood, Director of Wetland Action EEIG,
University of Huddersfield.