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Unlocking the existing adaptive capacities of women, farmers and businesses in semi-arid areas is key to realizing the SDGs.
Introduction
Semi-arid lands (SALs) in developing countries are high-risk climate change ‘hotspots’ (De Souza et al., Reference De Souza, Kituyi, Harvey, Leone, Murali and Ford2015; Huang et al., Reference Huang, Ji, Xie, Wang, He and Ran2016; Tucker et al., Reference Tucker, Daoud, Oates, Few, Conway, Mtisi and Matheson2015). They occupy over 15% of the earth's land surface (Safriel et al., Reference Safriel, Adeel, Niemeijer, Puigdefabregas, White, Lal, Winslow, Ziedler, Prince, Archer, King, Hassan, Scholes and Ash2005) and are home to approximately one billion people, including some of the poorest and least food secure (Middleton et al., Reference Middleton, Stringer, Goudie and Thomas2011; Tucker et al., Reference Tucker, Daoud, Oates, Few, Conway, Mtisi and Matheson2015). In Africa and Asia, these populations rely heavily on rain-fed agriculture, pastoralism and agricultural processing for their livelihoods, making them particularly exposed to climate and environmental variability. In addition, SALs in these regions are often remote, politically and economically marginalized areas that have limited access to markets, infrastructure and services (Middleton et al., Reference Middleton, Stringer, Goudie and Thomas2011; Thorpe & Maestre, Reference Thorpe and Maestre2015; Tucker et al., Reference Tucker, Daoud, Oates, Few, Conway, Mtisi and Matheson2015). Formal institutions and legal frameworks are typically underdeveloped, with land, water and other resource rights often insecure and unequally distributed.
Climate change will exacerbate the challenges faced by SALs, as global warming trends are expected to be particularly intense in these regions (Huang et al., Reference Huang, Ji, Xie, Wang, He and Ran2016; IPCC, Reference Field, Barros, Dokken, Mach, Mastrandrea, Bilir, M.Chatterjee, Ebi, Estrada, Genova, Girma, Kissel, Levy, MacCracken, Mastrandrea and White2014), with droughts and floods already becoming more severe. This confluence of climate and non-climate risks, combined with broader socio-economic inequalities, means climate hazards will affect poor populations in SALs disproportionately. Yet to date SALs have been given limited attention in international climate policy. This represents a major threat to the pledge within the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda to ‘leave no one behind’, and the Paris Agreement commitment to take into account the urgent and immediate needs of those that are particularly vulnerable to climate change.
In this paper we argue that national governments have underestimated opportunities for climate resilient development in SALs and we revisit and update literatures which highlight ways in which the adaptive capacity of SAL populations has been undermined by current adaptation and development policy and practice. In response, we call for a refocusing on approaches to supporting climate resilience in SALs that build on the opportunities of SALs and concentrate on leveraging the inherent adaptive capacities and flexibility of private actors – women, families, farmers and firms – to cope with and respond to prevailing environmental shocks and weather extremes. This, we argue, requires public provision of business enabling environments that support the full range of private sector actors in SALs to meet the challenges and opportunities of climate change.
Challenging existing development and adaptation policy and practice, we highlight opportunities to pursue a tailored approach to SAL adaptation, to open up more inclusive avenues of development (cf. Manuel-Navarrete & Pelling, Reference Manuel-Navarrete and Pelling2015; Pelling et al., Reference Pelling, Brien and Matyas2015). In so doing we identify opportunities to overcome some of the structural weaknesses that currently contribute to a lack of private investment, undermine important resilience strategies, hinder efforts to develop enabling conditions for private adaptation and limit opportunities to unlock broader resilience in SALs through the private sector.
Our analysis draws on five years of research conducted through the Pathways for Resilience in Semi-arid Economies (PRISE) programme in seven developing countries across West and East Africa, and South and Central Asia, as well as on broader engagement with literatures on climate change adaptation and development policy and practice in SALs.
Existing resilience and adaptive capacity in SALs
SALs are sites of dynamic social, as well as environmental, change. They are characterized by existing adaptive capacities and flexibility within the strategies that households and businesses adopt in the context of climatic and environmental variability, to manage their exposure to risk and maximize their own welfare (de Jode, Reference de Jode2009; Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Hesse et al., Reference Hesse, Anderson, Cotula, Skinner and Toulmin2013; Mortimore & Adams, Reference Mortimore and Adams1999; Mortimore et al., Reference Mortimore, Anderson, Cotula, Davies, Faccer, Hesse, Morton, Nyangena, Skinner and Wolfangel2009). This flexibility in autonomous adaptation behaviour (cf. Fankhauser, Reference Fankhauser2016; Mendelsohn, Reference Mendelsohn2012) can be seen in people adjusting and diversifying their livelihood strategies in response to the marked wet and dry seasons and the shifting availability of resources (Krätli, Reference Krätli2015). It can be seen in the heterogeneity of agricultural production systems and the prevalence of mixed farming systems. And it is frequently shaped by mobility and migration of humans and livestock and wildlife herds (Augustine, Reference Augustine2010; Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Fernandez-Gimenez, Turner, Stammler, Milner-Gulland, Fryxell and Sinclair2011; Opiyo et al., Reference Opiyo, Wasonga, Nyangito, Schilling and Munang2015; Rain, Reference Rain1999).
Pastoralists particularly have developed a diverse range of institutions and networks, as well as long-standing traditional strategies, characterized by mobility, flexibility and reciprocity, to manage the variability of resources in drylands and gain access to pasture and water (Bedelian & Ogutu, Reference Bedelian and Ogutu2017; Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Scoones, Reference Scoones1995). Indeed there is increasing evidence that, under the same conditions in climatically variable dryland environments, mobile and communal pastoralist systems may be more productive and resilient than sedentary and commercial ranch-based systems of livestock production (Behnke & Kerven, Reference Behnke and Kerven2013; Behnke & Muthami, Reference Behnke and Muthami2011; de Jode, Reference de Jode2009; Hesse et al., Reference Hesse, Anderson, Cotula, Skinner and Toulmin2013; Hesse & MacGregor, Reference Hesse and MacGregor2009; Little et al., Reference Little, McPeak, Barrett and Kristjanson2008; Rodriguez, Reference Rodriguez2008; Scoones, Reference Scoones1992). Other forms of internal or international and temporary or permanent human migration common to SALs, meanwhile, can make an important contribution to individual and societal adaptation. Migration may increase, as well as reduce, vulnerabilities (Hasan & Raza, Reference Hasan and Raza2009; Newborne & Gansaonré, Reference Newborne and Gansaonré2017; Stapleton et al., Reference Stapleton, Nadin, Watson and Kellett2017; Waldinger & Fankhauser, Reference Waldinger and Fankhauser2015). Yet, recent literatures reiterate the understanding that well planned migration can improve the resilience of rural households through livelihood diversification, inflow of remittances, transfer of knowledge and skills, promotion of innovation and expansion of social networks (Hagen-Zanker et al., Reference Hagen-Zanker, Postel and Mosler Vidal2018; Krishnamurthy, Reference Krishnamurthy2012; Qaisrani et al., Reference Qaisrani, Umar, Siyal and Salik2018; Salik et al., Reference Salik, Qaisrani, Umar and Ali2017; Scheffran et al., Reference Scheffran, Marmer and Sow2012; Sward & Codjoe, Reference Sward and Codjoe2012; Wilkinson et al., Reference Wilkinson, Schipper, Simonet and Kubik2018).
Recent research on the private sector in SALs has demonstrated ways in which micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) are actively responding to climate risks, for example, by diversifying into different activities and taking up insurance or loans from financial institutions (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a; Eskander et al., Reference Eskander, Fankhauser, Jha, Batool and Qaisrani2018; Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Conway, Pardoe, Batisani, Ndiyoi, Odada, Olago, Opere, Kgosietsile, Nyambe, Omukuti and Siderius2018a). Indeed, this research has shown that SAL businesses are not only highly aware of the current climate risks they face, but also, in some cases, are taking steps to prepare for future climate change (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a).
Top-down development policies and erosion of SAL resilience
Much of the economic and social dynamism and ingrained resilience that has evolved in SAL societies has been widely and continuously documented in academic and civil society literatures (Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Scoones and Kerven1993; Catley et al., Reference Catley, Lind and Scoones2012; Hesse & MacGregor, Reference Hesse and MacGregor2006; Mortimore, Reference Mortimore1989, Reference Mortimore1998; Mortimore & Adams, Reference Mortimore and Adams1999; Mortimore et al., Reference Mortimore, Anderson, Cotula, Davies, Faccer, Hesse, Morton, Nyangena, Skinner and Wolfangel2009; Rain, Reference Rain1999; Scoones, Reference Scoones1995). However, driven by typically centralized and top-down approaches to adaptation and development policy, national governments in developing countries have almost invariably failed to capitalize on the knowledge, institutions, skills and practices which underpin these existing adaptive capacities in SALs. Indeed, in many cases, the traditional institutions and livelihoods that have evolved to not only cope with, but also often to harness opportunities from, the climatic and environmental variability of SALs, have been actively undermined and destabilized by these policies.
As stated by Hesse (Reference Hesse2011), drylands policies in developing countries have tended to focus on bringing ‘stability’ and ‘order’ to environments viewed as unstable and disorganized and have sought to replace traditional land use and resource management practices with techniques seen as more ‘modern’. Narratives of resource scarcity and degradation, linked to conventional ecological equilibrium theory and notions of carrying capacity, for example have dominated policy and practice in SALs (Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Mortimore et al., Reference Mortimore, Anderson, Cotula, Davies, Faccer, Hesse, Morton, Nyangena, Skinner and Wolfangel2009; Scoones, Reference Scoones1995; Tiffen et al., Reference Tiffen, Mortimore and Gichuki1994). This has led to popular misconceptions of pastoralism as backward, irrational and unproductive (Hesse & MacGregor, Reference Hesse and MacGregor2006; Jenet et al., Reference Jenet, Buono, Lello, Gomarasca, Heine, Mason, Nori, Saavedra and Van Troos2016; Leach & Mearns, Reference Leach and Mearns1996; Swift, Reference Swift2003). In addition, policy development in Africa's SALs has had a long history of favouring agriculture over pastoralism and encouraging sedentarization and the privatization and commercialization of pastoral land.
Opportunities for broader forms of human migration to function as resilience strategies have also been curtailed in SALs, by a tendency for national governments to continue to consider internal migration as a developmental concern that needs to be restricted. Pakistan, for example, has no domestic migration policy, exacerbating many of the structural barriers and vulnerabilities faced by SAL migrants (Saeed et al., Reference Saeed, Salik and Ishfaq2016), and its climate change policy advocates limiting rural–urban population flows (Qaisrani & Salik, Reference Qaisrani and Salik2018). Other examples of large scale, centrally managed development strategies that have eroded or failed to recognize traditional resource management institutions and created new vulnerabilities and exacerbated degradation and conflict, have been widely documented in SALs, including in areas such as irrigation, forestry, land reform, livestock ranching, transportation infrastructure and natural resource extraction investments (e.g. Houdret, Reference Houdret2012; Mdee et al., Reference Mdee, Harrison, Mdee, Mdee and Bahati2014; Sandford, Reference Sandford, Catley, Lind and Scoones2013; Söderbaum & Taylor, Reference Söderbaum and Taylor2001; Weng et al., Reference Weng, Klintuni, Dirks, Dixon, Irfansyah and Sayer2013; see also Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003).
An under-recognized private sector in SALs
Widespread missed opportunities for climate resilient economic development in SALs, have also been underpinned by failure to recognize the full range of economic actors and their economic potential within SALs.
At national levels, the dominant framing of SAL economies has been one of low productivity, vulnerability and unsustainable livelihoods. This framing has emphasized the aridity and climatic variability that characterizes SALs, alongside limited access to ‘blue water’ in rivers and lakes to support irrigation, as major constraints to productivity (Jobbins et al., Reference Jobbins, Ludi, Calderone, Sisodia and Sarwar2018). Representation of SALs as resource scarce, remote, landlocked and sparsely populated regions, with limited access to markets, has further enhanced the ‘bad geography’ narrative attached to SALs (Jobbins et al., Reference Jobbins, Ludi, Calderone, Sisodia and Sarwar2018; Lemma et al., Reference Lemma, Jouanjean and Darko2015). While these features are pertinent, they are not the whole story.
SAL economies make major contributions to national livelihoods and present significant additional opportunities for the development of national economies.Footnote i Agricultural producers and pastoralists, are linked to large, and sometimes highly competitive, value chains spread across formal and informal sectors, incorporating a range of different sized businesses within and outside of SALs and exporting to domestic and international markets (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018). There are opportunities across these key value chains to upgrade processing activities and to provide additional benefits to SAL and national economies, including enhanced employment opportunities (Bedelian et al., Reference Bedelian, Moiko and Said2019; Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018). There is also increasing evidence that key value chains in SAL economies, such as the livestock sector in East Africa, have been grossly undervalued in terms of their contribution to national GDP (see for example Behnke & Muthami, Reference Behnke and Muthami2011; Carabine et al., Reference Carabine, Lwasa, Buyinza and Nabaasa2017; de Jode, Reference de Jode2009; Hesse & MacGregor, Reference Hesse and MacGregor2009; ICPALD, 2013; Rodriguez, Reference Rodriguez2008). Indeed, GDP itself may be a poor indicator of the potential and productivity found in drylands, where wealth is often held in assets, such as livestock.
The dominant discourse of SALs as unproductive has partly been able to dominate national development and adaptation policies, as the economic role and potential of the households, producers, and businesses – and their activities – in SALs have traditionally not been well recognized. This is mainly because: (1) economic actors operate largely at the level of agricultural producers and micro and small enterprises in the informal (unregistered) sector (Dougherty-Choux et al., Reference Dougherty-Choux, Terpstra, Kammila and Kurukulasuriya2015; International Labour Organisation, 2015); and (2) businesses, households and producers are often not clearly defined, static units, as producers, businesses and households often engage in and move in and out of a range of different livelihood activities (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Crick, Rouhaud, Conway and Fankhauser2018b).
Within this landscape, SALs have suffered from long-term and disproportionate under-investment and political and economic marginalization within national development agendas (Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Jobbins et al., Reference Jobbins, Conway, Fankhauser, Gueye, Liwenga, Ludi, Mitchell, Mountfort and Suleri2016; Mortimore et al., Reference Mortimore, Anderson, Cotula, Davies, Faccer, Hesse, Morton, Nyangena, Skinner and Wolfangel2009), which in turn has broadly contributed to a lack of private investment. Where increasing investment has emerged in SALs, for example through foreign capital from countries such as China, it has often been focused on resource extraction and large-scale infrastructure and agriculture investments, which are typically detached from local livelihoods, have not produced the ‘trickle down’ benefits they purported to achieve and have often been accompanied by large-scale land grabs (Baxter et al., Reference Baxter, Howard, Mills, Rickard and Macey2017; Borras et al., Reference Borras, Hall, Scoones, White and Wolford2011; Deininger & Byerlee, Reference Deininger and Byerlee2011; Dzumbira et al., Reference Dzumbira, Geyer and Geyer2017).
An under-provided-for private sector in SALs
Where investments and policies have been made to support the private sector in SALs, a failure to recognize and account for the full range of private sector actors (and their multiple livelihood pathways) within their design, has also compromised opportunities to capitalize on the autonomous adaptation potential of SAL populations.
As described by Fankhauser (Reference Fankhauser2016: 10), the underlying paradigm of autonomous private sector adaptation ‘is of economic agents that maximize their profits or welfare in the light of climatic risk’. However, while Hesse (Reference Hesse2011: 2) is undoubtedly right when he argues that ‘dryland people have much to teach us about living in an increasingly uncertain world’, SAL populations face very real structural and resource constraints which limit adaptive capacity (cf. Cleaver, Reference Cleaver1999, Reference Cleaver2012). Existing adaptation strategies and behaviours employed to cope with immediate shocks and stresses in SALs are accordingly not all sustainable and will not all be sufficient to buffer against current or future shocks and stresses (see also Chambwera et al., Reference Chambwera, Heal, Dubeux, Hallegatte, Leclerc, Markandya, McCarl, Mechler and Neumann2015). Indeed, some autonomous adaptation strategies observed in SALs, such as diversification into environmentally destructive practices (e.g. deforestation linked to charcoal production), distress sales of land and other assets and the scaling back of production and workforces, are likely to reduce future adaptive capacity, result in private actors being drawn into risky activities that increase their vulnerability, degrade natural resource bases or transfer vulnerabilities along value chains (Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018; Batool & Saeed, Reference Batool and Saeed2018; Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a; Rao et al., Reference Rao, Lawson, Raditloaneng, Solomon and Angula2017). Current responses also do not necessarily take future climate risk into account, for example in the selection of new crops and production methods. And in some cases, changing climate parameters may undermine the viability of current livelihood strategies in more fundamental and perhaps inescapable ways.
Signalling a clear and strong role for public policy to support private actors to manage climate risk, research has nevertheless demonstrated that the ability of private sector actors to adapt effectively and sustainably to climate risk is strongly influenced by the external business-enabling environment, in areas which are often lacking in SALs. Lack of access to finance, inappropriate incentive structures and limited access to markets and technologies (including climate smart inputs) are all factors that decrease the probability of firms engaging in sustainable adaptation actions, such as changing to climate resilient product mixes (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a). While access to tailored climate information services, information about adaptation options and general business support from public sources all increase the probability that businesses will engage in sustainable adaptation (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a; see also Agrawala et al., Reference Agrawala, Carraro, Kingsmill, Lanzi and Prudent-Richard2011; Averchenkova et al., Reference Averchenkova, Crick, Kocornik-Mina, Leck and Surminski2016; Chaudhury, Reference Chaudhury, Schaer and Kuruppu2018; Conway et al., Reference Conway, Nicholls, Brown, Tebboth, Adger, Ahmad, Biemans, Crick, Lutz, De Campos, Said, Singh, Zaroug, Ludi, New and Wester2019; Crawford & Seidel, Reference Crawford and Seidel2013; Crick et al., Reference Crick, Gannon, Diop and Sow2018b; Davies, Reference Davies2018; Dougherty-Choux et al., Reference Dougherty-Choux, Terpstra, Kammila and Kurukulasuriya2015; Stenek et al., Reference Stenek, Amado and Greenall2013).
Sustainable private sector adaptation and climate-resilient development therefore requires many structural deficits within general business environments (such as limited access to markets, finance and transport and communication infrastructure) to be addressed, alongside conditions that support climate-specific adaptive capacity (Carter et al., Reference Carter, Steynor, Vincent, Visman and Waagsaether2019; Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a, Reference Crick, Gannon, Diop and Sow2018b). Such a holistic and multi-sectoral approach to supporting private sector adaptation is in itself a challenge since adaptation policy is often embedded within environment ministries (Pardoe et al., Reference Pardoe, Vincent and Conway2018), typically resulting in limited integration of (and capacity for) adaptation planning for the private sector within local and national development agencies.
Where climate change adaptation policies have given some consideration to private sector needs, they have generally promoted and recognized only a limited range of business and production models. Most notably, private sector adaptation policies have tended to focus primarily on the needs of larger and formal businesses, with less consideration given to smaller businesses, operating in the informal sector, which dominate the enterprise landscapes in SALs. Yet, informal enterprises, and those with more restricted access to formal land ownership, including women, mobile pastoralists and other producers who farm land that is either communally owned or allocated through informal tenure (and thus who have little or no collateral), particularly struggle to access the support and especially the credit they require through formal channels (Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018; Batool & Saeed, Reference Batool and Saeed2018; Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Stein et al., Reference Stein, Hommes and Pinar Ardic2013).Footnote ii Female entrepreneurs often face notable additional barriers to resource access and economic participation, shaped by strong sociocultural orientations around gender roles and resource use and access. However, the specific needs of women as economic actors have similarly often been overlooked, through blanket approaches to the design of enabling policies and programmes, hinged on linear assumptions of readily transferable technology that fail to reflect the context, motivations and power structures in which actors take adaptation decisions (e.g. Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018; cf. Agarwal, Reference Agarwal1994).
Missed opportunities for building resilience in SALs through the private sector
The failure to tailor public provision of enabling conditions for private sector adaptation and development to the diversity of private sector actors also risks further undermining adaptive capacities in SALs and means national governments and their development partners are likely to miss out on important opportunities to build and support SAL resilience.
Informality in the private sector in SALs, for example, reflects the heterogeneity of livelihood activities in SALs, as private actors move in and out of different market activities and adjust their livelihood strategies in response to stressors and the variability in drylands. In this way, despite structural disadvantages for informal businesses, including restricted access to new market opportunities and public-sector services, informality has even been described as ‘a key adaptive characteristic’ to manage risks and variable resources in SALs (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018: 24).
Smaller, informal and often women-led enterprises are also being overlooked in the dominant neo-liberal agenda on development via market-based interventions. Yet these actors too have the potential to make important and wide-ranging contributions to building resilience along key value chains and within communities. Formal and informal enterprises in SALs can, for example, support increased access to new inputs, technologies and services (including those which are climate smart), create new markets and provide local and non-agricultural employment opportunities (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Crick, Rouhaud, Conway and Fankhauser2018b).
Women involved in entrepreneurship are understood to make relatively higher contributions to family and social welfare, by more efficiently allocating returns from MSMEs and other employment opportunities to the most critical household assets, including health, education and food security, which themselves shape resilience in SALs.Footnote iii Preliminary findings from PRISE research also suggest that female entrepreneurs may be more likely to engage in sustainable adaptation than men (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a), while wider literatures emphasize that women's responsibilities in households and communities position them well to find solutions to changing climate risks and to adapt livelihood strategies (UN WomenWatch, 2009; Wedeman & Petruney, Reference Wedeman and Petruney2018).
There are also examples of table banking groups and other women's groups and farmer cooperatives undertaking a range of other activities with potential to overcome barriers in business-enabling environments and increase resilience in SALs. These include sharing knowledge, for example about new markets, technologies and production techniques and requirements (e.g. certification standards) and initiating cooperatives and other common pool resource management initiatives, such as reforestation and greenhouse farming. Producer groups and other forms of MSME aggregation are also mechanisms that have been used to reduce costs of trading (for example through group purchase of climate smart inputs, such as drought-resilient seeds) and to increase the lobbying power of small businesses in respect to both government programming and accessing new markets at better rates (Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018; Lemma et al., Reference Lemma, Jouanjean and Darko2015; Tripathi et al., Reference Tripathi, Chung, Deering, Saracini, Willoughby, Wills, Mikhail, Warburton, Jayasinghe, Rafanomezana and Churm2012). In any agenda that seeks to mobilize the private sector for equitable adaptation and climate resilient development, these diverse actors need to be accounted for.
Delivering transformative adaptation in SALs
For the reasons outlined above, ‘development-as-usual’ pathways are likely to continue undermining resilience strategies among SAL populations, restricting development and limiting the ability of private actors to adapt to climate change. Continuing on current pathways risks prolonging the marginalization of the poorest and most vulnerable groups, including informal enterprises, women, and pastoralists. While the exclusion of these private actors from public support services that enable business development and adaptation to climate change also undermines the potential to unlock opportunities to build broader resilience in SALs through the private sector.
We argue a radical shift in national policy landscapes is required that refocuses on leveraging the inherent adaptive capacities and flexibility of private actors in SALs and provides enabling business environments that support the full range of private sector actors in SALs to meet the challenges and opportunities of climate change.
Delivering on this agenda will not be an easy task. Meaningful change will require a break from long-standing and entrenched national development trajectories. Moreover, policies and institutions deployed ostensibly to enhance SAL resilience have frequently had unanticipated consequences: community-based adaptation and development strategies have often been deployed in ways that reinforce local power structures, with opportunities for capture of processes by local elites, government officials and private players (Bersaglio & Cleaver, Reference Bersaglio and Cleaver2018; Cleaver, Reference Cleaver2012; Cleaver & Hamada, Reference Cleaver and Hamada2010; Galvin et al., Reference Galvin, Beeton and Luizza2018; Leach et al., Reference Leach, Mearns and Scoones1999). Decentralization often leads to recentralized control and has rarely been accompanied by transfer of sufficient funds to enable local government to fulfil their mandates (Hesse et al., Reference Hesse, Anderson, Cotula, Skinner and Toulmin2013; Ribot, Reference Ribot2011; Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003). Liberalization agendas have often entrenched marginalization, by prioritizing certain modes of doing business and failing to tackle barriers to market participation for the most vulnerable (Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003). Similarly, climate responses that have been defined through short-term, ‘projectized’, single-sector responses have often failed to recognize and respond to social context and build resilience over time (LDC Group, 2019).
Drawing on emerging strategies and novel mechanisms for supporting private adaptation that are showing signs of success within SALs, below we nevertheless propose key principles that we believe should be embedded within efforts to support development and adaptation within SALs.
Recommendation 1: Elevate the role of SALs and their inhabitants as key priority areas for appropriate investment and support within national and international development agendas.
SALs have been neglected within development and adaptation landscapes for too long. National governments and their development partners need to recognize the importance of supporting adaptation in SALs for achieving climate-resilient development and the pledge within the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development to ‘leave no one behind’, and upscale support for adaptation in these areas. In order to meet the objectives under the Paris Agreement to make climate finance flows consistent with demand and needs, national representatives (‘focal points’) to the UNFCCC should position SALs, and the private actors within them, as priority areas for investment and support. Developed countries and other development partners, meanwhile, should support SAL governments in this aim through institutional capacity-building and increasing the share of their funding commitments directed towards supporting adaptation within SALs.
Recommendation 2: Reorient SAL policy landscapes to focus on the public provision of enabling environments for private sector adaptation and climate resilient development.
Maximizing the opportunities of SALs requires a policy environment that capitalizes on the existing adaptive capacities within SALs and puts private actors at the centre of development and adaptation action. To do this, national governments, supported by development partners, will need to pursue a holistic approach to developing enabling environments for private adaptation and climate-resilient development. This will require supporting climate-specific adaptive capacity, for example through increasing access to climate-smart technologies and inputs, supporting the development of innovative climate tools and building capacity for climate information providers and private actors to translate climate information into useable formats that can inform adaptation options suited to SAL environments (Carter et al., Reference Carter, Steynor, Vincent, Visman and Waagsaether2019; Conway et al., Reference Conway, Nicholls, Brown, Tebboth, Adger, Ahmad, Biemans, Crick, Lutz, De Campos, Said, Singh, Zaroug, Ludi, New and Wester2019). But it will also require addressing the broader structural and development deficits that limit general business growth and development and shape underlying vulnerabilities, such as access to finance, transportation, water, energy, health, education and communication infrastructure.
These enabling conditions are not themselves specific to SALs, representing conditions required to support private adaptation and climate resilient business development more broadly. Yet they all deserve explicit consideration in public efforts to support private adaptation and climate-resilient development in SALs, where many of these elements are currently missing and where people are often acutely vulnerable.Footnote iv Since many of the factors required to enable adaptation in SALs are cross-cutting, spilling over the traditional remits and capabilities of any single sector, institution or actor, enabling conditions to support private adaptation will also require significant coordination across sectors and scales. To achieve this, policies and institutions targeting private sector development and climate change adaptation – which have to date been typically developed independently and remain disconnected – need to be aligned.
Recommendation 3: Tailor support for businesses to grow and adapt to climate change to the diverse and specific needs of the private sector in SALs.
To avoid entrenching existing inequalities and to maximize opportunities for inclusive adaptation and growth, investments designed to deliver enabling environments for private adaptation in SALs need to be designed in ways that reflect the flexibility, heterogeneity, informality and mobility that are inherent to SAL socioeconomic systems and to the way in which private actors manage variability, buffer shocks and capitalize on opportunities. Specifically, this will require policies, products and services that are flexible enough to support the diverse nature of actors and their activities and which support different adaptation responses, modes of production and ways of doing business within the same overall system.
The development of lightweight bee hives that women can carry from one geographic region to another in response to shifting climate pressures (Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018) is an example of the way in which even fairly simple inputs and technologies can be designed in ways that are more responsive to the needs of a wider range of economic actors in SALs. To avoid maladaptation and to support the sustainability of investments, the design and development of these products needs to be informed by climate information tailored to SAL environments and uncertainties (Conway et al., Reference Conway, Nicholls, Brown, Tebboth, Adger, Ahmad, Biemans, Crick, Lutz, De Campos, Said, Singh, Zaroug, Ludi, New and Wester2019; Vincent et al., Reference Vincent, Daly, Scannell and Leathes2018) and which support sustainable management of crucial natural resources: for example prioritizing green water management and avoiding blue water investments that threaten off-farm ecosystem services (Keys & Falkenmark, Reference Keys and Falkenmark2018).
Business finance opportunities especially need to be broadened to more inclusively target the range of private actors in SALs and their varied requirements, including Sharia-compliance in areas where Muslim populations live. These need to be made accessible to informal enterprise, individual producers, mobile pastoralists, women's collectives and producer cooperatives, as well as to private actors that experience more restricted access to formal land ownership. International climate funds such as the Green Climate Fund, the Global Environment Facility and the Adaptation Fund, similarly need to be made more accessible to the private sector in SALs, by recognizing the diversity in type, size and formality. For example, smallholder farmers should be recognized as ‘producers’ rather than simply ‘households’, to make them eligible for new streams of international climate finance for the private sector (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018).
Recommendation 4: Unlock broader resilience by building on productive sectors and driving innovation along value chains.
National governments and their development partners have a responsibility to ensure that all members of SAL societies have the ability to manage climate risk, engage in sustainable growth and adaptation and avoid transferring vulnerabilities along value chains. However, notwithstanding the need to mitigate the many challenges that underpin market-based development paradigms (see, for example, Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003), opportunities to build adaptive capacity and unlock climate-resilient development through the private sector should be thoughtfully and critically scaled up in SALs.
Novel risk-sharing mechanisms, mobilized through public private partnerships and multi-stakeholder partnerships,Footnote v have highlighted ways in which governments and their development partners can remove barriers to private sector investment in adaptation in SALs. For example, action and investments in areas such as infrastructure, research, data access, policy change and subsidies can help facilitate a business case for the private sector to develop new products, services or markets that build resilience and support local capacities in adaptation (Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Crick, Atela and Conway2020). These can and should include more vulnerable groups, in more marginalized regions, that would otherwise fall outside of market inclusion (Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Crick, Atela and Conway2020). In Senegal, for example, the national agricultural insurance fund, Compagnie Nationale d'Assurance Agricole du Sénégal (CNAAS), is a multi-stakeholder partnership that has brought together the government of Senegal, insurance companies, farmer organizations and the private sector, including Senegal's Agricultural Bank (La Banque AgricoleFootnote vi), to develop agricultural insurance products, including weather-index crop insurance products for smallholder farmers in remote areas. This has involved, among other things, investments in new rainfall stations, new crop production and climate databases and increased use of satellite data, to enhance data quality and improve the reliability of the weather indexes that expand the commercial viability of weather-index crop insurance products (MAER Sénégal, 2018).
Value chain and market analyses are approaches that can help identify risks, weaknesses and opportunities within and along SAL value chains and identify and broker linkages between private actors that help maximize opportunities for the full range of private sector actors to contribute to resilience in SALs (Batool & Saeed, Reference Batool and Saeed2018; Bedelian et al., Reference Bedelian, Moiko and Said2019; Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018). Creating a closer link between actors along the value chain, for example, can support the development of new products based on more climate-resilient crops: This is seen in Kenya where East African Breweries Limited (EABL) has developed a new low-cost beer, providing smallholder cereal producers in Kenya's eastern regions with access to a direct market for more climate resilient crops (Business Daily, 2018). Value chain analysis has also identified opportunities to increase the resilience of beef and milk value chains in the SALs of East and West Africa through the development of new market linkages with local processing and cold storage facilities (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018).
Partnership, value chain and cooperative approaches, which depend on often uncertain market forces for their viability and which are embedded within formal and informal power structures that shape what decisions are taken and by whom (Eriksen et al., Reference Eriksen, Nightingale and Eakin2015), present their own challenges as models for structuring adaptation action. They require sensitive implementation and monitoring and evaluation – including of the distribution of risk and value added across the full range of economic actors – if they are to avoid further entrenching marginalization and creating new vulnerabilities for SAL communities (Bulkeley & Newell, Reference Bulkeley and Newell2010; Schoonhoven-Speijer & Ruben, Reference Schoonhoven-Speijer, Ruben, Ruben and Hoebink2015; Selsky & Parker, Reference Selsky and Parker2005; Thorpe, Reference Thorpe2018; Thorpe & Maestre, Reference Thorpe and Maestre2015; Tripathi et al., Reference Tripathi, Chung, Deering, Saracini, Willoughby, Wills, Mikhail, Warburton, Jayasinghe, Rafanomezana and Churm2012). Nevertheless, building on productive SAL sectors and mobilizing private sector investment in adaptation will likely be fundamental to plugging gaps in adaptation and development finance. Reflecting a need to broaden what Pauw & Pegels (Reference Pauw and Pegels2013: 258) describe as ‘the private sector for adaptation’,Footnote vii in SALs attention needs to turn to supporting the full range of private sector actors to contribute to equitable national development agendas, as drivers of inclusive sustainable development and climate resilience. Women and informal enterprise in particular need to be better supported and incorporated into the economy to fulfil their potential to become key agents of change. Within this agenda, innovation is required to identify and support business models that encourage private sector actors to develop equitable business linkages and partnerships with a wider range of other businesses, including those that don't have the formal land entitlements that larger companies, seeking legislative protection and resource security, often require.
Recommendation 5: Reorient government policies to value and support human and livestock mobility.
National and local governments need to support the mobility of people and livestock across borders by removing policies that seek to limit migration and population return and developing regulatory frameworks and legal instruments that support migrants’ rights and freedom of movement. For example, national and local governments need to think carefully about how to introduce social protection measures and labour laws that reduce the opportunity for exploitation of migrants and reduce their vulnerability (Newborne & Gansaonré, Reference Newborne and Gansaonré2017; Wade et al., Reference Wade, Dime, Tandian and Ehode2017). National governments also need to provide supportive infrastructure and financial services for effective migration, including for safe remittance transfers (Stapleton et al., Reference Stapleton, Nadin, Watson and Kellett2017). These need to account for the heterogeneous nature of migrants, as well as the diverse forms of temporary and permanent migration that they may engage in and should be supported through the integration of migration planning across rural and urban scales, to avoid migrants falling between the cracks (Qaisrani & Salik, Reference Qaisrani and Salik2018; Qaisrani et al., Reference Qaisrani, Umar, Siyal and Salik2018). Similarly, national and county governments need to develop an institutional framework that supports sharing of grazing resources and develop land use plans that transcend administrative boundaries and maintain and protect livestock corridors and migratory routes to facilitate the mobility of livestock across subnational or national borders. This will require creating and preserving corridors that enable livestock and wildlife movement between private lands and around infrastructure investments. And, in many regions, this will entail protecting communal landholdings from land subdivision (see also Archer et al., Reference Archer, Dziba, Mulongoy, Maoela and Walters2018; Karki et al., Reference Karki, Senaratna Sellamuttu, Okayasu and Suzuki2018).
Recommendation 6: Invest in inclusive bottom-up adaptation planning.
Fundamentally, the failure to account for the diverse and specific characteristics and needs of SAL populations – and to build on the strengths, dynamics and characteristics of dryland systems – has arisen from adaptation and development policy and practice too often ignoring local knowledges, practices and power structures and failing to give SAL businesses and households the power to shape development and adaptation provision according to their own specific needs and realities (cf. Agrawal, Reference Agrawal2011; Cleaver, Reference Cleaver2012; Eriksen et al., Reference Eriksen, Nightingale and Eakin2015; Ferguson, Reference Ferguson1990; Leach et al., Reference Leach, Scoones and Stirling2010; Scott, Reference Scott1999; Tanner & Allouche, Reference Tanner and Allouche2011). It is therefore increasingly recognized that effectively supporting equitable and inclusive adaptation and climate-resilient development requires adaptation decisions to be made at the local level by local actors (e.g. Soanes et al., Reference Soanes, Rai, Steele, Shakya and MacGregor2017).
The Devolved Climate Finance (DCF) mechanism that has been piloted in the drylands of Senegal, Mali, Kenya and Tanzania has grown from this school of thought, seeking to increase the adaptation funds that reach the local levelFootnote viii and to support local actors and local institutions to make decisions about how and where to allocate these funds. The DCF mechanism is anchored within devolution and is designed to facilitate the flow of climate finance to local governments, while at the same time empowering local communities by strengthening their participation in the management and use of these funds (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Hesse, Orindi, Bonaya and Kiiru2019; DCF Alliance, 2019; Odhengo et al., Reference Odhengo, Atela, Steele, Orindi and Imbali2019; Orindi et al., Reference Orindi, Elhadi, Hesse, Ninan and Inoue2017).
Ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) approaches, that use biodiversity and ecosystem services to help people adapt to climate change, have similarly evolved around a commitment to co-produce adaptation solutions by combining local knowledge with evolving information about climate change (Reid et al., Reference Reid, Jones, Porras, Hicks, Wicander, Seddon, Kapos, Rizvi and Roe2019b, Reference Reid, Hicks, Jones, Kapos, Rizvi and Wicander2019a). EbA currently receives a small proportion of adaptation finance compared with hard infrastructure options (Chong, Reference Chong2014). Yet with increasing recognition of the parallel threat of biodiversity loss to the world's poorest (Archer et al., Reference Archer, Dziba, Mulongoy, Maoela and Walters2018; Karki et al., Reference Karki, Senaratna Sellamuttu, Okayasu and Suzuki2018), nature-based solutions are gaining increasing political traction (Carrington, Reference Carrington2019; UN News, 2019; United Nations Secretary General, 2019). EbA can be integrated with devolved climate finance, multi-stakeholder partnership and value chain approaches to supporting adaptation (see, for example, Reid & Orindi, Reference Reid and Orindi2018). It offers a lens to ensure fundamental environmental and biodiversity safeguards are integrated into adaptation investments (Seddon et al., Reference Seddon, Hou-Jones, Pye, Reid, Roe, Mountain and Rizvi2016a, Reference Seddon, Reid, Barrow, Hicks, Hou-Jones, Kapos, Rizvi and Roe2016b). It has also shown some important potential to support cost-effective and equitable social resilience to climate change among SAL populations so dependent upon natural resources. Reid et al. (Reference Reid, Jones, Porras, Hicks, Wicander, Seddon, Kapos, Rizvi and Roe2019b), for example, identifies a range of economic benefits of EbA interventions for private sector actors, such as avoided costs (e.g. from reduced dependence on agricultural inputs), decreased losses (e.g. fewer animal deaths from improved pasture and reduced crop losses due to diversification on farms) and new market opportunities (e.g. from tourism).
Building on such emergent approaches that support the principles of community-driven bottom-up planning and inclusion of climate-vulnerable people in decision making is probably critical. Indeed, this is a key assumption underpinning rising interest in the multi-stakeholder partnership, value chain and cooperative models for supporting adaptation, previously discussed. Yet if we are to achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development pledge to ‘leave no one behind’, their development needs to draw on the lessons of literatures which have highlighted the challenges of ensuring equitable participation in local institutional arrangements and the potential for localized adaptation and development planning responses to reproduce existing politics of exclusion, subordination and vulnerability (e.g. Eriksen et al., Reference Eriksen, Nightingale and Eakin2015; Sovacool et al., Reference Sovacool, Linnér and Goodsite2015; Tanner & Allouche, Reference Tanner and Allouche2011).
For governments, non-governmental organizations and other development partners supporting the design and delivery of adaptation projects, market integration initiatives and new climate partnerships, this is going to require a more critical engagement with the norms and forums of decision making. What decisions get taken, by whom, and to what extent embedded arrangements of authority reproduce social inequalities or create space to challenge them, require deep scrutiny (Cleaver, Reference Cleaver1999, Reference Cleaver2012; Scoones, Reference Scoones2009, Reference Scoones2015).Footnote ix So too do the framings that justify specific sets of actions to support adaptation and which are used to define what transformational adaptation looks like for different actors (Adger et al., Reference Adger, Dessai, Goulden, Hulme, Lorenzoni, Nelson, Otto, Johanna and Anita2009; Eriksen et al., Reference Eriksen, Nightingale and Eakin2015; Tanner & Allouche, Reference Tanner and Allouche2011). Development of productive mechanisms for bridging global and local scientific and traditional knowledge and co-producing locally tailored solutions, based on the aspirations and social and political realities of the communities they seek to target, within the context of changing climatic parameters, are therefore an urgent priority. This suggests the importance of broadening the research agenda focused on identifying models of defining and co-designing inclusive adaptation institutions and modes of participation with the diverse range of SAL actors they seek to target. Remodelling of monitoring and evaluation frameworks to support this agenda will likely also be required.
Momentum for change
The need for a reorientation in SAL policy that mobilizes local knowledge, experiences and practices in action to support adaptation and development, as has been proposed in this paper, is not in itself a novel assertion within academic development and adaptation literatures. Moreover, many of our assertions are strongly reminiscent of the livelihood agenda that emerged with such force in the 1990s (see for example Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003). However, progress towards these goals to date has remained inadequate. This paper, reflecting on practical experience with supporting climate change adaptation in SALs, has grown from a belief that the time to move beyond routine and incremental policy changes in current development pathways (cf. Few et al., Reference Few, Morchain, Spear, Mensah and Bendapudi2017; Kates et al., Reference Kates, Travis and Wilbanks2012) and to drive innovation within the adaptation and development of SALs through refocusing on the role of private actors, is now.
Earlier iterations in development policy reform can reassure us of the potential to reshape prevailing methods, frameworks, funding commitments and resource flows in line with evolutions in development theory (Scoones, Reference Scoones2009). Meanwhile, globally, political will for transformative adaptation action is higher than it has ever been before. Alongside commitments under the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Paris Agreement, are a range of other initiatives at international levels, designed to support innovation in adaptation planning and upscale adaptation action, consistent with local demand and needs and through participatory mechanisms. These include the ‘empowering locally led action’ track from the Global Commission on Adaptation (https://gca.org/global-commission-on-adaptation/action-tracks), as well as the LDC Initiative for Effective Adaptation and Resilience (LIFE-AR), being led by the Least Developed Countries (LDC) Group (http://www.ldc-climate.org/about-us/long-term-initiatives/), which itself recognizes the need to go beyond business as usual and to develop transformative strategies in adaptation planning.
Momentum created at international and national levels by these agendas should provide a positive force for tackling historical and current drivers of marginalization, for giving voice to this critical agenda and for challenging intransigent political barriers to inclusive development in SALs. Delay will be more costly than action now (Stern, Reference Stern2007). With developing countries under pressure to prepare their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) ahead of the 2020 update deadline, national governments have an important window of time to rethink the ways in which they have approached development and adaptation in SALs to date, to clearly articulate their priorities, and to request the necessary international support.
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Unlocking the existing adaptive capacities of women, farmers and businesses in semi-arid areas is key to realizing the SDGs.
Introduction
Semi-arid lands (SALs) in developing countries are high-risk climate change ‘hotspots’ (De Souza et al., Reference De Souza, Kituyi, Harvey, Leone, Murali and Ford2015; Huang et al., Reference Huang, Ji, Xie, Wang, He and Ran2016; Tucker et al., Reference Tucker, Daoud, Oates, Few, Conway, Mtisi and Matheson2015). They occupy over 15% of the earth's land surface (Safriel et al., Reference Safriel, Adeel, Niemeijer, Puigdefabregas, White, Lal, Winslow, Ziedler, Prince, Archer, King, Hassan, Scholes and Ash2005) and are home to approximately one billion people, including some of the poorest and least food secure (Middleton et al., Reference Middleton, Stringer, Goudie and Thomas2011; Tucker et al., Reference Tucker, Daoud, Oates, Few, Conway, Mtisi and Matheson2015). In Africa and Asia, these populations rely heavily on rain-fed agriculture, pastoralism and agricultural processing for their livelihoods, making them particularly exposed to climate and environmental variability. In addition, SALs in these regions are often remote, politically and economically marginalized areas that have limited access to markets, infrastructure and services (Middleton et al., Reference Middleton, Stringer, Goudie and Thomas2011; Thorpe & Maestre, Reference Thorpe and Maestre2015; Tucker et al., Reference Tucker, Daoud, Oates, Few, Conway, Mtisi and Matheson2015). Formal institutions and legal frameworks are typically underdeveloped, with land, water and other resource rights often insecure and unequally distributed.
Climate change will exacerbate the challenges faced by SALs, as global warming trends are expected to be particularly intense in these regions (Huang et al., Reference Huang, Ji, Xie, Wang, He and Ran2016; IPCC, Reference Field, Barros, Dokken, Mach, Mastrandrea, Bilir, M.Chatterjee, Ebi, Estrada, Genova, Girma, Kissel, Levy, MacCracken, Mastrandrea and White2014), with droughts and floods already becoming more severe. This confluence of climate and non-climate risks, combined with broader socio-economic inequalities, means climate hazards will affect poor populations in SALs disproportionately. Yet to date SALs have been given limited attention in international climate policy. This represents a major threat to the pledge within the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda to ‘leave no one behind’, and the Paris Agreement commitment to take into account the urgent and immediate needs of those that are particularly vulnerable to climate change.
In this paper we argue that national governments have underestimated opportunities for climate resilient development in SALs and we revisit and update literatures which highlight ways in which the adaptive capacity of SAL populations has been undermined by current adaptation and development policy and practice. In response, we call for a refocusing on approaches to supporting climate resilience in SALs that build on the opportunities of SALs and concentrate on leveraging the inherent adaptive capacities and flexibility of private actors – women, families, farmers and firms – to cope with and respond to prevailing environmental shocks and weather extremes. This, we argue, requires public provision of business enabling environments that support the full range of private sector actors in SALs to meet the challenges and opportunities of climate change.
Challenging existing development and adaptation policy and practice, we highlight opportunities to pursue a tailored approach to SAL adaptation, to open up more inclusive avenues of development (cf. Manuel-Navarrete & Pelling, Reference Manuel-Navarrete and Pelling2015; Pelling et al., Reference Pelling, Brien and Matyas2015). In so doing we identify opportunities to overcome some of the structural weaknesses that currently contribute to a lack of private investment, undermine important resilience strategies, hinder efforts to develop enabling conditions for private adaptation and limit opportunities to unlock broader resilience in SALs through the private sector.
Our analysis draws on five years of research conducted through the Pathways for Resilience in Semi-arid Economies (PRISE) programme in seven developing countries across West and East Africa, and South and Central Asia, as well as on broader engagement with literatures on climate change adaptation and development policy and practice in SALs.
Existing resilience and adaptive capacity in SALs
SALs are sites of dynamic social, as well as environmental, change. They are characterized by existing adaptive capacities and flexibility within the strategies that households and businesses adopt in the context of climatic and environmental variability, to manage their exposure to risk and maximize their own welfare (de Jode, Reference de Jode2009; Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Hesse et al., Reference Hesse, Anderson, Cotula, Skinner and Toulmin2013; Mortimore & Adams, Reference Mortimore and Adams1999; Mortimore et al., Reference Mortimore, Anderson, Cotula, Davies, Faccer, Hesse, Morton, Nyangena, Skinner and Wolfangel2009). This flexibility in autonomous adaptation behaviour (cf. Fankhauser, Reference Fankhauser2016; Mendelsohn, Reference Mendelsohn2012) can be seen in people adjusting and diversifying their livelihood strategies in response to the marked wet and dry seasons and the shifting availability of resources (Krätli, Reference Krätli2015). It can be seen in the heterogeneity of agricultural production systems and the prevalence of mixed farming systems. And it is frequently shaped by mobility and migration of humans and livestock and wildlife herds (Augustine, Reference Augustine2010; Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Fernandez-Gimenez, Turner, Stammler, Milner-Gulland, Fryxell and Sinclair2011; Opiyo et al., Reference Opiyo, Wasonga, Nyangito, Schilling and Munang2015; Rain, Reference Rain1999).
Pastoralists particularly have developed a diverse range of institutions and networks, as well as long-standing traditional strategies, characterized by mobility, flexibility and reciprocity, to manage the variability of resources in drylands and gain access to pasture and water (Bedelian & Ogutu, Reference Bedelian and Ogutu2017; Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Scoones, Reference Scoones1995). Indeed there is increasing evidence that, under the same conditions in climatically variable dryland environments, mobile and communal pastoralist systems may be more productive and resilient than sedentary and commercial ranch-based systems of livestock production (Behnke & Kerven, Reference Behnke and Kerven2013; Behnke & Muthami, Reference Behnke and Muthami2011; de Jode, Reference de Jode2009; Hesse et al., Reference Hesse, Anderson, Cotula, Skinner and Toulmin2013; Hesse & MacGregor, Reference Hesse and MacGregor2009; Little et al., Reference Little, McPeak, Barrett and Kristjanson2008; Rodriguez, Reference Rodriguez2008; Scoones, Reference Scoones1992). Other forms of internal or international and temporary or permanent human migration common to SALs, meanwhile, can make an important contribution to individual and societal adaptation. Migration may increase, as well as reduce, vulnerabilities (Hasan & Raza, Reference Hasan and Raza2009; Newborne & Gansaonré, Reference Newborne and Gansaonré2017; Stapleton et al., Reference Stapleton, Nadin, Watson and Kellett2017; Waldinger & Fankhauser, Reference Waldinger and Fankhauser2015). Yet, recent literatures reiterate the understanding that well planned migration can improve the resilience of rural households through livelihood diversification, inflow of remittances, transfer of knowledge and skills, promotion of innovation and expansion of social networks (Hagen-Zanker et al., Reference Hagen-Zanker, Postel and Mosler Vidal2018; Krishnamurthy, Reference Krishnamurthy2012; Qaisrani et al., Reference Qaisrani, Umar, Siyal and Salik2018; Salik et al., Reference Salik, Qaisrani, Umar and Ali2017; Scheffran et al., Reference Scheffran, Marmer and Sow2012; Sward & Codjoe, Reference Sward and Codjoe2012; Wilkinson et al., Reference Wilkinson, Schipper, Simonet and Kubik2018).
Recent research on the private sector in SALs has demonstrated ways in which micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) are actively responding to climate risks, for example, by diversifying into different activities and taking up insurance or loans from financial institutions (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a; Eskander et al., Reference Eskander, Fankhauser, Jha, Batool and Qaisrani2018; Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Conway, Pardoe, Batisani, Ndiyoi, Odada, Olago, Opere, Kgosietsile, Nyambe, Omukuti and Siderius2018a). Indeed, this research has shown that SAL businesses are not only highly aware of the current climate risks they face, but also, in some cases, are taking steps to prepare for future climate change (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a).
Top-down development policies and erosion of SAL resilience
Much of the economic and social dynamism and ingrained resilience that has evolved in SAL societies has been widely and continuously documented in academic and civil society literatures (Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Scoones and Kerven1993; Catley et al., Reference Catley, Lind and Scoones2012; Hesse & MacGregor, Reference Hesse and MacGregor2006; Mortimore, Reference Mortimore1989, Reference Mortimore1998; Mortimore & Adams, Reference Mortimore and Adams1999; Mortimore et al., Reference Mortimore, Anderson, Cotula, Davies, Faccer, Hesse, Morton, Nyangena, Skinner and Wolfangel2009; Rain, Reference Rain1999; Scoones, Reference Scoones1995). However, driven by typically centralized and top-down approaches to adaptation and development policy, national governments in developing countries have almost invariably failed to capitalize on the knowledge, institutions, skills and practices which underpin these existing adaptive capacities in SALs. Indeed, in many cases, the traditional institutions and livelihoods that have evolved to not only cope with, but also often to harness opportunities from, the climatic and environmental variability of SALs, have been actively undermined and destabilized by these policies.
As stated by Hesse (Reference Hesse2011), drylands policies in developing countries have tended to focus on bringing ‘stability’ and ‘order’ to environments viewed as unstable and disorganized and have sought to replace traditional land use and resource management practices with techniques seen as more ‘modern’. Narratives of resource scarcity and degradation, linked to conventional ecological equilibrium theory and notions of carrying capacity, for example have dominated policy and practice in SALs (Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Mortimore et al., Reference Mortimore, Anderson, Cotula, Davies, Faccer, Hesse, Morton, Nyangena, Skinner and Wolfangel2009; Scoones, Reference Scoones1995; Tiffen et al., Reference Tiffen, Mortimore and Gichuki1994). This has led to popular misconceptions of pastoralism as backward, irrational and unproductive (Hesse & MacGregor, Reference Hesse and MacGregor2006; Jenet et al., Reference Jenet, Buono, Lello, Gomarasca, Heine, Mason, Nori, Saavedra and Van Troos2016; Leach & Mearns, Reference Leach and Mearns1996; Swift, Reference Swift2003). In addition, policy development in Africa's SALs has had a long history of favouring agriculture over pastoralism and encouraging sedentarization and the privatization and commercialization of pastoral land.
Opportunities for broader forms of human migration to function as resilience strategies have also been curtailed in SALs, by a tendency for national governments to continue to consider internal migration as a developmental concern that needs to be restricted. Pakistan, for example, has no domestic migration policy, exacerbating many of the structural barriers and vulnerabilities faced by SAL migrants (Saeed et al., Reference Saeed, Salik and Ishfaq2016), and its climate change policy advocates limiting rural–urban population flows (Qaisrani & Salik, Reference Qaisrani and Salik2018). Other examples of large scale, centrally managed development strategies that have eroded or failed to recognize traditional resource management institutions and created new vulnerabilities and exacerbated degradation and conflict, have been widely documented in SALs, including in areas such as irrigation, forestry, land reform, livestock ranching, transportation infrastructure and natural resource extraction investments (e.g. Houdret, Reference Houdret2012; Mdee et al., Reference Mdee, Harrison, Mdee, Mdee and Bahati2014; Sandford, Reference Sandford, Catley, Lind and Scoones2013; Söderbaum & Taylor, Reference Söderbaum and Taylor2001; Weng et al., Reference Weng, Klintuni, Dirks, Dixon, Irfansyah and Sayer2013; see also Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003).
An under-recognized private sector in SALs
Widespread missed opportunities for climate resilient economic development in SALs, have also been underpinned by failure to recognize the full range of economic actors and their economic potential within SALs.
At national levels, the dominant framing of SAL economies has been one of low productivity, vulnerability and unsustainable livelihoods. This framing has emphasized the aridity and climatic variability that characterizes SALs, alongside limited access to ‘blue water’ in rivers and lakes to support irrigation, as major constraints to productivity (Jobbins et al., Reference Jobbins, Ludi, Calderone, Sisodia and Sarwar2018). Representation of SALs as resource scarce, remote, landlocked and sparsely populated regions, with limited access to markets, has further enhanced the ‘bad geography’ narrative attached to SALs (Jobbins et al., Reference Jobbins, Ludi, Calderone, Sisodia and Sarwar2018; Lemma et al., Reference Lemma, Jouanjean and Darko2015). While these features are pertinent, they are not the whole story.
SAL economies make major contributions to national livelihoods and present significant additional opportunities for the development of national economies.Footnote i Agricultural producers and pastoralists, are linked to large, and sometimes highly competitive, value chains spread across formal and informal sectors, incorporating a range of different sized businesses within and outside of SALs and exporting to domestic and international markets (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018). There are opportunities across these key value chains to upgrade processing activities and to provide additional benefits to SAL and national economies, including enhanced employment opportunities (Bedelian et al., Reference Bedelian, Moiko and Said2019; Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018). There is also increasing evidence that key value chains in SAL economies, such as the livestock sector in East Africa, have been grossly undervalued in terms of their contribution to national GDP (see for example Behnke & Muthami, Reference Behnke and Muthami2011; Carabine et al., Reference Carabine, Lwasa, Buyinza and Nabaasa2017; de Jode, Reference de Jode2009; Hesse & MacGregor, Reference Hesse and MacGregor2009; ICPALD, 2013; Rodriguez, Reference Rodriguez2008). Indeed, GDP itself may be a poor indicator of the potential and productivity found in drylands, where wealth is often held in assets, such as livestock.
The dominant discourse of SALs as unproductive has partly been able to dominate national development and adaptation policies, as the economic role and potential of the households, producers, and businesses – and their activities – in SALs have traditionally not been well recognized. This is mainly because: (1) economic actors operate largely at the level of agricultural producers and micro and small enterprises in the informal (unregistered) sector (Dougherty-Choux et al., Reference Dougherty-Choux, Terpstra, Kammila and Kurukulasuriya2015; International Labour Organisation, 2015); and (2) businesses, households and producers are often not clearly defined, static units, as producers, businesses and households often engage in and move in and out of a range of different livelihood activities (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Crick, Rouhaud, Conway and Fankhauser2018b).
Within this landscape, SALs have suffered from long-term and disproportionate under-investment and political and economic marginalization within national development agendas (Hesse, Reference Hesse2011; Jobbins et al., Reference Jobbins, Conway, Fankhauser, Gueye, Liwenga, Ludi, Mitchell, Mountfort and Suleri2016; Mortimore et al., Reference Mortimore, Anderson, Cotula, Davies, Faccer, Hesse, Morton, Nyangena, Skinner and Wolfangel2009), which in turn has broadly contributed to a lack of private investment. Where increasing investment has emerged in SALs, for example through foreign capital from countries such as China, it has often been focused on resource extraction and large-scale infrastructure and agriculture investments, which are typically detached from local livelihoods, have not produced the ‘trickle down’ benefits they purported to achieve and have often been accompanied by large-scale land grabs (Baxter et al., Reference Baxter, Howard, Mills, Rickard and Macey2017; Borras et al., Reference Borras, Hall, Scoones, White and Wolford2011; Deininger & Byerlee, Reference Deininger and Byerlee2011; Dzumbira et al., Reference Dzumbira, Geyer and Geyer2017).
An under-provided-for private sector in SALs
Where investments and policies have been made to support the private sector in SALs, a failure to recognize and account for the full range of private sector actors (and their multiple livelihood pathways) within their design, has also compromised opportunities to capitalize on the autonomous adaptation potential of SAL populations.
As described by Fankhauser (Reference Fankhauser2016: 10), the underlying paradigm of autonomous private sector adaptation ‘is of economic agents that maximize their profits or welfare in the light of climatic risk’. However, while Hesse (Reference Hesse2011: 2) is undoubtedly right when he argues that ‘dryland people have much to teach us about living in an increasingly uncertain world’, SAL populations face very real structural and resource constraints which limit adaptive capacity (cf. Cleaver, Reference Cleaver1999, Reference Cleaver2012). Existing adaptation strategies and behaviours employed to cope with immediate shocks and stresses in SALs are accordingly not all sustainable and will not all be sufficient to buffer against current or future shocks and stresses (see also Chambwera et al., Reference Chambwera, Heal, Dubeux, Hallegatte, Leclerc, Markandya, McCarl, Mechler and Neumann2015). Indeed, some autonomous adaptation strategies observed in SALs, such as diversification into environmentally destructive practices (e.g. deforestation linked to charcoal production), distress sales of land and other assets and the scaling back of production and workforces, are likely to reduce future adaptive capacity, result in private actors being drawn into risky activities that increase their vulnerability, degrade natural resource bases or transfer vulnerabilities along value chains (Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018; Batool & Saeed, Reference Batool and Saeed2018; Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a; Rao et al., Reference Rao, Lawson, Raditloaneng, Solomon and Angula2017). Current responses also do not necessarily take future climate risk into account, for example in the selection of new crops and production methods. And in some cases, changing climate parameters may undermine the viability of current livelihood strategies in more fundamental and perhaps inescapable ways.
Signalling a clear and strong role for public policy to support private actors to manage climate risk, research has nevertheless demonstrated that the ability of private sector actors to adapt effectively and sustainably to climate risk is strongly influenced by the external business-enabling environment, in areas which are often lacking in SALs. Lack of access to finance, inappropriate incentive structures and limited access to markets and technologies (including climate smart inputs) are all factors that decrease the probability of firms engaging in sustainable adaptation actions, such as changing to climate resilient product mixes (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a). While access to tailored climate information services, information about adaptation options and general business support from public sources all increase the probability that businesses will engage in sustainable adaptation (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a; see also Agrawala et al., Reference Agrawala, Carraro, Kingsmill, Lanzi and Prudent-Richard2011; Averchenkova et al., Reference Averchenkova, Crick, Kocornik-Mina, Leck and Surminski2016; Chaudhury, Reference Chaudhury, Schaer and Kuruppu2018; Conway et al., Reference Conway, Nicholls, Brown, Tebboth, Adger, Ahmad, Biemans, Crick, Lutz, De Campos, Said, Singh, Zaroug, Ludi, New and Wester2019; Crawford & Seidel, Reference Crawford and Seidel2013; Crick et al., Reference Crick, Gannon, Diop and Sow2018b; Davies, Reference Davies2018; Dougherty-Choux et al., Reference Dougherty-Choux, Terpstra, Kammila and Kurukulasuriya2015; Stenek et al., Reference Stenek, Amado and Greenall2013).
Sustainable private sector adaptation and climate-resilient development therefore requires many structural deficits within general business environments (such as limited access to markets, finance and transport and communication infrastructure) to be addressed, alongside conditions that support climate-specific adaptive capacity (Carter et al., Reference Carter, Steynor, Vincent, Visman and Waagsaether2019; Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a, Reference Crick, Gannon, Diop and Sow2018b). Such a holistic and multi-sectoral approach to supporting private sector adaptation is in itself a challenge since adaptation policy is often embedded within environment ministries (Pardoe et al., Reference Pardoe, Vincent and Conway2018), typically resulting in limited integration of (and capacity for) adaptation planning for the private sector within local and national development agencies.
Where climate change adaptation policies have given some consideration to private sector needs, they have generally promoted and recognized only a limited range of business and production models. Most notably, private sector adaptation policies have tended to focus primarily on the needs of larger and formal businesses, with less consideration given to smaller businesses, operating in the informal sector, which dominate the enterprise landscapes in SALs. Yet, informal enterprises, and those with more restricted access to formal land ownership, including women, mobile pastoralists and other producers who farm land that is either communally owned or allocated through informal tenure (and thus who have little or no collateral), particularly struggle to access the support and especially the credit they require through formal channels (Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018; Batool & Saeed, Reference Batool and Saeed2018; Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Stein et al., Reference Stein, Hommes and Pinar Ardic2013).Footnote ii Female entrepreneurs often face notable additional barriers to resource access and economic participation, shaped by strong sociocultural orientations around gender roles and resource use and access. However, the specific needs of women as economic actors have similarly often been overlooked, through blanket approaches to the design of enabling policies and programmes, hinged on linear assumptions of readily transferable technology that fail to reflect the context, motivations and power structures in which actors take adaptation decisions (e.g. Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018; cf. Agarwal, Reference Agarwal1994).
Missed opportunities for building resilience in SALs through the private sector
The failure to tailor public provision of enabling conditions for private sector adaptation and development to the diversity of private sector actors also risks further undermining adaptive capacities in SALs and means national governments and their development partners are likely to miss out on important opportunities to build and support SAL resilience.
Informality in the private sector in SALs, for example, reflects the heterogeneity of livelihood activities in SALs, as private actors move in and out of different market activities and adjust their livelihood strategies in response to stressors and the variability in drylands. In this way, despite structural disadvantages for informal businesses, including restricted access to new market opportunities and public-sector services, informality has even been described as ‘a key adaptive characteristic’ to manage risks and variable resources in SALs (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018: 24).
Smaller, informal and often women-led enterprises are also being overlooked in the dominant neo-liberal agenda on development via market-based interventions. Yet these actors too have the potential to make important and wide-ranging contributions to building resilience along key value chains and within communities. Formal and informal enterprises in SALs can, for example, support increased access to new inputs, technologies and services (including those which are climate smart), create new markets and provide local and non-agricultural employment opportunities (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018; Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Crick, Rouhaud, Conway and Fankhauser2018b).
Women involved in entrepreneurship are understood to make relatively higher contributions to family and social welfare, by more efficiently allocating returns from MSMEs and other employment opportunities to the most critical household assets, including health, education and food security, which themselves shape resilience in SALs.Footnote iii Preliminary findings from PRISE research also suggest that female entrepreneurs may be more likely to engage in sustainable adaptation than men (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Eskander, Fankhauser and Diop2018a), while wider literatures emphasize that women's responsibilities in households and communities position them well to find solutions to changing climate risks and to adapt livelihood strategies (UN WomenWatch, 2009; Wedeman & Petruney, Reference Wedeman and Petruney2018).
There are also examples of table banking groups and other women's groups and farmer cooperatives undertaking a range of other activities with potential to overcome barriers in business-enabling environments and increase resilience in SALs. These include sharing knowledge, for example about new markets, technologies and production techniques and requirements (e.g. certification standards) and initiating cooperatives and other common pool resource management initiatives, such as reforestation and greenhouse farming. Producer groups and other forms of MSME aggregation are also mechanisms that have been used to reduce costs of trading (for example through group purchase of climate smart inputs, such as drought-resilient seeds) and to increase the lobbying power of small businesses in respect to both government programming and accessing new markets at better rates (Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018; Lemma et al., Reference Lemma, Jouanjean and Darko2015; Tripathi et al., Reference Tripathi, Chung, Deering, Saracini, Willoughby, Wills, Mikhail, Warburton, Jayasinghe, Rafanomezana and Churm2012). In any agenda that seeks to mobilize the private sector for equitable adaptation and climate resilient development, these diverse actors need to be accounted for.
Delivering transformative adaptation in SALs
For the reasons outlined above, ‘development-as-usual’ pathways are likely to continue undermining resilience strategies among SAL populations, restricting development and limiting the ability of private actors to adapt to climate change. Continuing on current pathways risks prolonging the marginalization of the poorest and most vulnerable groups, including informal enterprises, women, and pastoralists. While the exclusion of these private actors from public support services that enable business development and adaptation to climate change also undermines the potential to unlock opportunities to build broader resilience in SALs through the private sector.
We argue a radical shift in national policy landscapes is required that refocuses on leveraging the inherent adaptive capacities and flexibility of private actors in SALs and provides enabling business environments that support the full range of private sector actors in SALs to meet the challenges and opportunities of climate change.
Delivering on this agenda will not be an easy task. Meaningful change will require a break from long-standing and entrenched national development trajectories. Moreover, policies and institutions deployed ostensibly to enhance SAL resilience have frequently had unanticipated consequences: community-based adaptation and development strategies have often been deployed in ways that reinforce local power structures, with opportunities for capture of processes by local elites, government officials and private players (Bersaglio & Cleaver, Reference Bersaglio and Cleaver2018; Cleaver, Reference Cleaver2012; Cleaver & Hamada, Reference Cleaver and Hamada2010; Galvin et al., Reference Galvin, Beeton and Luizza2018; Leach et al., Reference Leach, Mearns and Scoones1999). Decentralization often leads to recentralized control and has rarely been accompanied by transfer of sufficient funds to enable local government to fulfil their mandates (Hesse et al., Reference Hesse, Anderson, Cotula, Skinner and Toulmin2013; Ribot, Reference Ribot2011; Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003). Liberalization agendas have often entrenched marginalization, by prioritizing certain modes of doing business and failing to tackle barriers to market participation for the most vulnerable (Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003). Similarly, climate responses that have been defined through short-term, ‘projectized’, single-sector responses have often failed to recognize and respond to social context and build resilience over time (LDC Group, 2019).
Drawing on emerging strategies and novel mechanisms for supporting private adaptation that are showing signs of success within SALs, below we nevertheless propose key principles that we believe should be embedded within efforts to support development and adaptation within SALs.
Recommendation 1: Elevate the role of SALs and their inhabitants as key priority areas for appropriate investment and support within national and international development agendas.
SALs have been neglected within development and adaptation landscapes for too long. National governments and their development partners need to recognize the importance of supporting adaptation in SALs for achieving climate-resilient development and the pledge within the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development to ‘leave no one behind’, and upscale support for adaptation in these areas. In order to meet the objectives under the Paris Agreement to make climate finance flows consistent with demand and needs, national representatives (‘focal points’) to the UNFCCC should position SALs, and the private actors within them, as priority areas for investment and support. Developed countries and other development partners, meanwhile, should support SAL governments in this aim through institutional capacity-building and increasing the share of their funding commitments directed towards supporting adaptation within SALs.
Recommendation 2: Reorient SAL policy landscapes to focus on the public provision of enabling environments for private sector adaptation and climate resilient development.
Maximizing the opportunities of SALs requires a policy environment that capitalizes on the existing adaptive capacities within SALs and puts private actors at the centre of development and adaptation action. To do this, national governments, supported by development partners, will need to pursue a holistic approach to developing enabling environments for private adaptation and climate-resilient development. This will require supporting climate-specific adaptive capacity, for example through increasing access to climate-smart technologies and inputs, supporting the development of innovative climate tools and building capacity for climate information providers and private actors to translate climate information into useable formats that can inform adaptation options suited to SAL environments (Carter et al., Reference Carter, Steynor, Vincent, Visman and Waagsaether2019; Conway et al., Reference Conway, Nicholls, Brown, Tebboth, Adger, Ahmad, Biemans, Crick, Lutz, De Campos, Said, Singh, Zaroug, Ludi, New and Wester2019). But it will also require addressing the broader structural and development deficits that limit general business growth and development and shape underlying vulnerabilities, such as access to finance, transportation, water, energy, health, education and communication infrastructure.
These enabling conditions are not themselves specific to SALs, representing conditions required to support private adaptation and climate resilient business development more broadly. Yet they all deserve explicit consideration in public efforts to support private adaptation and climate-resilient development in SALs, where many of these elements are currently missing and where people are often acutely vulnerable.Footnote iv Since many of the factors required to enable adaptation in SALs are cross-cutting, spilling over the traditional remits and capabilities of any single sector, institution or actor, enabling conditions to support private adaptation will also require significant coordination across sectors and scales. To achieve this, policies and institutions targeting private sector development and climate change adaptation – which have to date been typically developed independently and remain disconnected – need to be aligned.
Recommendation 3: Tailor support for businesses to grow and adapt to climate change to the diverse and specific needs of the private sector in SALs.
To avoid entrenching existing inequalities and to maximize opportunities for inclusive adaptation and growth, investments designed to deliver enabling environments for private adaptation in SALs need to be designed in ways that reflect the flexibility, heterogeneity, informality and mobility that are inherent to SAL socioeconomic systems and to the way in which private actors manage variability, buffer shocks and capitalize on opportunities. Specifically, this will require policies, products and services that are flexible enough to support the diverse nature of actors and their activities and which support different adaptation responses, modes of production and ways of doing business within the same overall system.
The development of lightweight bee hives that women can carry from one geographic region to another in response to shifting climate pressures (Atela et al., Reference Atela, Gannon, Crick and Leal Filho2018) is an example of the way in which even fairly simple inputs and technologies can be designed in ways that are more responsive to the needs of a wider range of economic actors in SALs. To avoid maladaptation and to support the sustainability of investments, the design and development of these products needs to be informed by climate information tailored to SAL environments and uncertainties (Conway et al., Reference Conway, Nicholls, Brown, Tebboth, Adger, Ahmad, Biemans, Crick, Lutz, De Campos, Said, Singh, Zaroug, Ludi, New and Wester2019; Vincent et al., Reference Vincent, Daly, Scannell and Leathes2018) and which support sustainable management of crucial natural resources: for example prioritizing green water management and avoiding blue water investments that threaten off-farm ecosystem services (Keys & Falkenmark, Reference Keys and Falkenmark2018).
Business finance opportunities especially need to be broadened to more inclusively target the range of private actors in SALs and their varied requirements, including Sharia-compliance in areas where Muslim populations live. These need to be made accessible to informal enterprise, individual producers, mobile pastoralists, women's collectives and producer cooperatives, as well as to private actors that experience more restricted access to formal land ownership. International climate funds such as the Green Climate Fund, the Global Environment Facility and the Adaptation Fund, similarly need to be made more accessible to the private sector in SALs, by recognizing the diversity in type, size and formality. For example, smallholder farmers should be recognized as ‘producers’ rather than simply ‘households’, to make them eligible for new streams of international climate finance for the private sector (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018).
Recommendation 4: Unlock broader resilience by building on productive sectors and driving innovation along value chains.
National governments and their development partners have a responsibility to ensure that all members of SAL societies have the ability to manage climate risk, engage in sustainable growth and adaptation and avoid transferring vulnerabilities along value chains. However, notwithstanding the need to mitigate the many challenges that underpin market-based development paradigms (see, for example, Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003), opportunities to build adaptive capacity and unlock climate-resilient development through the private sector should be thoughtfully and critically scaled up in SALs.
Novel risk-sharing mechanisms, mobilized through public private partnerships and multi-stakeholder partnerships,Footnote v have highlighted ways in which governments and their development partners can remove barriers to private sector investment in adaptation in SALs. For example, action and investments in areas such as infrastructure, research, data access, policy change and subsidies can help facilitate a business case for the private sector to develop new products, services or markets that build resilience and support local capacities in adaptation (Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Crick, Atela and Conway2020). These can and should include more vulnerable groups, in more marginalized regions, that would otherwise fall outside of market inclusion (Gannon et al., Reference Gannon, Crick, Atela and Conway2020). In Senegal, for example, the national agricultural insurance fund, Compagnie Nationale d'Assurance Agricole du Sénégal (CNAAS), is a multi-stakeholder partnership that has brought together the government of Senegal, insurance companies, farmer organizations and the private sector, including Senegal's Agricultural Bank (La Banque AgricoleFootnote vi), to develop agricultural insurance products, including weather-index crop insurance products for smallholder farmers in remote areas. This has involved, among other things, investments in new rainfall stations, new crop production and climate databases and increased use of satellite data, to enhance data quality and improve the reliability of the weather indexes that expand the commercial viability of weather-index crop insurance products (MAER Sénégal, 2018).
Value chain and market analyses are approaches that can help identify risks, weaknesses and opportunities within and along SAL value chains and identify and broker linkages between private actors that help maximize opportunities for the full range of private sector actors to contribute to resilience in SALs (Batool & Saeed, Reference Batool and Saeed2018; Bedelian et al., Reference Bedelian, Moiko and Said2019; Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018). Creating a closer link between actors along the value chain, for example, can support the development of new products based on more climate-resilient crops: This is seen in Kenya where East African Breweries Limited (EABL) has developed a new low-cost beer, providing smallholder cereal producers in Kenya's eastern regions with access to a direct market for more climate resilient crops (Business Daily, 2018). Value chain analysis has also identified opportunities to increase the resilience of beef and milk value chains in the SALs of East and West Africa through the development of new market linkages with local processing and cold storage facilities (Carabine & Simonet, Reference Carabine and Simonet2018).
Partnership, value chain and cooperative approaches, which depend on often uncertain market forces for their viability and which are embedded within formal and informal power structures that shape what decisions are taken and by whom (Eriksen et al., Reference Eriksen, Nightingale and Eakin2015), present their own challenges as models for structuring adaptation action. They require sensitive implementation and monitoring and evaluation – including of the distribution of risk and value added across the full range of economic actors – if they are to avoid further entrenching marginalization and creating new vulnerabilities for SAL communities (Bulkeley & Newell, Reference Bulkeley and Newell2010; Schoonhoven-Speijer & Ruben, Reference Schoonhoven-Speijer, Ruben, Ruben and Hoebink2015; Selsky & Parker, Reference Selsky and Parker2005; Thorpe, Reference Thorpe2018; Thorpe & Maestre, Reference Thorpe and Maestre2015; Tripathi et al., Reference Tripathi, Chung, Deering, Saracini, Willoughby, Wills, Mikhail, Warburton, Jayasinghe, Rafanomezana and Churm2012). Nevertheless, building on productive SAL sectors and mobilizing private sector investment in adaptation will likely be fundamental to plugging gaps in adaptation and development finance. Reflecting a need to broaden what Pauw & Pegels (Reference Pauw and Pegels2013: 258) describe as ‘the private sector for adaptation’,Footnote vii in SALs attention needs to turn to supporting the full range of private sector actors to contribute to equitable national development agendas, as drivers of inclusive sustainable development and climate resilience. Women and informal enterprise in particular need to be better supported and incorporated into the economy to fulfil their potential to become key agents of change. Within this agenda, innovation is required to identify and support business models that encourage private sector actors to develop equitable business linkages and partnerships with a wider range of other businesses, including those that don't have the formal land entitlements that larger companies, seeking legislative protection and resource security, often require.
Recommendation 5: Reorient government policies to value and support human and livestock mobility.
National and local governments need to support the mobility of people and livestock across borders by removing policies that seek to limit migration and population return and developing regulatory frameworks and legal instruments that support migrants’ rights and freedom of movement. For example, national and local governments need to think carefully about how to introduce social protection measures and labour laws that reduce the opportunity for exploitation of migrants and reduce their vulnerability (Newborne & Gansaonré, Reference Newborne and Gansaonré2017; Wade et al., Reference Wade, Dime, Tandian and Ehode2017). National governments also need to provide supportive infrastructure and financial services for effective migration, including for safe remittance transfers (Stapleton et al., Reference Stapleton, Nadin, Watson and Kellett2017). These need to account for the heterogeneous nature of migrants, as well as the diverse forms of temporary and permanent migration that they may engage in and should be supported through the integration of migration planning across rural and urban scales, to avoid migrants falling between the cracks (Qaisrani & Salik, Reference Qaisrani and Salik2018; Qaisrani et al., Reference Qaisrani, Umar, Siyal and Salik2018). Similarly, national and county governments need to develop an institutional framework that supports sharing of grazing resources and develop land use plans that transcend administrative boundaries and maintain and protect livestock corridors and migratory routes to facilitate the mobility of livestock across subnational or national borders. This will require creating and preserving corridors that enable livestock and wildlife movement between private lands and around infrastructure investments. And, in many regions, this will entail protecting communal landholdings from land subdivision (see also Archer et al., Reference Archer, Dziba, Mulongoy, Maoela and Walters2018; Karki et al., Reference Karki, Senaratna Sellamuttu, Okayasu and Suzuki2018).
Recommendation 6: Invest in inclusive bottom-up adaptation planning.
Fundamentally, the failure to account for the diverse and specific characteristics and needs of SAL populations – and to build on the strengths, dynamics and characteristics of dryland systems – has arisen from adaptation and development policy and practice too often ignoring local knowledges, practices and power structures and failing to give SAL businesses and households the power to shape development and adaptation provision according to their own specific needs and realities (cf. Agrawal, Reference Agrawal2011; Cleaver, Reference Cleaver2012; Eriksen et al., Reference Eriksen, Nightingale and Eakin2015; Ferguson, Reference Ferguson1990; Leach et al., Reference Leach, Scoones and Stirling2010; Scott, Reference Scott1999; Tanner & Allouche, Reference Tanner and Allouche2011). It is therefore increasingly recognized that effectively supporting equitable and inclusive adaptation and climate-resilient development requires adaptation decisions to be made at the local level by local actors (e.g. Soanes et al., Reference Soanes, Rai, Steele, Shakya and MacGregor2017).
The Devolved Climate Finance (DCF) mechanism that has been piloted in the drylands of Senegal, Mali, Kenya and Tanzania has grown from this school of thought, seeking to increase the adaptation funds that reach the local levelFootnote viii and to support local actors and local institutions to make decisions about how and where to allocate these funds. The DCF mechanism is anchored within devolution and is designed to facilitate the flow of climate finance to local governments, while at the same time empowering local communities by strengthening their participation in the management and use of these funds (Crick et al., Reference Crick, Hesse, Orindi, Bonaya and Kiiru2019; DCF Alliance, 2019; Odhengo et al., Reference Odhengo, Atela, Steele, Orindi and Imbali2019; Orindi et al., Reference Orindi, Elhadi, Hesse, Ninan and Inoue2017).
Ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) approaches, that use biodiversity and ecosystem services to help people adapt to climate change, have similarly evolved around a commitment to co-produce adaptation solutions by combining local knowledge with evolving information about climate change (Reid et al., Reference Reid, Jones, Porras, Hicks, Wicander, Seddon, Kapos, Rizvi and Roe2019b, Reference Reid, Hicks, Jones, Kapos, Rizvi and Wicander2019a). EbA currently receives a small proportion of adaptation finance compared with hard infrastructure options (Chong, Reference Chong2014). Yet with increasing recognition of the parallel threat of biodiversity loss to the world's poorest (Archer et al., Reference Archer, Dziba, Mulongoy, Maoela and Walters2018; Karki et al., Reference Karki, Senaratna Sellamuttu, Okayasu and Suzuki2018), nature-based solutions are gaining increasing political traction (Carrington, Reference Carrington2019; UN News, 2019; United Nations Secretary General, 2019). EbA can be integrated with devolved climate finance, multi-stakeholder partnership and value chain approaches to supporting adaptation (see, for example, Reid & Orindi, Reference Reid and Orindi2018). It offers a lens to ensure fundamental environmental and biodiversity safeguards are integrated into adaptation investments (Seddon et al., Reference Seddon, Hou-Jones, Pye, Reid, Roe, Mountain and Rizvi2016a, Reference Seddon, Reid, Barrow, Hicks, Hou-Jones, Kapos, Rizvi and Roe2016b). It has also shown some important potential to support cost-effective and equitable social resilience to climate change among SAL populations so dependent upon natural resources. Reid et al. (Reference Reid, Jones, Porras, Hicks, Wicander, Seddon, Kapos, Rizvi and Roe2019b), for example, identifies a range of economic benefits of EbA interventions for private sector actors, such as avoided costs (e.g. from reduced dependence on agricultural inputs), decreased losses (e.g. fewer animal deaths from improved pasture and reduced crop losses due to diversification on farms) and new market opportunities (e.g. from tourism).
Building on such emergent approaches that support the principles of community-driven bottom-up planning and inclusion of climate-vulnerable people in decision making is probably critical. Indeed, this is a key assumption underpinning rising interest in the multi-stakeholder partnership, value chain and cooperative models for supporting adaptation, previously discussed. Yet if we are to achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development pledge to ‘leave no one behind’, their development needs to draw on the lessons of literatures which have highlighted the challenges of ensuring equitable participation in local institutional arrangements and the potential for localized adaptation and development planning responses to reproduce existing politics of exclusion, subordination and vulnerability (e.g. Eriksen et al., Reference Eriksen, Nightingale and Eakin2015; Sovacool et al., Reference Sovacool, Linnér and Goodsite2015; Tanner & Allouche, Reference Tanner and Allouche2011).
For governments, non-governmental organizations and other development partners supporting the design and delivery of adaptation projects, market integration initiatives and new climate partnerships, this is going to require a more critical engagement with the norms and forums of decision making. What decisions get taken, by whom, and to what extent embedded arrangements of authority reproduce social inequalities or create space to challenge them, require deep scrutiny (Cleaver, Reference Cleaver1999, Reference Cleaver2012; Scoones, Reference Scoones2009, Reference Scoones2015).Footnote ix So too do the framings that justify specific sets of actions to support adaptation and which are used to define what transformational adaptation looks like for different actors (Adger et al., Reference Adger, Dessai, Goulden, Hulme, Lorenzoni, Nelson, Otto, Johanna and Anita2009; Eriksen et al., Reference Eriksen, Nightingale and Eakin2015; Tanner & Allouche, Reference Tanner and Allouche2011). Development of productive mechanisms for bridging global and local scientific and traditional knowledge and co-producing locally tailored solutions, based on the aspirations and social and political realities of the communities they seek to target, within the context of changing climatic parameters, are therefore an urgent priority. This suggests the importance of broadening the research agenda focused on identifying models of defining and co-designing inclusive adaptation institutions and modes of participation with the diverse range of SAL actors they seek to target. Remodelling of monitoring and evaluation frameworks to support this agenda will likely also be required.
Momentum for change
The need for a reorientation in SAL policy that mobilizes local knowledge, experiences and practices in action to support adaptation and development, as has been proposed in this paper, is not in itself a novel assertion within academic development and adaptation literatures. Moreover, many of our assertions are strongly reminiscent of the livelihood agenda that emerged with such force in the 1990s (see for example Scoones & Wolmer, Reference Scoones and Wolmer2003). However, progress towards these goals to date has remained inadequate. This paper, reflecting on practical experience with supporting climate change adaptation in SALs, has grown from a belief that the time to move beyond routine and incremental policy changes in current development pathways (cf. Few et al., Reference Few, Morchain, Spear, Mensah and Bendapudi2017; Kates et al., Reference Kates, Travis and Wilbanks2012) and to drive innovation within the adaptation and development of SALs through refocusing on the role of private actors, is now.
Earlier iterations in development policy reform can reassure us of the potential to reshape prevailing methods, frameworks, funding commitments and resource flows in line with evolutions in development theory (Scoones, Reference Scoones2009). Meanwhile, globally, political will for transformative adaptation action is higher than it has ever been before. Alongside commitments under the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Paris Agreement, are a range of other initiatives at international levels, designed to support innovation in adaptation planning and upscale adaptation action, consistent with local demand and needs and through participatory mechanisms. These include the ‘empowering locally led action’ track from the Global Commission on Adaptation (https://gca.org/global-commission-on-adaptation/action-tracks), as well as the LDC Initiative for Effective Adaptation and Resilience (LIFE-AR), being led by the Least Developed Countries (LDC) Group (http://www.ldc-climate.org/about-us/long-term-initiatives/), which itself recognizes the need to go beyond business as usual and to develop transformative strategies in adaptation planning.
Momentum created at international and national levels by these agendas should provide a positive force for tackling historical and current drivers of marginalization, for giving voice to this critical agenda and for challenging intransigent political barriers to inclusive development in SALs. Delay will be more costly than action now (Stern, Reference Stern2007). With developing countries under pressure to prepare their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) ahead of the 2020 update deadline, national governments have an important window of time to rethink the ways in which they have approached development and adaptation in SALs to date, to clearly articulate their priorities, and to request the necessary international support.
Acknowledgements
This perspectives article is the product of a collective effort and is based on the results of five years of stakeholder-driven research carried out under the consortium for Pathways to Resilience in Semi-Arid Economies (PRISE) in Senegal, Burkina Faso, Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Pakistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Much of the empirical basis for this briefing is provided by research from across PRISE, produced by the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics and Political Science, Innovation Environnement Développement (IED) Afrique, Kenya Markets Trust (KMT), Mountain Societies Research Institute (MSRI), Overseas Development Institute (ODI), Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), Regional Environment Centre for Central Asia (CAREC) and the University of Ouagadougou (UO). We would like to particularly acknowledge the following individuals from PRISE, and from PRISE's CARIAA research consortium partner Adaptation at Scale in Semi-Arid Regions (ASSAR), who shared invaluable additional insights from their research to inform this perspectives article and/or who provided valuable feedback and logistical support during the design and writing process: From SDPI: Ahmed Khaver and Imran Khalid; from IED Afrique: Assane Bèye, Bara Guèye and Lancelot Ehode; from ODI: Rajeshree Sisodia, Peter Newbourne, Helen Mountfort and Nathalie Nathe; from the Grantham Research Institute: Judith Rees, Abbie Clare, Shaikh Eskander, Patrick Curran and Swenja Surminski; from KMT: Robina Abuya and Joseph Muhwanga; from the Indian Institute for Human Settlements: Chandni Singh; from the University of Cape Town: Dian Spear; and from the University of East Anglia: Mark Tebboth. The authors are also grateful to two anonymous reviewers for their clear and constructive feedback.
Author contributions
K.E.G. and F.C. led the analysis and manuscript writing. All authors contributed to the ideas and discussed and reviewed the manuscript.
Financial support
This work was carried out under the Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia (CARIAA), with financial support from the UK Government's Department for International Development (DfID) and the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada. Financial support from the Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment, and the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) (ES/R009708/1) through the Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy is also acknowledged.
Conflicts of interest
None.