hidden
Image Database Export Citations

Menu:

Rebuilding Resilience in the Sahel: Regreening in the Maradi and Zinder Regions of Niger

Show full item record

Type: Journal Article
Author: Sendzimir, Jan; Reij, Chris P.; Magnuszewski, Piotr
Journal: Ecology and Society
Volume: 16
Page(s):
Date: 2011
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/7634
Sector: Forestry
Region: Africa
Subject(s): agroforestry
pastoralism
reforestation
resilience
vulnerability
Abstract: "The societies and ecosystems of the Nigerien Sahel appeared increasingly vulnerable to climatic and economic uncertainty in the late twentieth century. Severe episodes of drought and famine drove massive livestock losses and human migration and mortality. Soil erosion and tree loss reduced a woodland to a scrub steppe and fed a myth of the Sahara desert relentlessly advancing southward. Over the past two decades this myth has been shattered by the dramatic reforestation of more than 5 million hectares in the Maradi and Zinder Regions of Niger. No single actor, policy, or practice appears behind this successful regreening of the Sahel. Multiple actors, institutions and processes operated at different levels, times, and scales to initiate and sustain this reforestation trend. We used systems analysis to examine the patterns of interaction as biophysical, livelihood, and governance indicators changed relative to one another during forest decline and rebound. It appears that forest decline was reversed when critical interventions helped to shift the direction of reinforcing feedbacks, e.g., vicious cycles changed to virtuous ones. Reversals toward de-forestation or reforestation were preceded by institutional changes in governance, then livelihoods and eventually in the biophysical environment. Biophysical change sustained change in the other two domains until interventions introduced new ideas and institutions that slowed and then reversed the pattern of feedbacks. However, while society seems better at coping with economic or climatic shock or stress, the resilience of society and nature in the Maradi/Zinder region to global sources of uncertainty remains a pressing question in a society with one of the highest population growth rates on Earth."

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
ES-2011-4198.pdf 1.159Mb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following document type(s)

Show full item record