Effects of Social Learning on Rural Farmers' Adaptive Capacity: Empirical Insights from the Vietnamese Mekong Delta

SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES(2020)

Cited 5|Views1
No score
Abstract
Environmental challenges in the Vietnamese Mekong Delta characterized by adverse impacts of climate change, upstream hydropower development and localized dyke expansion present imperatives for rural farmers to "learn to adapt." However, little is known about how learning contributes to improving their capacity in adapting to these "wicked" problems. This study investigates potential effects of farmers' learning on their adaptive capacity, utilizing nine focus group discussions, 33 interviews, and a structured survey of 300 farmers. The exploratory factor analysis produced two factors for social learning: (1) learning through social interactions and (2) self-reflection, and one factor for adaptive capacity. The regression results show that the social learning factors have significantly positive effects on adaptive capacity. Farmers with a higher level of social learning are likely to demonstrate higher adaptive capacity. The findings call for policy considerations to promote learning in a broader context of the delta to enhance local capacity.
More
Translated text
Key words
Adaptive capacity,farming households,floods,rural livelihoods,social learning,Vietnamese Mekong Delta
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined