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Analytical study on the appraisal of communal land use management practices and policies towards climate resilience and sustainability in Bir-Temicha Watershed of the Upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia

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dc.contributor.advisor Argaw, Mekuria
dc.contributor.advisor Bekele, Melaku
dc.contributor.author Tenaw Hailu Tedela
dc.date.accessioned 2017-11-16T12:40:58Z
dc.date.available 2017-11-16T12:40:58Z
dc.date.issued 2017-03
dc.date.submitted 2017-03
dc.identifier.citation Tenaw Hailu Tedela (2017) Analytical study on the appraisal of communal land use management practices and policies towards climate resilience and sustainability in Bir-Temicha Watershed of the Upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/23351>
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/23351
dc.description.abstract This study was aimed at analysing communal land use management practices and policies towards sustainability and climate resilience. The objectives of this study were to assess rainfall variability, climate change impact, adaptation practices and impediment factors for adaptation on the one hand and, on the other, analysing the pressure, scrutinising the sustainability of institutional practices, and assessing policy setting and its application status in managing communal lands. To conduct the study, a household survey, key informant interviews and group discussions were used. It employed both quantitative and qualitative methods. For analysis, rainfall variability trend analysis, different empirical formulas, Principal Component Analysis and analysis of variance were used. In addition, Qualitative Content Analysis technique and descriptive statistical tools were also used. The study found that there was spatiotemporal rainfall variability. About 18 extreme wet and 8 extreme dry events were depicted out of 194 frequencies of events. The most outstanding manifestations of climate change/variability impacts identified were: water scarcity, migration, severe erosion and feed scarcity. Applying biophysical measures on communal lands, practicing area enclosure and constraction of feeder road were moderately excersised adaptation and mitigation practices while, low level community awareness was the most outstanding barrier for community adaptation. Besides, feed source and fuel biomass energy did not satisfy community demand. Government recognition to support community user groups, the existence of community labour contribution and congruence between government legislation and community by-laws were found moderately strong. Besides, communal land administration and use of legislative setting and instruments to govern land administration were adequately in place to implement communal land use and management. However, workability of by-laws in applying them at the ground was a major weakness. In conclusion, the study revealed that there exist generally a weak communal land use management practices and policy implementation towards enhancing sustainability and climate resilience. Hence, the following recommendations were forwarded: enhancing community awareness, encouraging communities to establish their own private woodlots and grazing areas to reduce the pressure on communal land, applying proper communal land resource use and management plans and certifying communal lands with demarcation and maps should be given due emphasis to enhance sustainability. Moreover, policy and legislation evaluation and revision to improve its application at the ground is fundamental. On top of this, further research endeavour is still paramount important to scrutinize the integral effects of the biophysical, social, cultural and legislative dimensions for better sustainable and climate resilient communal land use management practices and policy implementation en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xviii, 239 leaves : illustrations, color graphs, color maps) en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Carrying capacity en
dc.subject Communal land en
dc.subject Feed balance en
dc.subject Fuel biomass en
dc.subject Land administration en
dc.subject Rainfall variability en
dc.subject.ddc 551.680963
dc.subject.ddc Sustainability -- Ethiopia en
dc.subject.lcsh Sustainable agriculture -- Ethiopia en
dc.subject.lcsh Environmental management -- Ethiopia en
dc.subject.lcsh Environmental sciences -- Ethiopia en
dc.title Analytical study on the appraisal of communal land use management practices and policies towards climate resilience and sustainability in Bir-Temicha Watershed of the Upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences en
dc.description.degree Ph. D. (Environmental Management)


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    Electronic versions of theses and dissertations submitted to Unisa since 2003

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