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. 2016 Dec;65:63–73. doi: 10.1016/j.foodpol.2016.11.001

Table 1.

Typology of resilience and coping in the Somali famine.

Category Examples Level Application/severity
Diversification
  • Diversify livelihoods and assets

  • Diversification of risk

  • Diversify against drought risk (riverine farming and/or camels)

  • Have a foot in the urban economy

  • Individual/household

  • Some diversification within clan or larger group

Mostly applies in the longer term and a means of reducing risk, not as a means of coping with shocks
Flexibility
  • Physical mobility with livestock

  • Labor mobility (employment)

  • Exploit different opportunities (including humanitarian aid)

  • Outmigration as a last resort

  • Household

  • Community-level decisions about when to move?

Limited ability to move condemned some small-scale livestock holders, but others suffered large losses far from home
Social “connectedness”
  • Forms of mutual support

  • Usual: remittances; unusual: diaspora or urban contacts, etc.

  • Having “someone to cry to”; three overlapping circles model

  • “Second circle” community level/clan level

  • Partly business level

  • Diaspora remittances stepped up in famine: food, water trucking

  • Third circle as “system failure”

Political power
  • Access to/control over aid

  • Household

  • Community

Gatekeepers from powerful clans in IDP settings
Crisis asset protection
  • Sharing food or assets with livestock

  • Buying water for livestock

  • Moving livestock in search of grazing and water

  • Leaving someone behind to protect land if migrating

  • Decision making about when to sell animals, when to move, etc.

  • Household

  • Community

  • Feeding cattle thatch from roofs during drought

  • Timing of livestock sales

  • Out-migration usually as a last resort

Asset sales or depletion
  • Sale of livestock

  • Sale of other productive assets

  • Land pledging or mortgaging

  • Household

  • Community

Rapid livelihood adaptation
  • Renting farmland (esp. riverine) to protect animals (access water/fodder)

  • Sharing lactating animals—move with non-lactating animals

  • Natural resource extraction: firewood, charcoal, thatch grass

  • Search for casual wage employment

  • Household or inter-household

  • Wage labor in community as form of social reciprocity albeit a form of exchange

Some of these are “normal” livelihoods for poor people, others are coping strategies in crisis
Credit
  • Use of savings/borrowing/debt

  • Borrowing/purchase on credit as one form of social connectedness

  • Household

  • Business

Social networks portrayed in positive light; can lead to long-term indebtedness
Consumption strategies
  • Changing diets

  • Borrowing food or money

  • Rationing strategies

  • Going hungry

Household and inter-household demographic strategies
  • Family splitting—both consumption- minimization strategy and resource-acquisition maximization strategy

  • Opportunistic access to aid resources/household splitting

  • Labor-sharing

  • Household

  • Inter-household/community

Data: Field Interviews 2012–14.