Southern African Science Service Centre for Climate Change and Adaptive Land Management BMBF
SASSCAL Data and Information Portal
Open Data and Information on Climate Change and Adapted Land Management in Southern Africa

Livelihood activities and skills in rural areas of the Zambezi region, Namibia: Implications for policy and poverty reduction

Map Map


Title
Title Livelihood activities and skills in rural areas of the Zambezi region, Namibia: Implications for policy and poverty reduction ?
Author Kamwi JM, Chirwa PWC, Graz FP, Manda SOM, Mosimane AW, Kätsch C ?
Abstract This paper examined livelihood activities and skill sets available within rural households in the Zambezi Region of Namibia. Specifically, the study addressed three key questions: (i) what livelihood activities do rural people pursue? (ii) what demographic factors are associated with these activities? and (iii) what measures can be taken to diversify and sustain income from these livelihood activities? In order to address these questions, semistructured interviews covering 424 households were used to collect the data. The questionnaire consisted of questions corresponding to the sustainable livelihood framework including (1) human assets (2) financial assets and major sources of income (3) physical and natural assets and (4) social assets. A series of logistic regressions were fitted from which the estimated odds ratios (y) were derived to ascertain the effect of the predictors on the livelihood activities and skills. Odds ratios were used to measure the magnitude of strength of association or non-independence between binary data values. The results showed that the use of various livelihood activities and skills in different combinations is of significant importance to rural livelihoods. Five percent of the respondents obtained income from only one source, with 95 % of the respondents engaged in a combination of farming and non-farming activities. Most of the respondents had various reasons for diversifying into other activities vis-a-vis agricultural income, limited skills, large family size, availability of opportunities, seasonal nature of agricultural produce, favourable demand for goods and services or a combination of these. In addition, the results showed that gender, age, designation and education significantly (p<0.05) influenced the choice of household’s skills. The study concludes that a combination of rural household activities and skills influenced by a variety of factors have led to improved livelihoods in the study area. For policy purposes, this suggests that state interventions in rural livelihood skill development can play a significant role in promoting more sustainable rural livelihoods. ?
Citation Kamwi JM, Chirwa PWC, Graz FP, Manda SOM, Mosimane AW, Kätsch C. Afr. J. Food Agric. Nutr. Dev. 2018; 18(1): 13074-13094. DOI: 10.18697/ajfand.81.16640. ?
Dataset
Document Reference Date Type publication ?
Date 2018-04-01 ?
Language English ?
Online Linkage https://www.ajol.info/index.php/ajfand/article/view/169967 ?
Associated project SASSCAL (Phase 1) ?
Subproject 033 Development of a national forest monitoring program for Namibia ?
Dataset Classification
Type PDF ?
Category publication ?
Geographic Location
Study site Region Zambezi ?
Metadata
Metadata Contact Person Knox, Nichola, Dr ?
Metadata Date Stamp 2018-08-08 ?
Identifier
Internal identifier sdp_doc_documents_6485 (Link)