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Author Notes:

E-mail addresses: cfurman@uga.edu (C. Furman), carla.roncoli@emory.edu (C. Roncoli), wendylin@ufl.edu (W. Bartels), mab90@psu.edu (M. Boudreau), hcrockett@morehouse.edu (H. Crockett), heathergray@federation.coop (H. Gray), gerrit.hoogenboom@wsu.edu (G. Hoogenboom).

Tel.: +1 404 712 6373. Tel.: +1 352 392 1864x281. Tel.: +1 610 892 1200. Tel.: +1 404 681 2800x2254. Tel.: +1 404 765 0991. Tel.: +1 509 786 9371.

Carrie Furman and Carla Roncoli share the senior authorship for this paper.

We thank the following individuals for their support and input Angela Brown, Dan Dourte, Clyde Fraisse, Pam Knox, Fred Royce, Scott Templeton, Michael Thomas, and David Zierden. We also thank Robbie Finch for help with maps and graphics. We are also grateful to the RISA professionals who provided valuable insight, to the Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistant Fund for their collaboration, and finally to the farmers who participated in the survey and interviews for sharing their time and knowledge.

Subjects:

Research Funding:

This work was supported by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Sector Applications Research Program (SARP) and by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) with grants to the Southeast Climate Consortium (SECC).

Keywords:

  • minority farmers
  • equity
  • climate forecasts
  • adaptation
  • drought
  • Southeast U.S.

Social justice in climate services: Engaging African American farmers in the American South

Tools:

Journal Title:

Climate Risk Management

Volume:

Volume 2

Publisher:

, Pages 11-25

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

This article contributes to efforts to develop more inclusive climate services, understood as institutional arrangements and processes that generate and disseminate science-based climate information to promote improved preparedness to climate impacts. Discussion on equity in climate services tends to focus on the specific challenges of women and the poor in developing countries. We seek to broaden this scope by considering a farming population in the southern United States, whose particular circumstances are shaped by rural poverty as well as by racial discrimination, namely African American farmers. The research is based on a phone survey, in-depth interviews, and a workshop, and was conducted in collaboration with a civil right organization that helped the research team gain trust and entry to this community. The findings show that farmers in this study are vulnerable to drought given their relatively limited access to resources and risk management mechanisms. Climate forecasts can help these farmers move from coping strategies to deal with the effects of climate anomalies to proactive planning to anticipate and mitigate those effects. Research participants were able to identify a range of options for using such information in risk management decisions. Provision of climate services to African American farmers, however, must be consistent with existing patterns of knowledge management. These patterns are shaped by major trends stemming from the transformation of rural Southern life. Social networks of mutual assistance and knowledge transmission have been eroded by the outmigration of African American farmers from rural areas. Additionally, their relationship with public agencies is marred by a legacy of racial inequities, which makes it difficult for well-meaning projects involving the same agencies to establish legitimacy in this community. We discuss how insights from research findings and research process have guided programmatic efforts to involve African American farmers in climate services and outline lessons that can inform similar initiatives seeking to work with under-represented groups. In the conclusions we propose that engagement of this community challenges climate services to fully embrace a “social justice” perspective and an understanding of science as transformative of society.

Copyright information:

2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
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