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Living with typhoons and changing weather patterns: Indigenous resilience and the adaptation pathways of smallholder farmers in Taiwan

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Abstract

Indigenous resilience is an increasingly popular topic in research on how the world’s indigenous peoples cope with and adapt to global climate change. Currently, a scientific gap exists in the understanding of the factors shaping Indigenous resilience. This study aimed to address this gap by focusing on two Indigenous Tayal communities in northern Taiwan and how they have coped with and built resilience in the face of climate change and climate-related disasters. This study employed both quantitative (n = 101) and qualitative methods (n = 10) to determine the factors that shape the livelihood adaptation pathways and resilience capacities (i.e., absorptive, adaptive, and transformative) of Indigenous and local smallholder farmers. This study demonstrated that the adaptation pathways of individual households must be placed in the broader context of economic, social, and historical processes. Cultural practices, traditional ecological knowledge systems, place attachment, and perceptions, as well as socioeconomic factors and convictions regarding the need to combat climate change and conserve nature, have shaped households’ resilience capacities. The evidence of a relationship between ethnicity and livelihood resilience was far from conclusive, and both Indigenous and non-indigenous households living in the same locality must be included when assessing Indigenous resilience to climate change. This study contributes to better understanding the agency of Indigenous households in their response to climate change and negative impacts of climate-related events. Such an understanding is necessary because sufficient insight into Indigenous and endogenous forms of climate change adaptation is lacking.

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Fig. 1

(adapted from Pelling 2011; Fazey et al. 2016; Agrawal et al. 2019; Howitt 2020)

Fig. 2

(land use data from National Land Surveying and Mapping Center 2019)

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Data availability statement

The data are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

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Acknowledgements

We thank all the respondents and informants of this study for their kind support. The views and opinions expressed in this publication are solely those of the authors.

Funding

This study was funded by Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan (MOST 109-2636-H-003-007 and MOST 108-2410-H-003-140).

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Correspondence to Li-San Hung.

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Ethical approval for this study was obtained from the Research Ethics Committee of National Taiwan Normal University (REC Number 201906HS017). All participants in this study signed a consent form prior to the interview or survey.

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Handled by Hirotaka Matsuda, University of Tokyo, Japan.

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Bayrak, M.M., Hung, LS. & Hsu, YY. Living with typhoons and changing weather patterns: Indigenous resilience and the adaptation pathways of smallholder farmers in Taiwan. Sustain Sci 18, 951–965 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11625-022-01247-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11625-022-01247-3

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