Excerpt
Abstract
Gunjur village in Kombo South West Coast Region, The Gambia is like several Gambian rural coastal communities vulnerable to the negative impacts of coastal erosion. Wherein such negative impacts are felt by the rural community and influences deleteriously on their livelihood and well-being. Therefore, there is the urgent necessity to reduce the vulnerability of community members such as farmers, fishermen, fish smokers, fish mongers to the impacts of coastal erosion.
Furthermore, measuring vulnerability is a key to effective risk reduction and the promotion of a culture of disaster resilience. Thereupon, this study assesses the social vulnerability of households to coastal erosion in Gunjur village by using the MOVE framework. Primary data is obtained through questionnaire administration, Focus Group Discussion (FGD), expert interview and portable GPS Receiver; while secondary data is obtained from published technical documents, and already published related research. The data is analyzed using Statistical and GIS tools.
Meanwhile, the study identifies the socio-economic characteristics, the level of exposure, susceptibility, and lack of resilience of the concerned coastal community. Moreover, most of the households interviewed are resource poor and at the same time vulnerable to a slow and creeping hazard such as coastal erosion amidst a changing climate and variability. The key finding during the social vulnerability assessment is that women are more vulnerable than men. This is true when considering things such as the high unemployment rate, illiteracy rate, the percentage of women with no ownership of land, reliance on rain-fed agriculture and the heavy dependence on scare natural resources like firewood. Thus, the urgent necessity for government and relevant authorities to empower women so that they can realize their full potential, and take their rightful place in national development.
Among the things recommended, are construction of break waters and groins (hard engineering) at strategic locations along the Gambian coast, beach nourishment project (soft engineering), alternative livelihood activities, a robust well integrated policy framework for Climate Change and Natural Resource Management that takes into account sound adaptation
and mitigation measures; this will in turn avoid mal-adaptation, build resilience at all levels, thereby reduce vulnerability and enhance human security.