Vol. 8, No. 3 July - September 2002
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Community-based Action Review of “Drought Relief 2000” in Gujarat, India: Some Lessons for Asia
In March 2000, the Disaster Mitigation Institute (DMI), a community-based action planning and action research team in Ahmedabad, was invited by Oxfam (India) Trust to review the “drought relief 2000” in Gujarat. The two-month, multi-level, multi-method review covering the four most critical districts was conducted in selected villages using qualitative and quantitative methods. The outcomes were discussed with both the local communities and government officials. Five useful results for upcoming drought in Asia are presented here. First, the extent a victim is protected can be determined by two factors: when a drought is declared, and how drought relief is withdrawn. Delayed declaration of drought almost doubles the human and economic costs of relief inputs. Early and abrupt withdrawal of drought relief only prolongs the impact of drought on human nutrition, agricultural production and cattle breeding from two to six seasons. Governments and public authorities must take timely steps in declaring drought and careful thought before closing down relief camps.
Third, most drought assessments focus on rural, farm-based, water and food sector-focused impacts of drought. But increasingly, drought adversely affects local livelihoods in trade, commerce, small business and small town economic activities. Assessments by consultants and pilot teams of international NGOs must include the above activities in assessments for more connected drought relief. Fourth, financing or funding relief must protect the livelihoods of poor people, develop and maintain region-wide fodder security for cattle, and build water harvesting campaigns mooted by local communities. Specialization of relief on one of the three is not effective. Fifth, poor households, especially in drought-visited areas, routinely plan for and manage the uncertainties associated with drought-induced crises. Ensure that relief interventions support their plans and do not undermine them. Two critical dimensions of household coping strategies must receive particular attention: the significance of women’s work and the continued centrality of non-market resources, relationships and institutions in the struggle for survival. To many, the above five lessons may seem well known, developed and argued for over a decade in Asia, but their actual use in field operations is still rare to find. Not that private or public relief agencies have other intentions, but the fact remains that experiences of relief efforts disappear with the completion of the crisis and each new drought relief effort “rediscovers” effective ways of mitigating drought in Asia. Mihir R Bhatt is the director of the Disaster Mitigation Institute in Ahmedabad, India. He can be contacted at dmi@icenet.net |
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