PA21A-01:
Land Use, Livelihoods, Vulnerabilities, and Resilience in Coastal Bangladesh

Tuesday, 16 December 2014: 8:00 AM
Jonathan M Gilligan1, Brooke Ackerly2, Steven Lee Goodbred Jr1 and Carol Wilson1, (1)Vanderbilt University, Earth & Environmental Sciences, Nashville, TN, United States, (2)Vanderbilt University, Political Science, Nashville, TN, United States
Abstract:
The densely populated, low-lying coast of Bangladesh is famously associated with vulnerability to sea-level rise, storms, and flooding. Simultaneously, land-use change has significantly altered local sediment transport, causing elevation loss and degradation of drainage. The rapid growth of shrimp aquaculture has also affected soil chemistry in former agricultural areas and the stock of riverine fisheries through intense larval harvesting. To understand the net impact of these environmental changes on the region’s communities, it is necessary to examine interactions across scale – from externally driven large scale environmental change to smaller scale, but often more intense, local change – and also between the physical environment and social, political, and economic conditions.

We report on a study of interactions between changing communities and changing environment in coastal Bangladesh, exploring the role of societal and physical factors in shaping the different outcomes and their effects on people’s lives. Land reclamation projects in the 1960s surrounded intertidal islands with embankments. This allowed rice farming to expand, but also produced significant elevation loss, which rendered many islands vulnerable to waterlogging and flooding from storm surges. The advent of large-scale shrimp aquaculture added environmental, economic, social, and political stresses, but also brought much export revenue to a developing nation. Locally, attempts to remedy environmental stresses have produced mixed results, with similar measures succeeding in some communities and failing in others.

In this context, we find that people are continually adapting to changing opportunities and constraints for food, housing, and income. Niches that support different livelihood activities emerge and dwindle, and their occupants' desires affect the political context. Understanding and successfully responding to the impacts of environmental change requires understanding not only the physical environment, but also the human livelihoods, interpersonal interactions, and human-environmental interactions within a socio-ecological system.