Tackling climate change through craft development : the case of rural women in uPhongolo Local Municipality
Abstract
Climate change is a global phenomenon that is affecting all humanity. Bearing the harshest brunt
of environmental, social and economic shocks are the world’s poorest and those in vulnerable
conditions such as women in rural areas. Rural areas have experienced a decline in the
dependence on agriculture and livestock farming because of climate change, thus forcing people
especially women to look for alternative sources of sustainable livelihoods (SLs). The objective of
this study was to establish the extent to which craft development can be used as an alternative
livelihood by women in uPhongolo Local Municipality in KwaZulu-Natal to mitigate the effects
of climate change. This study adopted a SL theoretical framework to explain how women in
the study area used craft development to improve their livelihoods. A survey method was
adopted for this study using both qualitative and quantitative approaches. Non-probability
sampling strategy using a purposive sampling technique was used to select 50 women crafters
from uPhongolo Local Municipality. Face-to-face interviews using questionnaires, which had
both closed and open-ended questions, were conducted. These allowed for the collection of
numeric data and simultaneously allowed respondents to express themselves and elaborate on
the structured questions. The Software Programme for Social Science (SPSS) was used to analyse
quantitative data that had been generated using structured interviews and categorised qualitative
data. The findings indicated that innovative entrepreneurship using natural capital readily
available in the area for craft development and linking the products to the market play a
significant role in improving SLs of women in the study area. The study recommends that
capacity-building programmes be provided to equip rural women with skills that would enhance
their ability to respond to natural hazards such as climate change.