Western Indian Ocean J. Mar. Sci. Vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 87-97, 2012
© 2013 WIOMSA
Building Socio-ecological Resilience to Climate Change
through Community-Based Coastal Conservation and
Development: Experiences in Southern Madagascar
Kame Westerman
1
, Kirsten L.L. Oleson
1, 2
and Alasdair R. Harris
1
1
Blue Ventures Conservation, Level 2 Annex, Omnibus Business Centre, 39-41 North Road,
London N7 9DP, United Kingdom;
2
University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2500 Campus Rd
Honolulu, HI 96822, United States.
Keywords: Climate change adaptation, community-based adaptation, socio-
ecological resilience, locally managed marine area, Madagascar, PHE
Abstract—Climate change impacts fall disproportionately on the world’s poorest,
most marginalised communities, particularly those highly dependent on direct
use of natural resources, such as subsistence ishing communities. Vulnerability
to climate change involves social and ecological factors, and efforts to reduce
it and build long-term resilience must target both. In Madagascar, generalised
strategies developed at the national level address vulnerability, adding to a variety
of international initiatives. Yet, such high-level planning inevitably remains
vague and indeterminate for most of the island’s coastal communities, with little
meaningful implementation on the ground. Therefore, local measures to build
resilience and adaptive capacity are critical to ensure that resource-dependent
communities are able to cope with the immediate and long-term effects of climate
change. Examination of an integrated population-health-environment (PHE)
programme in Madagascar, comprising a locally-managed marine area (LMMA)
and socio-economic development activities, illustrates how practical initiatives can
contribute to building immediate and long-lasting resilience and adaptive capacity.
Such community-based approaches should play a key role in adaptation measures
within the western Indian Ocean region, where many coastal communities live in
severe poverty on the front line of a rapidly changing climate.
Corresponding author: KW
Email: research@blueventures.org
INTRODUCTION
Anthropogenic climate change is causing a
number of adverse environmental impacts
worldwide, from a rise in sea level and an
increased frequency and severity in extreme
weather events, to increases in temperature
and acidity of seawater (IPCC 2007). While
increasing consumption in developed
countries is responsible for the vast majority