The Road to Resilience: A Scoping Study for the Taadoud Transition to Development Project

Author(s)
Fitzpatrick, M. and Young, H.
Publication language
English
Pages
50pp
Date published
20 Nov 2015
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Conflict, violence & peace, Livelihoods
Countries
Sudan
Organisations
Tufts University

This scoping study explores the resilience strategies of households in multiple livelihood systems by describing how households in Darfur have coped with conflict and other shocks over the past fifteen years. We found that people actively select particular sources of income in a strategic pattern and move in and out of various income streams as the context and their assets allow to maximize their immediate and long-term outcomes while coping with and recovering from shocks.

Simplified caricatures of the conflict in Darfur have described farming and animal herding as two opposed livelihood strategies, as if they function independently of each other, competing for the same resources. They are in fact using similar activities and depending on the sustainable management of the same natural resources. Factors related to power and social networks, often roughly following livelihood patterns, determine access to these natural resources.