Traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management: A preliminary case study of the Rwenzori

The shift from flood protection to flood risk management, together with recent arguments on incorporating culture in managing risk, underscores the application of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) in managing disasters from flood hazards. Yet, documentation and incorporation of TEK into practic...

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Main Authors: Bosco Bwambale, Moses Muhumuza, Martine Nyeko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-05-01
Series:Jàmbá
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/536
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author Bosco Bwambale
Moses Muhumuza
Martine Nyeko
author_facet Bosco Bwambale
Moses Muhumuza
Martine Nyeko
author_sort Bosco Bwambale
collection DOAJ
description The shift from flood protection to flood risk management, together with recent arguments on incorporating culture in managing risk, underscores the application of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) in managing disasters from flood hazards. Yet, documentation and incorporation of TEK into practice remains a challenge. This article contributes to addressing this challenge by exploring the existence of TEK to flooding in the Rwenzori Mountains, Uganda. Using semi-structured interviews, data were collected from residents of the Nyamwamba watershed where intense flash floods caused deadly impacts in May 2013. Collected data were analysed using content, thematic and interpretive analysis techniques. Results indicate that TEK is exhibited through various traditional ecological approaches (TEAs). Although endangered, TEAs (conducted through collective action for a communally accepted end) are framed in three main activities: (1) assessment and prediction of rainfall and flood by the traditional hydro-meteorologist (diviner) and the traditional rain forecaster (rainmaker); (2) the mountain cleansing ritual (which act as flood risk awareness platform); and (3) immunising riverine communities through planting certain indigenous plants, which improve hydrological systems through their high conservation value for native ecological diversity. As most TEAs are conducted through collective action, they represent a platform to understand local capacities and enhance adoption of measures, and/or a source of knowledge for new measures to address flood risk. Therefore, full-scale investigations of these TEAs, determining how relevant TEAs are fine-tuned, and (scientific) measures enculturated based on fine-tuned TEAs could result in effective flood risk management in various flood hotspots where TEAs influence action.
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spelling doaj.art-73b37b04c4924b75b3b36d13e550a5282022-12-22T01:20:37ZengAOSISJàmbá1996-14212072-845X2018-05-01101e1e1010.4102/jamba.v10i1.536215Traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management: A preliminary case study of the RwenzoriBosco Bwambale0Moses Muhumuza1Martine Nyeko2Faculty of Agriculture and Environment, Gulu University; School of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, Mountains of the Moon University; Centre for Action and Applied Research for Development, Fort-portalSchool of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, Mountains of the Moon UniversityFaculty of Agriculture and Environment, Gulu UniversityThe shift from flood protection to flood risk management, together with recent arguments on incorporating culture in managing risk, underscores the application of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) in managing disasters from flood hazards. Yet, documentation and incorporation of TEK into practice remains a challenge. This article contributes to addressing this challenge by exploring the existence of TEK to flooding in the Rwenzori Mountains, Uganda. Using semi-structured interviews, data were collected from residents of the Nyamwamba watershed where intense flash floods caused deadly impacts in May 2013. Collected data were analysed using content, thematic and interpretive analysis techniques. Results indicate that TEK is exhibited through various traditional ecological approaches (TEAs). Although endangered, TEAs (conducted through collective action for a communally accepted end) are framed in three main activities: (1) assessment and prediction of rainfall and flood by the traditional hydro-meteorologist (diviner) and the traditional rain forecaster (rainmaker); (2) the mountain cleansing ritual (which act as flood risk awareness platform); and (3) immunising riverine communities through planting certain indigenous plants, which improve hydrological systems through their high conservation value for native ecological diversity. As most TEAs are conducted through collective action, they represent a platform to understand local capacities and enhance adoption of measures, and/or a source of knowledge for new measures to address flood risk. Therefore, full-scale investigations of these TEAs, determining how relevant TEAs are fine-tuned, and (scientific) measures enculturated based on fine-tuned TEAs could result in effective flood risk management in various flood hotspots where TEAs influence action.https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/536indigenous knowledgetraditional plantsculturehazarddisastersocial hydrologynatural resources management
spellingShingle Bosco Bwambale
Moses Muhumuza
Martine Nyeko
Traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management: A preliminary case study of the Rwenzori
Jàmbá
indigenous knowledge
traditional plants
culture
hazard
disaster
social hydrology
natural resources management
title Traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management: A preliminary case study of the Rwenzori
title_full Traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management: A preliminary case study of the Rwenzori
title_fullStr Traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management: A preliminary case study of the Rwenzori
title_full_unstemmed Traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management: A preliminary case study of the Rwenzori
title_short Traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management: A preliminary case study of the Rwenzori
title_sort traditional ecological knowledge and flood risk management a preliminary case study of the rwenzori
topic indigenous knowledge
traditional plants
culture
hazard
disaster
social hydrology
natural resources management
url https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/536
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