dc.description.abstract | Climate change is not gender neutral as its effects are not felt equally by men and women. Existing gender
disparities result into gender differentiated vulnerabilities which in turn result into gender differentiated impacts.
The goal of this study was to evaluate the susceptibility of livelihoods to climate change in the arid and semi-arid
regions of Makueni county, Kenya based on gender. A semi-structured questionnaire was utilized to obtain
cross-sectional primary data from 400 household heads selected using multi stage random sampling. The Kenya
Meteorological Department provided rainfall and temperature data. The data was analyzed using two livelihood
vulnerability indices: the composite Livelihood Vulnerability Index (LVI) and the Intergovernmental Panel for
Climate Change (LVI-IPCC) vulnerability index. The results revealed gendered disparities in livelihood
vulnerability to climate change. According to the composite livelihood vulnerability index (LVI), women in
Makueni county are more vulnerable to climate change (LVI women: 0.296, LVI men: 0.275). Women exhibited
higher vulnerability in six out of the seven major components considered: natural disasters and climate variability
(women: 0.375, men: 0.358), livelihood strategies (women: 0.363, men: 0.319), water (women: 0.342, men:
0.317), food (women: 0.295, men: 0.276), social networks (women: 0.274, men: 0.247), and socio-demographic
profile (women: 0.170, men: 0.127). According to the LVI-IPCC approach, women and men exhibited similar
degrees of vulnerability (men: 0.038, women: 0.034), but there were significant differences in the vulnerability
contributing factors, with women exhibiting higher vulnerability in all three vulnerability factors: exposure
(women: 0.375, men: 0.358), sensitivity (women: 0.290, men: 0.278) and adaptive capacity (women: 0.259,
men: 0.221). The study recommends adoption of gender-responsive climate change policies in order to address
gender-based discrimination, impediments and inequities that increase men’s and women’s vulnerability. | en_US |