Relationship Between Climate Change, Debt, Nutrition and Health During COVID-19 Pandemic, 2022

DOI

Running between 2019 and 2022, the project ‘Depleted by Debt? Focusing a gendered lens on climate resilience, credit and nutrition in Cambodia and South India’ has undertaken cutting-edge interdisciplinary research during the COVID-19 pandemic on some of the most pressing issues impacting rural communities today. The data collected - via quantitative surveys, semi-structured qualitative interviews, and photo-elicitation -evidences how household over-indebtedness needs to be understood and tackled in tandem with the climate crisis and the negative impacts these are both having on people’s health and well-being.Small-scale credit is exalted in mainstream development thinking as a key means of supporting women and their families in dealing with daily, ongoing, and often slow-onset climate disasters. Facing growing crises of agricultural productivity from droughts and floods, and taking primary responsibility for the nutritional wellbeing of their households, women are targeted as credit borrowers globally. Credit provisioning therefore speaks to the push for 'resilience' against climate disasters that is central to Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 13, 'Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts', and which has serious implications for SDG 5 'Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls' that prioritises the valuing and recognition of women's unpaid care and domestic work. How do we ensure, then, that 'climate resilience' does not come at the cost of women's emotional and bodily depletion through processes of household nutrition provisioning? This is the key concern motivating the project which asks: (1) In what ways is credit, as a form of climate resilience, shaping nutritional provisioning? (2) How are the dynamics of nutrition provisioning and credit-taking in a changing climate being experienced and visualised? (3) What are the gender and social reproductive dynamics of the climate-credit-nutrition nexus? (4) What lessons can be learned to deliver improved and more equitable credit provisioning and nutritional outcomes to households and communities affected by slow-onset climate disasters? The project is set within the political economy contexts of Cambodia and Tamil Nadu, India.

Data have been collected via various methods and sampling procedures including quantitative surveys, qualitative interviews, and photo elicitation; further information about the collection methods is available in the document 85779_data_collection_methods.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-855779
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=1825ca64f74646e097eb92741113d9742939275398dd3022ca1ca8b4bfcbe717
Provenance
Creator Iskander, D, University College London; Brickell, K, King's College London; Natarajan, N, King's College London; Parsons, L, Royal Holloway, University of London; Guermond, V, Royal Holloway, University of Londo; Zanello, G, Reading University; Picchioni, F, Greenwich University; Joseph, N, Institute French Pondicherry; Guerin, I, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement; Venkatasubramanian, G, Institute French Pondicherry; Chann, S, Royal University of Phnom Penh
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2023
Funding Reference ESRC
Rights Katherine Brickell, King's College London. Dalia Iskander, University College London. Nithya Natarajan, King's College London. Laurie Parsons, Royal Holloway, University of Londo. Vincent Guermond, Royal Holloway, University of Londo. Giacomo Zanello, Reading University. Fiorella Picchioni, Greenwich University. Nithya Joseph, Institute French Pondicherry. Isabelle Guerin, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement. Govindan enkatasubramanian, Institute French Pondicherry. Sopheak Chann, Royal University of Phnom Penh; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service. All requests are subject to the permission of the data owner or his/her nominee. Please email the contact person for this data collection to request permission to access the data, explaining your reason for wanting access to the data, then contact our Access Helpdesk.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Numeric; Text; Still image
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage Cambodia; India