Department of Geography, University of Colorado Boulder, 110 Guggenheim Building, Boulder, CO, 80301, USA.
Department of Earth Sciences, Montana State University, 221 Traphagen, Bozeman, MT, 59718-4001, USA.
Ambio. 2018 Nov;47(7):794-805. doi: 10.1007/s13280-018-1021-3. Epub 2018 Feb 19.
In Spring 2015, a series of earthquakes and aftershocks struck Nepal. The earthquakes caused significant changes in labor and land availability, cash income needs, and land quality. We examine how these post-earthquake impacts converged with ongoing agricultural shifts. Earthquake-related socio-economic and landscape changes specifically motivate the adoption of cardamom, Amomum subulatum, a high-value ecologically beneficial, and low labor commercial crop. We investigate reasons for the increased interest in cardamom post-earthquake, and challenges associated with it. We find that adopting cardamom serves as an important post-disaster adaptation. However, more broadly, unevenly distributed interventions coupled with the high capital costs of agricultural transition exacerbate social differentiation in communities after the disaster. Adoption is often limited to economically better off smallholder farmers. This paper extends previous research on disasters and smallholder farming by highlighting the specific potential of disasters to accelerate agricultural transitions and resulting inequality from the changes.
2015 年春季,尼泊尔发生了一系列地震和余震。地震导致劳动力和土地供应、现金收入需求以及土地质量发生了重大变化。我们研究了这些地震后的影响如何与正在进行的农业转变相融合。与地震相关的社会经济和景观变化特别促使人们采用小豆蔻,即 Amomum subulatum,这是一种高价值、生态有益、低劳动力的商业作物。我们调查了地震后人们对小豆蔻兴趣增加的原因,以及与之相关的挑战。我们发现,种植小豆蔻是一种重要的灾后适应策略。然而,更广泛地说,干预措施分布不均,加上农业转型的高资本成本,加剧了灾后社区的社会分化。这种种植方式往往局限于经济条件较好的小农户。本文通过强调灾害加速农业转型的特定潜力以及由此带来的不平等变化,扩展了先前关于灾害和小农户农业的研究。