An asset-based approach to vulnerability: the case of small-scale fishing areas in Cameroon and Nigeria

J Dev Stud. 2011;47(2):338-53. doi: 10.1080/00220381003599410.

Abstract

This paper analyses vulnerability to poverty of rural small-scale fishing communities using cross-section data from 295 households in Cameroon and 267 in Nigeria. We propose a vulnerability measure that incorporates the idea of asset poverty into the concept of expected poverty, which allows decomposing expected poverty into expected structural-chronic, structural-transient, and stochastic-transient poverty. The findings show that most households in our study areas are expected to be structurally-chronic and structurally-transient poor. This underlines the importance of asset formation for long-term poverty reduction strategies. Further refinements are possible with longitudinal data and information about future states of nature.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Cameroon / ethnology
  • Employment / economics
  • Employment / history
  • Employment / psychology
  • Evidence-Based Practice / economics
  • Evidence-Based Practice / education
  • Evidence-Based Practice / history
  • Fisheries* / economics
  • Fisheries* / history
  • Food Industry / economics
  • Food Industry / education
  • Food Industry / history
  • Food Supply* / economics
  • Food Supply* / history
  • History, 20th Century
  • History, 21st Century
  • Nigeria / ethnology
  • Poverty* / economics
  • Poverty* / ethnology
  • Poverty* / history
  • Poverty* / legislation & jurisprudence
  • Poverty* / psychology
  • Rural Health* / history
  • Rural Population / history
  • Social Class / history
  • Socioeconomic Factors* / history
  • Vulnerable Populations* / ethnology
  • Vulnerable Populations* / legislation & jurisprudence
  • Vulnerable Populations* / psychology