A qualitative study of lived experience and life courses following dam release flooding in Northern Ghanaian communities: implications for damage and loss assessment
A qualitative study of lived experience and life courses following dam release flooding in Northern Ghanaian communities: implications for damage and loss assessment
Background: dams provide water for industrial, agricultural, and domestic use, particularly in arid regions. However, controlled dam releases due to heavy rainfall may affect downstream communities' livelihoods and life courses such long-term impacts may be omitted from damage and loss assessments. This study aims to assess the lived experiences and long-term consequences of dam release flooding for downstream populations, comparing these with the typical scope of a damage and loss assessment (DaLA).
Methods: this research was conducted in two flood-prone districts in the White Volta basin, Ghana, subject to dam spillage. Four Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) with community opinion headers, household heads, chiefs, local politicians, and institutional staff were conducted and analysed, alongside semi-structured interviews with twelve opinion leaders and disaster-related institutions.
Results: flood-affected communities struggled to attract partners for marriage due to stigmatisation from flooding impacts. Women outside flooded areas rejected male members’ marriage proposals, while communities offered young girls for marriage to wealthy men for greater financial security. Out-migration of female members to seek better livelihoods frequently led to divorce, subsequently affecting children's education and well-being. Participants reported long-term trauma from flood-related contact with dangerous wildlife, travel disruption, disease risk, livelihood loss, and accidents. Such life course events and long-term trauma would be omitted from a DaLA exercise.
Conclusion: beyond its immediate impacts, flooding undermines family relationships and marriage, impairing children’s education and traumatises affected communities. We recommend livelihood diversification programmes, psychological support and family counselling to address these long-term impacts, with expansion of DaLA’s scope to underpin such support.
Asamoah, Moses
87d4c435-054d-4eb2-b3f4-79de8260588c
Dzodzomenyo, Mawuli
8a014b94-3899-4a8f-95f9-57f8dc92b1f9
Li, Chengxiu
5c025d03-9b07-4413-a3eb-9ccdc3cf3bbc
Agyemang, Linda Serwaa
b04bbc02-aab1-4902-b6c9-3f8b724e16e1
Wright, Jim
94990ecf-f8dd-4649-84f2-b28bf272e464
Asamoah, Moses
87d4c435-054d-4eb2-b3f4-79de8260588c
Dzodzomenyo, Mawuli
8a014b94-3899-4a8f-95f9-57f8dc92b1f9
Li, Chengxiu
5c025d03-9b07-4413-a3eb-9ccdc3cf3bbc
Agyemang, Linda Serwaa
b04bbc02-aab1-4902-b6c9-3f8b724e16e1
Wright, Jim
94990ecf-f8dd-4649-84f2-b28bf272e464
Asamoah, Moses, Dzodzomenyo, Mawuli, Li, Chengxiu, Agyemang, Linda Serwaa and Wright, Jim
(2024)
A qualitative study of lived experience and life courses following dam release flooding in Northern Ghanaian communities: implications for damage and loss assessment.
PLoS ONE.
(In Press)
Abstract
Background: dams provide water for industrial, agricultural, and domestic use, particularly in arid regions. However, controlled dam releases due to heavy rainfall may affect downstream communities' livelihoods and life courses such long-term impacts may be omitted from damage and loss assessments. This study aims to assess the lived experiences and long-term consequences of dam release flooding for downstream populations, comparing these with the typical scope of a damage and loss assessment (DaLA).
Methods: this research was conducted in two flood-prone districts in the White Volta basin, Ghana, subject to dam spillage. Four Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) with community opinion headers, household heads, chiefs, local politicians, and institutional staff were conducted and analysed, alongside semi-structured interviews with twelve opinion leaders and disaster-related institutions.
Results: flood-affected communities struggled to attract partners for marriage due to stigmatisation from flooding impacts. Women outside flooded areas rejected male members’ marriage proposals, while communities offered young girls for marriage to wealthy men for greater financial security. Out-migration of female members to seek better livelihoods frequently led to divorce, subsequently affecting children's education and well-being. Participants reported long-term trauma from flood-related contact with dangerous wildlife, travel disruption, disease risk, livelihood loss, and accidents. Such life course events and long-term trauma would be omitted from a DaLA exercise.
Conclusion: beyond its immediate impacts, flooding undermines family relationships and marriage, impairing children’s education and traumatises affected communities. We recommend livelihood diversification programmes, psychological support and family counselling to address these long-term impacts, with expansion of DaLA’s scope to underpin such support.
Text
PONE-D-24-14536_FTC_2
- Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 26 November 2024.
Request a copy
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 26 September 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 494984
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494984
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: c9d8cecd-fdf7-43de-8383-ee99839ffd1f
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 24 Oct 2024 16:49
Last modified: 25 Oct 2024 01:39
Export record
Contributors
Author:
Moses Asamoah
Author:
Mawuli Dzodzomenyo
Author:
Chengxiu Li
Author:
Linda Serwaa Agyemang
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics