Climate Change, Voluntary Immobility, and Place-Belongingness: Insights from Togoru, Fiji
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Place Belongingness and Climate Change
3. Research Site and Methods
3.1. Research Site
3.2. Research Design, Data Collection, and Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Background of Togoru
4.2. Experiences of Coastal Change
4.3. Adapting in Place
4.4. Relocation
4.5. Place-Belongingness in Togoru
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions and Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Household (HH) | No. of HH Members | Mobility Characteristics |
---|---|---|
#1 | 2 | Household members had worked around Fiji. Following their retirement in 2014, they returned to Togoru. A household member works in Suva five days a week and returns to Togoru every weekend. |
#2 | 2 | Household members work in western Fiji and travel back and forth to Togoru. They plan to return permanently in the near future. |
#3 | 4 | Never left Togoru. |
#4 | 5 | Left for Suva city to work and returned to Togoru in 2017. A member of the household works in Suva four days a week and returns to Togoru for the rest of the week. |
#5 | 4 | Left for Labasa town to work and returned to Togoru in 2013. In 2019 moved back to Labasa for one year and returned in 2020. |
#6 | 3 | Relocated to Navua town in 2015 and plans to return to Togoru in 2022. |
#7 | 2 | Not interviewed as they have migrated to Australia but regularly visit Togoru. |
Levels | Adaptation Strategies | Representative Quotes |
---|---|---|
Household | Investing in and adapting infrastructure | “This old house we have is 48 years old. You can see the cracks on the wall and part of it is sinking also due to strong winds and saltwater intrusion. So, we thought of building a new one but on higher posts to protect us from the flooded waters caused by heavy rain and or from high tides” (HH #3, participant #1). |
“We plan to move back to Togoru next year, 2022, and renovate and strengthen the house to be able to stand impacts of climate” (HH #6, participant #1). | ||
Innovative farming methods | “Farming, we cannot do that because of the seawater. But my husband and I go on to YouTube to research ways to go about making small home gardens in salty areas” (HH #4, participant #1). | |
Community | Construction of protective barriers | “The first sea wall I can recall was built in 1972… It was built by the community members… the District Officer, they supported us by providing the cement and wheelbarrow, we supply the coral, and the community provided the labor” (HH #3, participant #1). |
“One time they had brought 100 tires to save their coastline and when TC Winston came in 2016, most of the tires became washed onto the mainland into their compound” (GoF, participant #2). | ||
Restoring and enhancing natural ecosystems | “But for the seaside, why we have to plant more trees. What we are doing now is planting coconut trees all around. If we do not do that… the heat of the sun on our soil, which is sandy, is overheated and heavy rain and waves washing onto the sand” (HH #3, participant #1). | |
Government | Proposed seawall | “We decided a sea wall was the way forward and not relocation. It will be built of cement and fully funded by the Government of Fiji” (HH #3, participant #1). |
“All we want is the sea wall to be done up and it’s been a long time we have been asking. Late last year (2020) around November, surveyors from the Government came to Togoru to peg the markings for the new sea wall” (HH #4, participant #1). |
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Yee, M.; Piggott-McKellar, A.E.; McMichael, C.; McNamara, K.E. Climate Change, Voluntary Immobility, and Place-Belongingness: Insights from Togoru, Fiji. Climate 2022, 10, 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030046
Yee M, Piggott-McKellar AE, McMichael C, McNamara KE. Climate Change, Voluntary Immobility, and Place-Belongingness: Insights from Togoru, Fiji. Climate. 2022; 10(3):46. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030046
Chicago/Turabian StyleYee, Merewalesi, Annah E. Piggott-McKellar, Celia McMichael, and Karen E. McNamara. 2022. "Climate Change, Voluntary Immobility, and Place-Belongingness: Insights from Togoru, Fiji" Climate 10, no. 3: 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030046
APA StyleYee, M., Piggott-McKellar, A. E., McMichael, C., & McNamara, K. E. (2022). Climate Change, Voluntary Immobility, and Place-Belongingness: Insights from Togoru, Fiji. Climate, 10(3), 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030046