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"This book considers how basic income could be used as a mechanism for disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation in African agrarian societies. African agrarian societies are among those most severely impacted by disasters, due to insufficient financial and technological resources to prepare for and respond to crises. This book argues that hazards and environmental disasters are increasingly not isolated occurrences, and the vulnerability of communities is cumulative event after event, with capacities to cope and adapt weakened progressively. With pre- and post-disaster operating as a single continuous process, basic income could provide communities with a stable flow of money, leaving them better able to adapt and respond to crises. To illustrate the theoretical framework, the book uses Mozambique, and more specifically the district of Buzi, as an instrumental case study. This innovative book will be of interest to readers across the fields of global development, African studies, and humanitarian and disaster studies"--



This book considers how basic income could be used as a mechanism for disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation in African agrarian societies. It will be of interest to readers across the fields of global development, African studies, and humanitarian and disaster studies.

1. Introduction
2. Crises, Disasters and Societies
3. African Agrarian
Societies
4. Sub-Saharan African Agrarian Societies in Disasters
5.
Development and Humanitarian Aid as Intervention
6. Transfers In-Kind,
Vouchers and Cash
7. With a Case Study: Mozambique Búzi District
8. A
Detailed Look at Disasters Management from a Population Perspective Búzi
District as an Illustrative Case
9. Conclusions
10. Wrapping Up
Sara Bernardo holds a PhD in African Studies from ISCTE-IUL, Lisbon University Institute, Portugal. She has previously worked in the NGO sector.