
Behavioural adaptation for water security and inclusion (BASIN)
Water security is central to addressing the challenge of climate change. Water insecurity is a major pathway through which climate change impacts humanity. One in three Africans experience water scarcity, with women, children and other marginalised groups being disproportionately affected. Adaptation to water scarcity is fundamentally about behaviour change. While behavioural and psychological sciences have made important contributions in understanding behaviour change, current insights have limited application in Africa as they primarily draw from Western societies. This is a gap that the BASIN project seeks to bridge.
BASIN aims to draw insights from behavioural approaches to improve decision-making for more effective and equitable adaptation in policy and practice. Recognising that barriers and opportunities exist at multiple scales, the project will examine adaptation behaviours and practices from the individual level to the more systemic, organisational and political levels.
Project overview
BASIN aims to synthesise, assess and test the application potential of multi-level behavioural and psychological science perspectives for adaptation in Africa to enhance water security for the most vulnerable.
It is a transdisciplinary partnership that brings together four universities, three NGOs and a knowledge broker.
Our work includes testing insights into targeting weather and climate information to enable adaptation action. We are doing this through case studies where our NGO partners are addressing cases of critical climate–water challenges in Burkina Faso, Malawi and Tanzania, providing the basis for upscaling insights in the Sahel, Ethiopia and Zambia.
Through intensive engagement with stakeholders and policymakers, and tailored and targeted policy-oriented actions, BASIN is aiming to achieve:
- Improved decision-making to enable more effective and equitable adaptation in policy and practice, including by our NGO partners
- More inclusive water security in the face of climate change in our case countries and globally.
Case studies
BASIN will examine how institutional practices (re)produce inequality, and how more inclusive water security and equitable adaptation can be supported.
Burkina Faso, Malawi and Tanzania have been chosen as case study countries because they have experienced damaging major flood and drought events since the mid-2000s. While there remains high uncertainty about changes in mean rainfall, variability is projected to increase, with higher frequency and intensity of extremes.
Our project case studies will consider behavioural factors across individual and organisational levels in: strengthening resilience to climate extremes, including local flood adaptation and behaviour in marginalised communities. This will draw on concepts about how threats are perceived (including how they are communicated), and factors influencing behaviour, by taking into account whether available flood mitigation measures are effective and affordable to implement. This recognises that to understand behavioural responses established factors such as risk perception, income and gender need to be complemented by perceived effectiveness and costs of methods, alongside factors such as fatalism, denial and wishful thinking.
Photo Credit: Jade Zhao
Lead Organizations
CLARE Partners
Contacts
j.zhao16@lse.ac.uk https://www.lse.ac.uk/granthaminstitute/basin/Updates
Climate adaptation and drought resilience go hand-in-hand
Boosting resilience of dryland communities through Sand River Utilization and Local Water Harvesting Innovations in Central Tanzania
New thematic summaries unveil innovative research for climate adaptation and resilience
Championing community volunteering to enhance water security
Read about research for impact approaches in CLARE in our first working paper
A behavioural lens could refresh approaches to water security
Strengthening drought resilience is effective climate adaptation
Water security in Africa is gender dependent
Why understanding the behavioural dimensions of adapting to water insecurity is so important
Introducing the CLARE research portfolio
Outputs

Using political settlement analysis to explain Tanzania’s changing public participation agenda in water governance

Water on the mind : mapping behavioral
psychological research on water security

Beyond access : procedural justice
the pursuit of water security through community relay frameworks

Maintaining groundwater collection over the rainy season with water ATM price reductions : a study in Kitui County Kenya

Organisational perceptions of adapting to a changing climate

Water insecurity
menstrual hygiene management : a feminist political ecology study of women in Freetown Sierra Leone

Mapping community engagement in water-focused non-governmental organisations to ensure just
effective work : a sub-Saharan Africa case study

Role of human behaviour in water management

Enhancing adaptation for water security
inclusion
