Research from an alternate reality~ctm
University of Otago

Dr Anita Latai-Niusulu interviewing a Samoan farmer. Credit: Dr Anita Latai-Niusulu
The resilience of Samoan communities in the face of climate change is providing a blueprint for other nations to follow, according to Samoa and Otago researchers.
It is one of the first studies to examine Samoa’s grassroots ability to adapt to climate change, and its authors warn officials risk ignoring village expertise at their peril.
The newly-released paper is co-authored by Dr Anita Latai-Niusulu from the National University of Samoa, and University of Otago Professors Tony Binns and Etienne Nel, both from the School of Geography.
The study, based on Dr Latai-Niusulu’s PhD thesis, interviewed 165 residents in villages across Samoa’s main islands Upolu and Savaii, including in coastal, inland, urban and rural areas.
More than 70 per cent of Samoa’s population lives in 330 rural villages across Upolu and Savaii, and most of the country’s infrastructure, population and development is near the coastline.
The researchers found villagers had a heightened awareness of climate change and noticed hotter days and longer dry spells, shorter periods of rainfall, stronger damaging winds, and sea level rise.
However rather than despairing at the prospect, villagers have developed a pragmatic and positive approach to impending climate changes.
Past natural disasters such as Cyclones Ofa and Val in the 1990s had a devastating effect on many communities, but the recovery period also brought opportunities for developing tighter social connections, new food supplies and infrastructural development and, in some cases, village relocation.
Professor Binns says the Samoan approach challenges general Western perceptions about Pacific nations’ ability to respond to climate change.
He says exposure to serious environmental challenges has not made villagers ‘fatalistic’ or ‘helpless’, but instead has given them a more optimistic outlook on life.
The close-knit Samoan village structure, with a village council (fono) made up of chiefly title holders (matai) from extended family units throughout the village, means that each villager has a voice at the local decision table.
Communities also regularly meet together at evening prayers to share information and strengthen social networks.
This, along with the fact that more than 80 per cent of Samoa’s land and resources are still collectively owned, means Samoans can engage in collaborative action against climate change.
Common strategies in all villages include diversifying food and water sources, being geographically mobile, having more than one place to live, and developing mental and spiritual strength.
“Such diverse livelihood portfolios and close community collaboration have generated an impressive level of resilience which communities elsewhere in the Pacific and beyond could well emulate,” Professor Binns says.
However, the study found climate change decisions in Samoa are primarily occurring at a national level, and are dominated by the views of government workers, consultancy firms and civil society workers.
Officials need to listen to community expertise and develop a more nuanced understanding of each village’s key concerns – which vary according each village’s unique geographical challenges, Professor Binns says.
“Governments need to carefully reconsider their expenditure in relation to climate change adaptation, with perhaps less spending directed towards building seawalls and coastal roads.
“More support should be given to other climate change adaptation initiatives such as village, church and family activities that strengthen social networks and build social memory.”
###
The study has been published in the Singapore Journal of Topical Geography.
For more information, contact:
Professor Tony Binns
Ron Lister Chair of Geography
School of Geography/Te Ihowhenua
University of Otago
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I remember how these folk made a total fool out of Margaret Mead and all Western Intelligensia! Well Done, and now another chance….. Brett Keane
Samoa is not the only place which is proving resilient to “climate change”.
My home in south eastern Australia is doing much the same – since I arrived here 40 years ago the sea-level has not changed in any noticeable way; the temperatures are exactly on the long-term average, and the current drought is typical and unrelated to CC.
Actually, I would like to bet there are many places around the world resilient to “climate change”.
An entire planet of ’em!
“The researchers found villagers had a heightened awareness of climate change and noticed hotter days and longer dry spells, shorter periods of rainfall, stronger damaging winds, and sea level rise.”
I’ll be darned. Those villagers in Samoa aren’t as backwards as some might have assumed. It appears as if they are using busted climate model, computer simulations of the atmosphere instead of observations of the real world climate optimum ………..just like the 97% of elite climate scientists who know that model data always trumps observations (-:
This is silly.
The islands in the Central Pacific has the most stable and unchanging climate anywhere on Earth. Temperatures are virtually constant over the year and between day and night. Rainfall does vary a bit over the year as the ITCZ moves north and south. And (except near the Equator) each island may be hit by a hurricane once or twice a century. And sea level moves up and down several centimeters each Nino/Nina.
Otherwise, nothing. The warm ocean buffers everything almost completely.
And, yes, (relative) sea-level has risen sharply on Samoa recently, due to tectonics (= earthquake):
https://www.sonel.org/?page=gps&idStation=831
Sorry. I don’t believe there has been any climate change in Samoa. Anecdata be damned.
American Samoa is classified tropical rain forest, Af (Köppen-Geiger). This has not changed.
The researchers found villagers had a heightened awareness of climate change and noticed hotter days and longer dry spells, shorter periods of rainfall, stronger damaging winds, and sea level rise.
Assuming that’s not an outright lie (big assumption), that’s just evidence eco-loon propaganda has reached even these isolated people. And they’re savvy enough to know they could get in on the climate-change gravy-train if they play their cards right & act like “victims” (ala the Maldives).
Typically, Samoans want to get to New Zealand to save themselves form climate change, agreed, however, it’s more so they can get on the “dole” and get a KFC meal on Friday.
Kewl eh bro?!
–“The researchers found villagers had a heightened awareness of climate change and noticed hotter days and longer dry spells, shorter periods of rainfall, stronger damaging winds, and sea level rise.”–
The first thing a real researcher would do is consider the confirmation bias implicit in such a “heightened awareness”.
Neat trick;
Incessantly propagandize people that climate change will mean “hotter days and longer dry spells, shorter periods of rainfall, stronger damaging winds, and sea level rise” for two or three decades.
Then pretend their heightened awareness of climate change and their noticing hotter days and longer dry spells, shorter periods of rainfall, stronger damaging winds, and sea level rise is something they independently and spontaneously observed, not something drilled into their heads by decades of propaganda.
up to date Samoa:
https://www.google.com/search?q=latest+TV+documentaries+samoa&oq=latest+TV+documentaries+samoa&aqs=chrome.