Adaptation Fund in Alaotra-Mangoro, Madagascar
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Katherine Browne, Stockholm Environment Institute
Version: View help for Version V2
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Project Citation:
Project Description
Survey questions captured information about household wealth (as measured by key assets and socioeconomic indicators), education level, ethnicity and immigration status, food insecurity, coping strategies, and adaptive capacity. They also measured household political connectivity as a product of household and extended family members' positions in government, institutions of customary governance, security forces, and community-level leadership, as well as household members' participation in local committees. Finally, questions addressed forms of household participation in the AFRice project.
Scope of Project
Methodology
In the first phase of sampling, a random number generator was used to select 12 clusters (4 of each subject group) in each commune for surveying. In the second phase, approximately 15 households were selected within each cluster. The method of selection differed for beneficiary and non-beneficiary households. Because only a small portion of the households benefited, random sampling was not possible for beneficiary households. Instead the survey team relied on chiefs fokontany (local government officials) and tangalamena (village elders) to initially identify beneficiary households, then used snowball sampling to identify additional beneficiaries. This method may have introduced some bias to the sample, as local leaders may have identified wealthier or more politically connected households for surveying. For non-beneficiary households, the survey team used the UNICEF “pencil spin” technique to randomly select households (Maxwell & Caldwell, 2008). Most fokontany had only one significant village, but in cases where there was more than one the team divided to survey households in both.
The sampling design was made more complex by the discovery, during preliminary site visits, that many of the project benefits intended for the commune of Bemaitso had been redirected to another fokontany (Ambatoharanana) in the neighboring commune of Andilamena. At that juncture, the survey team had neither the time nor resources to fully sample the entire commune (i.e., collect 12 clusters). Neglecting to include Andilamena, however, had the potential to bias the findings, particularly because local informants indicated that political connections played a role in redirecting the benefits. Therefore, three additional clusters were added to represent Andilamena: one each of beneficiaries and non-beneficiaries in Ambatoharana, and one from a randomly selected non-beneficiary fokontany.
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