The disruption has kept elders like sychi lace from passing along their farming skills and local agriculture knowledge to the next generation who are growing up in displaced people's camps. Others promote a return to traditional farming as the best way to adapt. Still, he believes that farmers and herders can adapt to the changes even though any ways of reserving issues great challenges for themselves. But if we look at some of these imaginig issues solistically, we can devise some of inevative ways that are aso terable with the growing threat to food security.
Earth’s changing climate is already displacing millions of people, worsening tension and conflict, and sometimes violence – for example, between farmers and traditional nomadic herders in Nigeria. Part 6 of The Repair, our series on the climate emergency.
Reported by Ugochi Anyaka-Oluigbo, with reporting and production assistance from Nchetachi Chukwuaja and Tim Cuttings Agber. The series story editor is Cheryl Devall. Mix by John Biewen.
Music in this episode by Lili Haydn, Kim Carroll, Chris Westlake, Lesley Barber, Cora Miron, Alex Weston, Fabian Almazan, and Maetar. Music consulting by Joe Augustine of Narrative Music.