Journal article

Informal Network as a Coping Strategy in the Climate-Livestock Relationship


Authors listOtrachshenko, Vladimir; Iliyas, San; Ova, Nargiza Alimukhamed

Publication year2024

Pages101-129

JournalCommunist and Post-Communist Studies

Volume number57

Issue number1

ISSN0967-067X

eISSN1873-6920

Open access statusBronze

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1525/cpcs.2024.2091084

PublisherUniversity of California Press


Abstract
Traditions and culture affect decisions in many daily life aspects, including family, labor market, business, and social life activities. The focus of this article is on Uzbekistan, a country that has a legacy of the Soviet past but also maintains its own traditions. Specifically, we focus on an informal network of people with common interests, known as the gap. In this article we examine whether households participating in the gap react to adverse shocks differently compared to households that do not belong to this network. We focus on the impact of climate shocks, one of the most prominent problems in Uzbekistan. In particular, we study whether climate conditions lead to differences in livestock assets across households in Uzbekistan and explore the climate-livestock relationship for members and nonmembers of the gap. The results suggest that households participating in the gap are more risk averse compared to other households. That is, in a place with a high risk of climate shocks, the gap members have lower livestock assets. At the same time, if in a current year, weather conditions improve-that is, there is more rainfall-members of the gap are able to increase their livestock assets in comparison with nonmembers.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleOtrachshenko, V., Iliyas, S. and Ova, N. (2024) Informal Network as a Coping Strategy in the Climate-Livestock Relationship, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, 57(1), pp. 101-129. https://doi.org/10.1525/cpcs.2024.2091084

APA Citation styleOtrachshenko, V., Iliyas, S., & Ova, N. (2024). Informal Network as a Coping Strategy in the Climate-Livestock Relationship. Communist and Post-Communist Studies. 57(1), 101-129. https://doi.org/10.1525/cpcs.2024.2091084


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 12:04