Climate change and vulnerable groups in Zimbabwe: Implications for social work practice
Date
2024-09Author
Charamba, Sunungurayi
Mushunje, Mildred
Mwapaura, Kudzai
Simango, Tapiwanashe G.
Risinamhodzi, Netsai
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Social work is a practical profession that aims to improve problem-solving
skills and social functioning, particularly for disadvantaged and marginalised
vulnerable groups. The ongoing climate change is worsening the global social
work burden since it increases the frequency of occurrence, magnitude, and
duration of disaster events such as droughts, heat waves, diseases, tropical
cyclones, and floods that negatively impact human beings. Specifically,
children, people with disabilities, women, and the elderly are especially
vulnerable, as they are often unable to move quickly and may have existing
health conditions that make escaping from disasters difficult—meanwhile,
the human rights perspective advocates for the inclusivity of all people in the
disaster management process. The study used qualitative literature reviewanalysis to explore social work-based strategies for managing the impacts of
climate change in Zimbabwe while ensuring the participation of vulnerable
groups in co-creating the strategy. The research involved a scoping literature
review using African Journals Online, Google Scholar, and ProQuest Central
search engines. The study followed specific steps, including formulating the
research problem, developing and validating the reviewing protocol,
searching for relevant literature using key search terms, screening for
inclusion, assessing the relevance, extracting data, analysing and synthesising
data, and reporting the findings. Conclusions and recommendations were
based on the gaps and inconsistencies identified in the literature review.