Climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a South African university

Climate change is expected to pose grave consequences to communities around the world. It is predicted that many people, mostly in the developing world, will experience shortages of water and food as well as numerous health-related effects because of climate change. Therefore, rigorous global action...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shingirai S. Mugambiwa, Obey Dzomonda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-05-01
Series:Jàmbá : Journal of Disaster Risk Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/476
id doaj-b39e17d780d44e7b994a01524f9fbd5f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b39e17d780d44e7b994a01524f9fbd5f2020-11-25T02:32:04ZengAOSISJàmbá : Journal of Disaster Risk Studies1996-14212072-845X2018-05-01101e1e610.4102/jamba.v10i1.476212Climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a South African universityShingirai S. Mugambiwa0Obey Dzomonda1Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of LimpopoDepartment of Business Management, University of LimpopoClimate change is expected to pose grave consequences to communities around the world. It is predicted that many people, mostly in the developing world, will experience shortages of water and food as well as numerous health-related effects because of climate change. Therefore, rigorous global action is needed to enable developing countries to adapt to the effects of climate change. Universities play a pivotal role in addressing these issues and their impacts through research and technological innovations. Hence, assessing the extent to which university students understand climate change and its impacts displays the extent of hope in mitigating future changes in climatic conditions. This article assesses the knowledge and understanding of climate change and its impacts by students at an institution of higher learning in South Africa. This study utilised a quantitative approach and a descriptive design. The convenience method was used to obtain participants for the study. Self-administered questionnaires were utilised in a survey to collect data from the participants. A sample of 90 university students participated in the survey. Data analysis included descriptive statistics and T-tests. Reliability was measured using the Cronbach’s alpha. The study discovered that university students have low knowledge and understanding of climate change. As a result, the study concluded that if students could be well-informed about climate change issues, they could positively contribute to the development of their communities by crafting smart climate change mitigation and adaptation skills.https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/476climate changevulnerabilityuniversity studentsclimate hazards
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shingirai S. Mugambiwa
Obey Dzomonda
spellingShingle Shingirai S. Mugambiwa
Obey Dzomonda
Climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a South African university
Jàmbá : Journal of Disaster Risk Studies
climate change
vulnerability
university students
climate hazards
author_facet Shingirai S. Mugambiwa
Obey Dzomonda
author_sort Shingirai S. Mugambiwa
title Climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a South African university
title_short Climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a South African university
title_full Climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a South African university
title_fullStr Climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a South African university
title_full_unstemmed Climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a South African university
title_sort climate change and vulnerability discourse by students at a south african university
publisher AOSIS
series Jàmbá : Journal of Disaster Risk Studies
issn 1996-1421
2072-845X
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Climate change is expected to pose grave consequences to communities around the world. It is predicted that many people, mostly in the developing world, will experience shortages of water and food as well as numerous health-related effects because of climate change. Therefore, rigorous global action is needed to enable developing countries to adapt to the effects of climate change. Universities play a pivotal role in addressing these issues and their impacts through research and technological innovations. Hence, assessing the extent to which university students understand climate change and its impacts displays the extent of hope in mitigating future changes in climatic conditions. This article assesses the knowledge and understanding of climate change and its impacts by students at an institution of higher learning in South Africa. This study utilised a quantitative approach and a descriptive design. The convenience method was used to obtain participants for the study. Self-administered questionnaires were utilised in a survey to collect data from the participants. A sample of 90 university students participated in the survey. Data analysis included descriptive statistics and T-tests. Reliability was measured using the Cronbach’s alpha. The study discovered that university students have low knowledge and understanding of climate change. As a result, the study concluded that if students could be well-informed about climate change issues, they could positively contribute to the development of their communities by crafting smart climate change mitigation and adaptation skills.
topic climate change
vulnerability
university students
climate hazards
url https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/476
work_keys_str_mv AT shingiraismugambiwa climatechangeandvulnerabilitydiscoursebystudentsatasouthafricanuniversity
AT obeydzomonda climatechangeandvulnerabilitydiscoursebystudentsatasouthafricanuniversity
_version_ 1724821727359270912