Living with Natural Disasters: Doctoral Research by Violet Kanyiginya Highlights Both Vulnerability and Resilience in the Ugandan Highlands

 

 

 

Floods that sweep away entire villages, landslides that swallow roads and fields, natural disasters are affecting more and more people worldwide, often because population growth forces them to live in high-risk areas. This is also true for the Kigezi Highlands in southwestern Uganda, where Violet Kanyiginya has spent the past few years studying the interaction between landscape, climate, and people.

For her PhD, Kanyiginya mapped more than 4,000 natural disasters in the Kigezi Highlands, an impressive inventory. She did not limit herself to numbers and satellite images, but also listened to the stories of local residents. Older inhabitants provided historical insights, while volunteers acted as geo-observers and river monitors, tracking changes in the landscape and water levels on a daily basis. “That citizen-centered approach was crucial”, Kanyiginya emphasizes. “People in the region are not passive victims, they have knowledge and experience that strengthen our research. Nature is powerful, but it is often human choices that determine how severe a disaster becomes. By better understanding how the landscape changes and how people respond, we can work together to find solutions.”

Her analysis shows that natural disasters have been part of life in the Kigezi Highlands for centuries. Landslides and flash floods were the most common. However, their impact has increased significantly in recent decades. The main reason: more people, more farmland, and major changes in land use. Where forests and grasslands once stood, there are now houses and fields, leaving the soil more vulnerable. “We see that human activities make the landscape more sensitive to disasters”, Kanyiginya explains. “That also means that better land management choices can make a big difference.”

The insights from Kanyiginya’s doctoral research are not merely academic. They provide crucial data for local and national policymakers to improve land management and disaster prevention, from identifying safe building zones to protecting forests, and involving communities in early warning systems. “I hope my work can contribute to a future in which communities in high-risk areas are better prepared and protected”, Kanyiginya concludes.

More information:
Violet Kanyiginya:
Kanyiginya studied land use and water management in Uganda, Tanzania, and Botswana. In 2019, she received a scholarship for a PhD at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), in collaboration with the Royal Museum for Central Africa and Mbarara University. She has published nine scientific articles and presented her work at fifteen international conferences.

Violet.Kanyiginya@vub.be

Prof. Matthieu Kervyn (supervisor): Matthieu.Kervyn.De.Meerendre@vub.be

 

 


Frans Steenhoudt

Frans Steenhoudt

Perscontact wetenschap en onderzoek

 

Share

Latest stories

Website preview
VUB and the Japan Sport Council sign a cooperation agreement for a European research centre for elite sport
First agreement between the Japan Sport Council and a foreign university strengthens international cooperation in high-performance sport
press.vub.ac.be
Website preview
VUB and HELIOS Foundation launch chair on mental well-being at work
The Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) and HELIOS Foundation are launching the chair on mental well-being at work. With this new collaboration, both partners want to contribute to healthier, more sustainable and more people-oriented workplaces in Belgium. The chair will combine scientific research with concrete interventions in organisations to reduce psychosocial risks and help prevent long-term disability due to mental health problems.
press.vub.ac.be
Website preview
VUB study: Small group of returners responsible for disproportionate share of e-commerce's ecological footprint
They are more likely to buy several options at once and only decide at home what they ultimately want to keep
press.vub.ac.be

Get updates in your mailbox

By clicking "Subscribe" I confirm I have read and agree to the Privacy Policy.

About Press - Vrije Universiteit Brussel

Vrije Universiteit Brussel is an internationally oriented university in Brussels, the heart of Europe. By providing excellent research and education on a human scale, VUB wants to make an active and committed contribution to a better society.

The World Needs You

The Vrije Universiteit Brussel assumes its scientific and social responsibility with love and decisiveness. That’s why VUB launched the platform De Wereld Heeft Je Nodig – The World Needs You, which brings together ideas, actions and projects based on six Ps. The first P stands for People, because that’s what it’s all about: giving people equal opportunities, prosperity, welfare, respect. Peace is about fighting injustice, big and small, in the world. Prosperity combats poverty and inequality. Planet stands for actions on biodiversity, climate, air quality, animal rights... With Partnership, VUB is looking for joint actions to make the world a better place. The sixth and last P is for Poincaré, the French philosopher Henri Poincaré, from whom VUB derives its motto that thinking should submit to nothing except the facts themselves. VUB is an ‘urban engaged university’, strongly anchored in Brussels and Europe and working according to the principles of free research.

www.vub.be/dewereldheeftjenodig

 


Contact

Pleinlaan 2 1050 Brussel

02 / 629.11.38

tineke.sonck@vub.be

www.vub.ac.be