Namibian farmers, drought-resistant crops, indigenous crops, climate migration, Southern Africa agriculture, food security, rural livelihoods, climate adaptation, mahangu, sorghum, cowpea, Bambara groundnut, agroecology, smallholder farmers, Limpopo agriculture, Tsumeb, Thohoyandou, cross-border farming, seed systems, community seed banks, nutrition security, climate-smart agriculture, SADC migration, South Africa rural development, sustainable farming, climate-resilient crops, urban food insecurity, migration health, gender and migration, youth farmers, undocumented migrants, agricultural policy, FAO dryland program, El Niño drought, crop diversity, informal settlements, traditional knowledge, agricultural extension, smallholder collectives, local markets, food sovereignty, adaptive farming practices, climate change impact, multi-stakeholder collaboration.

From Tsumeb to Thohoyandou: The Namibian Farmers Bringing Drought-Resistant Indigenous Crops Across Borders

Namibian Farmers Bringing Drought‑Resistant Crops Across Borders In the arid expanses between Tsumeb in northern Namibia and Thohoyandou in Limpopo Province, a new pattern of climate‑linked movement and agricultural innovation is emerging. Severe droughts and erratic rainfall, driven by climate variability, are forcing rural agricultural households to rethink what crops they grow, where they live, […]

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