By switching to dark mode you can reduce the energy consumption of our digital service.

Experiential Learning: Vulnerability Walk

The Vulnerability Walk is a serious game that helps explore the different vulnerabilities that exist within a community and reflects on how adaptation efforts can effectively address these.
The vulnerability Walk - at a glance

Summary

The ways in which people, households and communities are socially differentiated determines how vulnerable people are to the range of risks they are exposed to – both climatic and non-climatic – and shapes their abilities to respond and adapt to these risks. Understanding these social differences in vulnerability is therefore essential to ensure that adaptation efforts are sustainable and successful, and to help local communities address the risks they face without compromising their wellbeing or exacerbating inequities.

This game helps explore the different vulnerabilities that exist within a community and reflects on how adaptation efforts can effectively address these.

Read the cards:

What you need

  • Facilitators: 1
  • Number of players: 2 – Many
  • Time to play: 20 mins +

Materials

  • ​List of context-appropriate characters (see further resources for examples)
  • Small pieces of paper (one for each character) List of context-appropriate Yes/No questions (see further resources for examples) A large enough space for people to move around (inside or outside)

Process

  1. Devise context-appropriate characters that cover the wide range of social differences that exist in your region (e.g. gender, class, ethnicity, caste, disability, socio-economic status, urban vs. rural, proximity to village centre).
  2. Devise context-appropriate questions (10 or more) that will elicit Yes/No responses from the characters based on these social differences.
  3. Randomly assign characters to participants, and ask them to keep their character secret until the end of the game.
  4. Participants stand in a straight line, with plenty space to move forward.
  5. Ask each question. If characters answer ‘yes’, they take one step forward. If characters answer ‘no’, they remain in place.
  6. End game once all questions have been asked.
  7. Reflect on the game using questions like these:
    1. Why could you or could you not move forward?
    2. How did you feel when you moved forward?
    3. Where are the men? Where are the women? Where are the poor? Where are the old? Where are the young?
    4. What does this tell us about vulnerability?
    5. What are the implications of these dynamics for adaptation efforts?
    6. How could we change the vulnerability status quo?

Related resources

Add your project

Exchange your climate change adaptation projects and lessons learned with the global community.