NAIROBI, Kenya - Sept. 23, 2025 - PRLog -- The Human Resilience Project has completed its first in a series of ten global expeditions to learn with and from some of the world's most remote communities about what it means to survive and thrive under extreme pressure. Carried under the banner of Explorers Club flag #12 and designated a Rolex watch expedition, the mission took researchers deep into northern Kenya to engage with the Gabra, a nomadic camel-herding people whose way of life is collapsing under climate change.
Led by Dr. Constance Scharff, Explorers Club member and principal investigator, the team traversed the Chalbi Desert and surrounding region, documenting how the Gabra are navigating a shift away from nomadism. With livestock decimated by repeated droughts, the overwhelming majority of Gabra are settling in towns for the first time in their history.
Despite this upheaval, the Gabra demonstrated powerful strategies of resilience, which may be useful lessons to other communities experiencing tremendous adversity. The Gabra exhibit:
- Radical Acceptance of hardship as a perpetual fact of life.
- Unwavering Faith in God as an anchor through uncertainty.
- Reciprocity and Collective Responsibility, a cultural ethic of sharing and mutual care that ensures no one is left behind.
"These are lessons the world needs right now," said Dr. Scharff. "The Gabra remind us that resilience is not only about surviving crisis; it's about sustaining hope and community in the midst of change."
The team's findings also revealed striking generational differences: elders often expressed grief over the end of nomadism, while women and younger people spoke with optimism about education, new opportunities brought by "modernity," and access to water that is found in villages and towns.
The Human Resilience Project is currently fielding a ten-expedition initiative that seeks to uncover universal human strategies for resilience in the face of climate change, conflict, and cultural transformation. Each site is chosen for its unique pressures and the potential to learn enduring lessons for humanity.
The Kenya mission was the first step in this ambitious global effort. The team is now in Australia and New Zealand, on the second leg of the series, engaging with Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, and Māori communities, to understand how Indigenous knowledge sustains resilience across generations.
"The Human Resilience Project is more than an exploration of our inner lives and how we rise to face adversity," said Dr. Scharff. "It is about honoring communities who are carrying ancient wisdom into an uncertain future, and learning how the lessons they choose to share can help us all."
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About The Human Resilience Project
The Human Resilience Project is a multi-year initiative to document and share human strategies for resilience in communities most impacted by climate change and cultural disruption. Findings will be shared in public lectures and a forthcoming book.
About The Explorers Club & Rolex Partnership
The Explorers Club, founded in 1904, promotes scientific exploration of land, sea, air, and space. Through its partnership with Rolex, it supports expeditions at the frontiers of discovery that contribute to the preservation of the planet.
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Source: The Human Resilience Project
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