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Adapting to Climate Change
Thresholds, Values, Governance
This presents top scientific research by leading researchers and practitioners on the critical issue of adapting to climate change.
W. Neil Adger (Edited by), Irene Lorenzoni (Edited by), Karen L. O'Brien (Edited by)
9780521764858, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 25 June 2009
532 pages
25.4 x 17.8 x 2.9 cm, 1.13 kg
'This book presents a wide range of ideas and approaches to adapting to climate change. … The book provides a good overview of the challenges facing those studying adaptation and those seeking to adapt to climate change … there are many thought provoking chapters covering a diverse range of subects. … the book is a must read for anyone, researcher or policy-maker working in the area of adaptation.' The Geographical Journal
Adapting to climate change is a critical problem facing humanity. This involves reconsidering our lifestyles, and is linked to our actions as individuals, societies and governments. This book presents top science and social science research on whether the world can adapt to climate change. Written by experts, both academics and practitioners, it examines the risks to ecosystems, demonstrating how values, culture and the constraining forces of governance act as barriers to action. As a review of science and a holistic assessment of adaptation options, it is essential reading for those concerned with responses to climate change, especially researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and graduate students. Significant features include historical, contemporary, and future insights into adaptation to climate change; coverage of adaptation issues from different perspectives: climate science, hydrology, engineering, ecology, economics, human geography, anthropology and political science; and contributions from leading researchers and practitioners from around the world.
Introduction
1. Adaptation now
Part I. Adapting to Thresholds in Physical and Ecological Systems: 2. Ecological limits of adaptation to climate change
3. Adapting to the effects of climate change on water supply reliability
4. Protecting London from tidal flooding: limits to engineering adaptation
5. Climate prediction: a limit to adaptation?
6. Learning to crawl: how to use seasonal climate forecasts to build adaptive capacity
7. Norse Greenland settlement and limits to adaptation
8. Sea ice change in Arctic Canada: are there limits to Inuit adaptation?
Part II. The Role of Value and Culture in Adaptation: 9. The past, present and some possible futures of adaptation
10. Do values subjectively define the limits to climate change adaptation?
11. Conceptual and practical barriers to adaptation: vulnerability and responses to heat waves in the UK
12. Values and cost-benefit analysis: economic efficiency criteria in adaptation
13. Hidden costs and disparate uncertainties: trade-offs in approaches to climate policy
14. Community based adaptation and culture in theory and practice
15. Exploring the invisibility of local knowledge in decision-making: the Boscastle harbour flood disaster
16. Adaptation and conflict within fisheries: insights for living with climate change
17. Exploring cultural dimensions of adaptation to climate change
18. Adapting to an uncertain climate on the great plains: testing hypotheses on historical populations
19. Climate change and adaptive human migration: lessons from rural North America
Part III. Governance, Knowledge and Technologies for Adaptation: 20. Are our levers long and our fulcra strong enough? Exploring the soft underbelly of adaptation decisions and actions
21. Decentralized planning and climate adaptation: toward transparent governance
22. Climate adaptation, local institutions and rural livelihoods
23. Adaptive governance for a changing coastline: science, policy and publics in search of a sustainable future
24. Climate change, international cooperation and adaptation in transboundary water management
25. Decentralization: a window of opportunity for successful adaptation to climate change?
26. Adapting to climate change: the nation-state as problem and solution
27. Limits to adaptation: analysing institutional constraints
28. Accessing diversification, networks and traditional resource management as adaptations to climate extremes
29. Governance limits to effective global financial support for adaptation
30. Organizational learning and governance in adaptation in urban development
31. Conclusions: transforming the world
Index.
Subject Areas: Meteorology & climatology [RBP], Environmental economics [KCN], Politics & government [JP]