﻿FN Clarivate Analytics Web of Science
VR 1.0
PT J
AU Hamilton, M
   Lubell, M
AF Hamilton, Matthew
   Lubell, Mark
TI Collaborative Governance of Climate Change Adaptation Across Spatial and
   Institutional Scales
SO POLICY STUDIES JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation governance; spatial and institutional scales;
   East Africa
ID P-ASTERISK MODELS; COLLECTIVE ACTION; POLICY NETWORKS; RATIONAL CHOICE;
   EAST-AFRICA; SYSTEMS; ORGANIZATION; COOPERATION; MANAGEMENT; GOVERNMENT
AB We examine two related questions that are key for understanding collaborative outcomes in complex governance systems. The first is the extent to which collaboration among policy actors depends upon their joint participation in policy forums. The second is how the scales at which these forums operate conditionally affect the likelihood of collaboration. We address these questions using data from a recent survey on actors' collaborative interactions as well as their participation in climate change adaptation policy forums in the Lake Victoria region in East Africa. Exponential random graph models show that actors are more likely to collaborate if they jointly participate in policy forums. However, this effect weakens at progressively higher spatial levels at which forums operate. Similarly, collaboration is less likely among actors jointly participating in forums that sponsor decision making at the higher collective choice level rather than lower operational choice level. While policy forums may catalyze collaboration, our findings suggest that their capacity to do so may be subject to scale-dependent transaction costs of political contracting.
C1 [Hamilton, Matthew] Univ Michigan, Sch Environm & Sustainabil, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Lubell, Mark] Univ Calif Davis, Environm Sci & Policy, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
   [Lubell, Mark] Univ Calif Davis, Ctr Environm Policy & Behav, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of
   California System; University of California Davis; University of
   California System; University of California Davis
RP Hamilton, M (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Sch Environm & Sustainabil, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
RI Hamilton, Matt/HJP-9671-2023; Lubell, Mark/H-5018-2012
OI Lubell, Mark/0000-0001-5757-7116; Hamilton, Matthew/0000-0003-0509-4467
FU NSF Division of Graduate Education (DGE) [0801430]; Responding to Rapid
   Environmental Change (REACH) IGERT; UC Davis
FX The authors thank Emilinah Namaganda, Shuaib Lwasa, Paul Onyango, and
   Charles Mundia for valuable recommendations and logistical assistance
   preceding and during fieldwork. Earlier versions of this paper were
   presented at the 2015 Political Networks Conference, the 2015 American
   Political Science Association Conference and the 2016 Environmental
   Politics and Governance Conference. The authors thank conference
   participants and discussants for valuable feedback. The authors also
   thank Michael Levy, Gwen Arnold, Michael Springborn, Ken Frank, Sarah
   Galey, Roger Hamilton, and three anonymous reviewers for constructive
   comments on earlier drafts. Research was partially supported by NSF
   Division of Graduate Education (DGE) #0801430, the Responding to Rapid
   Environmental Change (REACH) IGERT awarded to UC Davis, and a Henry A.
   Jastro Research Scholarship Award from UC Davis.
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NR 96
TC 63
Z9 67
U1 4
U2 75
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0190-292X
EI 1541-0072
J9 POLICY STUD J
JI Policy Stud. J.
PD MAY
PY 2018
VL 46
IS 2
BP 222
EP 247
DI 10.1111/psj.12224
PG 26
WC Political Science; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law; Public Administration
GA GI1XC
UT WOS:000434162900002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Howes, M
   Tangney, P
   Reis, K
   Grant-Smith, D
   Heazle, M
   Bosomworth, K
   Burton, P
AF Howes, Michael
   Tangney, Peter
   Reis, Kimberley
   Grant-Smith, Deanna
   Heazle, Michael
   Bosomworth, Karyn
   Burton, Paul
TI Towards networked governance: improving interagency communication and
   collaboration for disaster risk management and climate change adaptation
   in Australia
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE disaster risk management; Joined-up Government; Network Governance;
   collaboration; policy integration; climate change adaptation;
   communication
ID JOINED-UP GOVERNMENT; ORGANIZATIONAL RESILIENCE; SCALES; EMBEDDEDNESS;
   CAPACITY; EXCHANGE; POLITICS; UK
AB Major disasters, such as bushfires or floods, place significant stress on scarce public resources. Climate change is likely to exacerbate this stress. An integrated approach to disaster risk management (DRM) and climate change adaptation (CCA) could reduce the stress by encouraging the more efficient use of pooled resources and expertise. A comparative analysis of three extreme climate-related events that occurred in Australia between 2009 and 2011 indicated that a strategy to improve interagency communication and collaboration would be a key factor in this type of policy/planning integration. These findings are in accord with the concepts of Joined-up Government and Network Governance. Five key reforms are proposed: developing a shared policy vision; adopting multi-level planning; integrating legislation; networking organisations; and establishing cooperative funding. These reforms are examined with reference to the related research literature in order to identify potential problems associated with their implementation. The findings are relevant for public policy generally but are particularly useful for CCA and DRM.
C1 [Howes, Michael; Tangney, Peter; Reis, Kimberley; Burton, Paul] Griffith Univ, Griffith Sch Environm, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Howes, Michael; Tangney, Peter; Reis, Kimberley; Burton, Paul] Griffith Univ, Urban Res Program, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Howes, Michael; Tangney, Peter; Reis, Kimberley; Burton, Paul] Griffith Univ, Griffith Sch Environm, Gold Coast, Australia.
   [Howes, Michael; Tangney, Peter; Reis, Kimberley; Burton, Paul] Griffith Univ, Urban Res Program, Gold Coast, Australia.
   [Grant-Smith, Deanna] Queensland Univ Technol, QUT Business Sch, Brisbane, Qld 4001, Australia.
   [Heazle, Michael] Griffith Univ, Griffith Asia Inst, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Heazle, Michael] Griffith Univ, Sch Govt & Int Relat, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Bosomworth, Karyn] RMIT Univ, Climate Change Adaptat Program, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Bosomworth, Karyn] RMIT Univ, Global Cities Res Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
C3 Griffith University; Griffith University; Griffith University; Griffith
   University - Gold Coast Campus; Griffith University; Griffith University
   - Gold Coast Campus; Queensland University of Technology (QUT); Griffith
   University; Griffith University; Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
   (RMIT); Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT)
RP Howes, M (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Griffith Sch Environm, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
EM m.howes@griffith.edu.au
RI Reis, Kimberley/AAE-8779-2019; Grant-Smith, Deanna/I-3463-2019;
   /CAE-0280-2022; Howes, Michael/S-2804-2019; Burton, Paul
   Andrew/AAG-3436-2020; Bosomworth, Karyn/A-6435-2016; Tangney,
   Peter/O-2153-2015
OI Reis, Kimberley/0000-0002-6713-1908; Grant-Smith,
   Deanna/0000-0001-5935-2690; Burton, Paul Andrew/0000-0002-6092-0779;
   Howes, Michael/0000-0003-1102-1483; Bosomworth,
   Karyn/0000-0001-9907-0858; Tangney, Peter/0000-0003-3878-4034
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NR 120
TC 99
Z9 104
U1 3
U2 146
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-0568
EI 1360-0559
J9 J ENVIRON PLANN MAN
JI J. Environ. Plan. Manag.
PD MAY 4
PY 2015
VL 58
IS 5
BP 757
EP 776
DI 10.1080/09640568.2014.891974
PG 20
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA CC4RT
UT WOS:000350341600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Miller Hesed, CD
   Van Dolah, ER
   Paolisso, M
AF Miller Hesed, Christine D.
   Van Dolah, Elizabeth R.
   Paolisso, Michael
TI Engaging faith-based communities for rural coastal resilience: lessons
   from collaborative learning on the Chesapeake Bay
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Chesapeake Bay; Churches; Climate change; Coastal; Collaborative
   learning; Rural
ID AFRICAN-AMERICAN COMMUNITIES; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY;
   KNOWLEDGE; JUSTICE
AB Rural coastal areas are highly vulnerable to climate change impacts. In the USA, much energy is devoted to conserving rural coastal ecosystems by promoting their adaptation to climate change. However, these areas are also home to vulnerable and underserved communities who can be challenging to engage in climate adaptation discussions. Churches-as trusted social institutions-may offer a structure through which government decision-makers and rural residents can engage to improve the resilience of these rural coastal regions. We employed collaborative learning to engage government decision-makers and rural church members on the topic of climate impacts on Maryland's Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. We analyzed the collaborative learning process and its outcomes using ethnographic methods. In this paper, we present our approach and discuss the benefits and challenges of collaborative learning with rural churches. We found that this approach yielded major benefits including greater understanding of capacities and limitations in addressing environmental challenges, increased trust and social networks, expanded engagement with a greater diversity of stakeholders, increased opportunities for new conversations, new pathways toward interventions, and stakeholder empowerment. Collaborating with churches is not without challenges though; it requires considerable time and effort and presents difficulties in navigating social hierarchies and specialized language, identifying common goals, grappling with the newness of climate change, and overcoming institutional barriers. Despite these challenges, we conclude that collaborative learning with churches is a valuable approach for information exchange and network-building toward more resilient rural coasts.
C1 [Miller Hesed, Christine D.; Van Dolah, Elizabeth R.; Paolisso, Michael] Univ Maryland, Dept Anthropol, 4302 Chapel Dr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
C3 University System of Maryland; University of Maryland College Park
RP Miller Hesed, CD (corresponding author), Univ Maryland, Dept Anthropol, 4302 Chapel Dr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
EM christinedm@gmail.com
RI Hesed, Christine/AAP-9583-2021
OI Miller Hesed, Christine D./0000-0003-1644-1962; Van Dolah,
   Elizabeth/0000-0001-7520-8269; Paolisso, Michael/0000-0001-6921-3985
FU National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Coastal and Ocean
   Climate Application Program [NA17OAR4310248]
FX This research was financially supported by the National Oceanic and
   Atmospheric Administration's Coastal and Ocean Climate Application
   Program (grant no. NA17OAR4310248). The authors wish to thank all
   research participants and the project team for their contributions to
   this study.
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NR 62
TC 17
Z9 19
U1 3
U2 26
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 159
IS 1
BP 37
EP 57
DI 10.1007/s10584-019-02638-9
EA JAN 2020
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA KS7JB
UT WOS:000510364400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chamard, S
AF Chamard, Sharon
TI Finding synergies in the built environment between climate change
   adaptation and crime prevention
SO CRIME PREVENTION & COMMUNITY SAFETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Building design; Crime; Climate change; Flooding; Wildfire risks;
   Greening; Passive cooling
ID VIOLENT CRIME; URBAN TREES; TEMPERATURE; BURGLARY; DESIGN; CITIES; HEAT;
   NEIGHBORHOODS; PERFORMANCE; LANDSCAPE
AB This article identifies potential synergies between the domains of crime prevention and climate change adaptation within the built environment. It delves into three specific risks associated with climate change-heat, wildfires, and flooding and tidal surges-and investigates how adapting the built environment to these challenges may inadvertently affect crime vulnerability or prevention. It examines how human-controlled nature-based solutions, such as trees and community gardens, can reduce both heat-related problems and crime risks. The article discusses passive cooling through architectural design in hot climates and explores strategies for reducing wildfire risks through landscaping and building design. Additionally, it considers the implications of sea walls and floating structures for crime prevention in the face of tidal surges and flooding. The article concludes by underscoring the need for further research in this intersection of climate change adaptation and crime prevention and the role of crime scientists in shaping safer urban environments amid the challenges of climate change.
C1 [Chamard, Sharon] Univ Alaska Anchorage, 3211 Providence Dr, Anchorage, AK 99508 USA.
C3 University of Alaska System; University of Alaska Anchorage
RP Chamard, S (corresponding author), Univ Alaska Anchorage, 3211 Providence Dr, Anchorage, AK 99508 USA.
EM sechamard@alaska.edu
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NR 92
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU PALGRAVE MACMILLAN LTD
PI BASINGSTOKE
PA BRUNEL RD BLDG, HOUNDMILLS, BASINGSTOKE RG21 6XS, HANTS, ENGLAND
SN 1460-3780
EI 1743-4629
J9 CRIME PREV COMMUNITY
JI Crime Prev. Community Saf.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 26
IS 2
SI SI
BP 198
EP 215
DI 10.1057/s41300-024-00206-7
EA MAY 2024
PG 18
WC Criminology & Penology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Criminology & Penology
GA YV2Q5
UT WOS:001215973300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Goodwin, S
   Olazabal, M
   Castro, AJ
   Pascual, U
AF Goodwin, Sean
   Olazabal, Marta
   Castro, Antonio J.
   Pascual, Unai
TI Global mapping of urban nature-based solutions for climate change
   adaptation
SO NATURE SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
ID GREEN
AB Many cities around the world are experimenting with nature-based solutions (NbS) to address the interconnected climate-, biodiversity- and society-related challenges they are facing (referred to as the climate-biodiversity-society, or CBS, nexus), by restoring, protecting and more sustainably managing urban ecosystems. Although the application of urban NbS is flourishing, there is little synthesized evidence clarifying the contribution of NbS in addressing the intertwined CBS challenges and their capacity to encourage transformational change in urban systems worldwide. We map and analyse NbS approaches specifically for climate change adaptation across 216 urban interventions and 130 cities worldwide. Results suggest that current NbS practices are limited in how they may comprehensively address CBS challenges, particularly by accounting for multidimensional forms of climate vulnerability, social justice, the potential for collaboration between public and private sectors and diverse cobenefits. Data suggest that knowledge and practice are biased towards the Global North, under-representing key CBS challenges in the Global South, particularly in terms of climate hazards and urban ecosystems involved. Our results also point out that further research and practice are required to leverage the transformative potential of urban NbS. We provide recommendations for each of these areas to advance the practice of NbS for transformative urban adaptation within the CBS nexus.
   Nature-based solutions for climate adaptation are not comprehensively addressing the climate-biodiversity-society nexus, limiting their capacity to promote urban transformation. However, notable transformative examples of urban nature-based solutions do exist, especially in the Global South.
C1 [Goodwin, Sean; Olazabal, Marta; Pascual, Unai] Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Leioa, Spain.
   [Goodwin, Sean; Castro, Antonio J.] Univ Almeria, Andalusian Ctr Evaluat & Monitoring Global Change, Dept Biol & Geol, Almeria, Spain.
   [Olazabal, Marta; Pascual, Unai] Basque Fdn Sci, IKERBASQUE, Bilbao, Spain.
   [Pascual, Unai] Univ Bern, Ctr Dev & Environm, Bern, Switzerland.
C3 Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3); Universidad de Almeria; Basque
   Foundation for Science; University of Bern
RP Goodwin, S (corresponding author), Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Leioa, Spain.; Goodwin, S (corresponding author), Univ Almeria, Andalusian Ctr Evaluat & Monitoring Global Change, Dept Biol & Geol, Almeria, Spain.
EM Sean.goodwin@bc3research.org
RI Goodwin, Sean/ADX-8317-2022; Olazabal, Marta/AFT-6957-2022; Castro,
   Antonio J./Z-2469-2019; PASCUAL, UNAI/B-4766-2012; Olazabal,
   Marta/C-3027-2008
OI Castro, Antonio J./0000-0003-1587-8564; PASCUAL,
   UNAI/0000-0002-5696-236X; Olazabal, Marta/0000-0002-3381-0654; Goodwin,
   Sean/0000-0001-8968-8160
FU 'la Caixa' Foundation [100010434]; Maria de Maeztu excellence
   accreditation [MDM-2017-0714]; MCIN/AEI; Basque Government through the
   BERC;  [LCF/BQ/DI20/11780006]
FX The project that gave rise to these results received the support of a
   fellowship from the 'la Caixa' Foundation (ID 100010434). The fellowship
   code is LCF/BQ/DI20/11780006' (S.G.). This research is further supported
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NR 67
TC 56
Z9 58
U1 60
U2 181
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2398-9629
J9 NAT SUSTAIN
JI Nat. Sustain.
PD APR
PY 2023
VL 6
IS 4
DI 10.1038/s41893-022-01036-x
EA JAN 2023
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AG7Y5
UT WOS:000928228800002
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pasquier, U
   Few, R
   Goulden, MC
   Hooton, S
   He, Y
   Hiscock, KM
AF Pasquier, Ulysse
   Few, Roger
   Goulden, Marisa C.
   Hooton, Simon
   He, Yi
   Hiscock, Kevin M.
TI "We can't do it on our own!" - Integrating stakeholder and scientific
   knowledge of future flood risk to inform climate change adaptation
   planning in a coastal region
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Flood risk management; Climate change adaptation; Integrated assessment;
   Scientist-stakeholder engagement; Flood modelling
ID DECISION-MAKING; MANAGEMENT; PARTICIPATION; ENGAGEMENT; PROJECTS
AB Decision-makers face a particular challenge in planning for climate adaptation. The complexity of climate change's likely impacts, such as increased flooding, has widened the scope of information necessary to take action. This is particularly the case in valuable low-lying coastal regions, which host many competing interests, and where there is a growing need to draw from varied fields in the risk-based management of flooding. The rising scrutiny over science's ability to match expectations of policy actors has called for the integration of stakeholder and scientific knowledge domains. Focusing on the Broads - the United Kingdom's largest protected wetland - this study looked to assess future flood risk and consider potential adaptation responses in a collaborative approach. Interviews and surveys with local stakeholders accompanied the development of a hydraulic model in an iterative participatory design, centred on a scientist-stakeholder workshop. Knowledge and perspectives were shared on processes driving risk in the Broads, as well as on the implications of adaptation measures, allowing for their prioritisation. The research outcomes highlight not only the challenges that scientist-stakeholder integrated assessments of future flood risk face, but also their potential to lead to the production of useful information for decision-making.
C1 [Pasquier, Ulysse; He, Yi] Univ East Anglia, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Sch Environm Sci, Norwich Res Pk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   [Few, Roger; Goulden, Marisa C.] Univ East Anglia, Sch Int Dev, Norwich Res Pk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   [Hooton, Simon] Broads Authority, Yare House,62-64 Thorpe Rd, Norwich NR1 1RY, Norfolk, England.
   [Hiscock, Kevin M.] Univ East Anglia, Sch Environm Sci, Norwich Res Pk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
C3 University of East Anglia; University of East Anglia; University of East
   Anglia
RP Pasquier, U (corresponding author), Univ East Anglia, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Sch Environm Sci, Norwich Res Pk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
EM u.pasquier@uea.ac.uk
RI Few, Roger/AAT-3914-2021; He, Yi/F-7885-2011
OI He, Yi/0000-0002-3014-3964; Pasquier, Ulysse/0000-0002-8390-9062
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NR 38
TC 41
Z9 47
U1 2
U2 26
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD JAN
PY 2020
VL 103
BP 50
EP 57
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2019.10.016
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA JY0WS
UT WOS:000504145500007
OA hybrid, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sebos, I
   Nydrioti, I
   Katsiardi, P
   Assimacopoulos, D
AF Sebos, Ioannis
   Nydrioti, Ioanna
   Katsiardi, Pipina
   Assimacopoulos, Dionysis
TI Stakeholder perceptions on climate change impacts and adaptation actions
   in Greece
SO EURO-MEDITERRANEAN JOURNAL FOR ENVIRONMENTAL INTEGRATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change impacts; Adaptation actions; Knowledge and perceptions of
   key stakeholders
ID GOVERNANCE
AB The scientific evidence clearly demonstrates that human activity plays a significant role in the changes to the world's climate, and it is crucial to take adaptive actions to mitigate the impacts of these changes. Effective climate adaptation requires raising awareness among a variety of key stakeholders, such as executives and staff in the public and private sectors, while assessing the incentives and actions they undertake and allowing them to act at various levels of engagement, ranging from global to local. The aim of this study was to investigate the levels of awareness, perceived values, recommendations and expectations regarding climate change among key actors in Greece, focusing on the consequences of climate change in the country and the concurrent adaptation actions taken by stakeholders. A web-based survey was designed and conducted, and responses were systematically collected, categorized and analyzed. The key stakeholders believed that planning and implementing adaptation measures are crucial in addressing and minimizing the impacts of climate change. However, it was also noted that these plans and measures alone are insufficient to counteract the long-term, devastating consequences of climate change in Greece, and more comprehensive and targeted measures must be adopted. It was also concluded that the main obstacle to addressing and adapting to climate change in terms of public policy planning in Greece is the lack of human and financial resources, particularly among public institutions.
C1 [Sebos, Ioannis; Nydrioti, Ioanna; Katsiardi, Pipina; Assimacopoulos, Dionysis] Natl Tech Univ Athens, Sch Chem Engn, 9 Heroon Polytech St, Athens 15780, Greece.
C3 National Technical University of Athens
RP Sebos, I (corresponding author), Natl Tech Univ Athens, Sch Chem Engn, 9 Heroon Polytech St, Athens 15780, Greece.
EM isebos@mail.ntua.gr
RI Sebos, Ioannis/AAE-8472-2020
OI Nydrioti, Ioanna/0000-0002-6330-6221; sebos, ioannis/0000-0003-4800-6893
FU HEAL-Link Greece; European Union's (EU) LIFE program [IPC/GR/000006];
   Green Fund of Greece
FX Open access funding provided by HEAL-Link Greece. Funding for this
   research was received from the European Union's (EU) LIFE program under
   the grant agreement LIFE17 IPC/GR/000006: "Project LIFE-IP
   AdaptInGR-Boosting the implementation of adaptation policy across
   Greece" and the Green Fund of Greece. The text reflects only the
   authors' views, and the European Union is not liable for any use that
   may be made of the information contained therein.
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NR 41
TC 23
Z9 24
U1 2
U2 5
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 2365-6433
EI 2365-7448
J9 EURO-MEDITERR J ENVI
JI Euro-Mediterr. J. Environ. Integrat.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 8
IS 4
BP 777
EP 793
DI 10.1007/s41207-023-00396-w
EA AUG 2023
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA W0TE7
UT WOS:001044856700001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Deenapanray, PNK
   Trærup, S
AF Deenapanray, Prakash N. K.
   Traerup, Sara
TI Technology needs assessment for climate change adaptation: Experiences
   of Mauritius and Seychelles
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Technology needs assessment; Climate change adaptation; Small island
   developing States; Lessons learned
ID POLICY
AB Besides access to climate finance and capacity building, developing countries, comprised mainly of least developed countries (LDCs) and small island developing states (SIDS) have negotiated for increased technology transfer to support their climate change adaptation. The Global Environment Facility has been supporting LDCs and SIDS to develop technology needs assessments (TNAs) to leverage international climate finance, and 62 countries have conducted a TNA to date. Ten SIDS are currently completing their TNAs, and 9 more will start the process in 2021. The focus of this paper is on in-country processes that have not received much attention to date. We find that an efficient TNA process is characterized by the adoption of an inclusive multi-stakeholder process, using existing institutional structures to increase ownership, and applying a learning-by-doing approach. An effective TNA process supports the formulation of national climate change policies and strategies and importantly enables the country to leverage international climate finance. For the latter, an effective TNA should address more closely the investment criteria of the Green Climate Fund. The lessons learned are shared to better inform forthcoming TNA processes in SIDS.
C1 [Deenapanray, Prakash N. K.] Univ Mascareignes, Fac Sustainable Dev & Engn, Rue Concorde, Roches Brunes, Rose Hill, Mauritius.
   [Deenapanray, Prakash N. K.] ELIA Ecol Living Act Ltd, 74 Soc Fleche, La Gaulette 91104, Mauritius.
   [Traerup, Sara] Tech Univ Denmark, UNEP DTU Partnership, Marmorvej 51, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.
C3 Technical University of Denmark
RP Deenapanray, PNK (corresponding author), Univ Mascareignes, Fac Sustainable Dev & Engn, Rue Concorde, Roches Brunes, Rose Hill, Mauritius.; Deenapanray, PNK (corresponding author), ELIA Ecol Living Act Ltd, 74 Soc Fleche, La Gaulette 91104, Mauritius.
EM sanju@ecolivinginaction.com; slmt@dtu.dk
OI Traerup, Sara Laerke Meltofte/0000-0001-6419-9862
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NR 41
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 5
U2 23
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD MAR
PY 2022
VL 22
IS 1
AR 2
DI 10.1007/s10113-021-01859-y
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XN0UO
UT WOS:000729230100002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chen, ZS
   Swallow, SK
   Yue, IT
AF Chen, Zhenshan
   Swallow, Stephen K.
   Yue, Ian T.
TI Non-participation and Heterogeneity in Stated: A Double Hurdle Latent
   Class Approach for Climate Change Adaptation Plans and Ecosystem
   Services
SO ENVIRONMENTAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Built assets; Choice experiment; Double hurdle model; Mixture model;
   Natural assets; Serial non-participation; Valuation; Resilience;
   Adaptation; Sea-level rise
ID WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; PROTEST RESPONSES; SERIAL NONPARTICIPATION; MODEL
   SELECTION; CHOICE; PREFERENCE; VALUATION; AGGREGATION
AB We introduce a double hurdle latent class approach to model choice experiments, where serial non-participants and clustered preference patterns are present. The proposed approach is applied to a recent stated preference study in which the residents of the Eastern Shore of Virginia answer choice questions about alternative coastal climate change adaptation plans. While the double hurdle latent class model avoids self-contradictory assumptions, estimates and tests show that, compared with an unrestricted latent class model, it achieves a significantly better statistical fit and maintains the capability to link the heterogeneity of participants' preferences to their attributes. Moreover, the double hurdle latent class model also provides important implications in how to conduct welfare analysis based on different behavioral patterns of different groups, which leads to nontrivial changes in welfare measures. The empirical results highlight that certain ecosystem services may increase the willingness to pay for coastal climate change adaptation plans.
C1 [Chen, Zhenshan; Swallow, Stephen K.] Univ Connecticut, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, 1376 Storrs Rd Unit 4021, Storrs, CT 06269 USA.
   [Swallow, Stephen K.] Univ Connecticut, Ctr Environm Sci & Engn, 1376 Storrs Rd Unit 4021, Storrs, CT USA.
   [Yue, Ian T.] Dept Nat Resources & Environm Control, Div Climate Coastal & Energy, 100 W Water St,Suite 5A, Dover, DE USA.
C3 University of Connecticut; University of Connecticut
RP Chen, ZS (corresponding author), Univ Connecticut, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, 1376 Storrs Rd Unit 4021, Storrs, CT 06269 USA.
EM zhenshan.chen@uconn.edu
OI CHEN, ZHENSHAN/0000-0002-9824-2563
FU Virginia Coast Reserve Long-term Ecological Research (LTER) program
   through the U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB-1237733]; U.S.
   Department of Agricultural, National Institute of Food and Agriculture
   (NIFA); Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station under Hatch project
   [CONS00971]
FX We would like to thank the Virginia Coast Reserve Long-term Ecological
   Research (LTER) program for financial support through the U.S. National
   Science Foundation grant DEB-1237733, including collaborative support
   from the University of Virginia VCR LTER scientists and staff. Partial
   support for this project was also provided through the U.S. Department
   of Agricultural, National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA), the
   Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station under Hatch project CONS00971.
   All activities related to this paper were conducted in compliance with
   Institutional Review Board (IRB) policies, under protocol #H14-304 for
   survey development through data collection and protocol #X17-063 for
   analysis supporting this paper. Thanks to Dr. John H. Porter (University
   of Virginia) for producing the SLR model that informed the acreage
   values we used for the choice questions. Thanks to Gwynn Crichton
   (formerly The Nature Conservancy), Dr. Karen J. McGlathery (University
   of Virginia), and Curtis Smith (Accomack-Northampton Planning District
   Commission) for their review and suggestions on survey content and
   wording. Also, we would like to express our sincere gratitude to
   Christian Vossler and three anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful and
   valuable comments.
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NR 42
TC 7
Z9 10
U1 4
U2 22
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0924-6460
EI 1573-1502
J9 ENVIRON RESOUR ECON
JI Environ. Resour. Econ.
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 77
IS 1
BP 35
EP 67
DI 10.1007/s10640-020-00434-z
EA JUN 2020
PG 33
WC Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA NI2YJ
UT WOS:000539935400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jeevamani, JJJ
   Priya, P
   Infantina, JA
   Abhilash, KR
   Behera, DP
   Samuel, VD
   Soundararajan, R
   Purvaja, R
   Ramesh, R
AF Jeevamani, J. Joyson Joe
   Priya, P.
   Infantina, J. Amali
   Abhilash, K. R.
   Behera, Durga Prasad
   Samuel, V. Deepak
   Soundararajan, R.
   Purvaja, R.
   Ramesh, R.
TI An integrated approach to assess coastal vulnerability versus fisheries
   livelihood sustainability: Strategies for climate change adaptation in
   Sindhudurg, west coast of India
SO ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Livelihood; Vulnerability; Sustainability; Adaptation
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE
AB Global warming-induced climate change affects the coastal regions diversely leading to warmer oceans, rise in sea level, aggravating storm patterns, inundations, increasing precipitations and salinization. This study focusses to explore the livelihood as well as the vulnerability status of the marine fishing spatial units in Sindhudurg Coastal and Marine Ecosystem (SCME) area, west coast of India. The focus was to develop a composite index, namely, Sustainable Fisheries Livelihood Index (SFLI) comprising five capitals, which acts as a tool to evaluate the livelihood status of the fishing communities and also a coastal vulnerability (Cumulative Vulnerability Index-CVI) framework from an earlier assessment was used. The livelihood and vulnerability indices were integrated to arrive at a decision-making matrix to identify and propose suitable interventions for appropriate climate adaptation strategies and achieving sustainable fisheries livelihood. In the present study, SCME was found to have a low SFLI value (0.36). Among the three taluks in SCME, Malvan taluk had comparatively higher SFLI (0.46) than Vengurla (0.34) and Devgad (0.29) taluks. Based on cumulative vulnerability indices, the majority of marine fishing spatial units (i.e. 58.3% after combining high and very high CVI ranges) in SCME were found to face severe vulnerability. These spatial units, plotted using CVI versus SFLI in the four quadrants of decision matrix, were analyzed for management interventions with strategies aimed at reducing the vulnerability and improve the adaptive capacity of fishing communities to achieve sustainable livelihoods. Spatial units in Quadrant IV were preferred to have focused climate change adaptation strategies to minimize vulnerability as well as to improve the fisheries livelihood sustainability by enhancing the access to livelihood capital assets. Spatial units in Quadrant I might serve as model units to demonstrate the vulnerability mitigation interventions to achieve stability and sustainability of livelihoods. Appropriate interventions for climate change adaptation such as diversification of fishing, selection of appropriate fishing gears, regulation of fishing effort, diversification of livelihoods and adoption of ecosystem approach to fisheries management (EAFM) have been discussed.
C1 [Jeevamani, J. Joyson Joe; Priya, P.; Infantina, J. Amali; Abhilash, K. R.; Behera, Durga Prasad; Samuel, V. Deepak; Soundararajan, R.; Purvaja, R.; Ramesh, R.] Anna Univ Campus, Minist Environm Forest & Climate Change MoEFCC, Natl Ctr Sustainable Coastal Management NCSCM, Chennai 600025, Tamil Nadu, India.
C3 Anna University
RP Samuel, VD (corresponding author), Anna Univ Campus, Minist Environm Forest & Climate Change MoEFCC, Natl Ctr Sustainable Coastal Management NCSCM, Chennai 600025, Tamil Nadu, India.
EM deepakocean@gmail.com
RI J, Joyson/A-3997-2014; Behera, Durga/F-5361-2013; Soundararajan,
   R./J-8127-2019; Ramachandran, Purvaja/K-5522-2018; Ramachandran,
   Ramesh/B-4814-2018
OI Ramachandran, Ramesh/0000-0003-2471-7746; J, Joyson Joe
   Jeevamani/0000-0001-6619-925X; Samuel, Deepak/0000-0002-6441-0127
FU Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Government of India;
   World Bank under the India ICZM Project; Institute for Ocean Management,
   Anna University, Chennai
FX The study was undertaken as part of the grant-in-aid project of Mangrove
   Cell of Maharashtra under the UNDP Sindhudurg Project on Landscape Level
   Plan for Sindhudurg Coastal and Marine Ecosystem, Maharashtra (Letter
   No. PM/NCSCM/dated 17 December 2015). The authors acknowledge the
   financial and technical support of the Ministry of Environment, Forest
   and Climate Change, Government of India, and the World Bank under the
   India ICZM Project. The support of Institute for Ocean Management, Anna
   University, Chennai in data collection is gratefully acknowledged.
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NR 36
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 3
U2 39
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1387-585X
EI 1573-2975
J9 ENVIRON DEV SUSTAIN
JI Environ. Dev. Sustain.
PD MAR
PY 2021
VL 23
IS 3
BP 4011
EP 4042
DI 10.1007/s10668-020-00754-6
EA MAY 2020
PG 32
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA QI6JH
UT WOS:000533022900002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Arifah
   Salman, D
   Yassi, A
   Demmallino, EB
AF Arifah
   Salman, Darmawan
   Yassi, Amir
   Demmallino, Eymal Bahsar
TI Knowledge flow analysis of knowledge co-production-based climate change
   adaptation for lowland rice farmers in Bulukumba Regency, Indonesia
SO REGIONAL SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Knowledge flow; Knowledge co-production;
   Climate field school (CFS); Social network analysis (SNA); Indonesia
ID WATER SCARCITY; FIELD SCHOOLS; COPRODUCTION; VULNERABILITY; STRATEGIES;
   MANAGEMENT; COASTAL
AB To increase the resilience of farmers' livelihood systems, detailed knowledge of adaptation strategies for dealing with the impacts of climate change is required. Knowledge co-production approach is an adaptation strategy that is considered appropriate in the context of the increasing frequency of disasters caused by climate change. Previous research of knowledge coproduction on climate change adaptation in Indonesia is insufficient, particularly at local level, so we examined the flow of climate change adaptation knowledge in the knowledge co-production process through climate field school (CFS) activities in this study. We interviewed 120 people living in Bulukumba Regency, South Sulawesi Province, Indonesia, involving 12 crowds including male and female farmers participated in CFS and not participated in CFS, local government officials, agriculture extension workers, agricultural traders, farmers' family members and neighbors, etc. In brief, the 12 groups of people mainly include two categories of people, i.e., people involved in CFS activities and outside CFS. We applied descriptive method and Social Network Analysis (SNA) to determine how knowledge flow in the community network and which groups of actors are important for knowledge flow. The findings of this study reveal that participants in CFS activities convey the knowledge they acquired formally (i.e., from TV, radio, government, etc.) and informally (i.e., from market, friends, relatives, etc.) to other actors, especially to their families and neighbors. The results also show that the acquisition and sharing of knowledge facilitate the flow of climate change adaptation knowledge based on knowledge co-operation. In addition, the findings highlight the key role of actors in the knowledge transfer process, and key actors involved in disseminating information about climate change adaptation. To be specific, among all the actors, family member and neighbor of CFS actor are the most common actors in disseminating climate knowledge information and closest to other actors in the network; agricultural trader and family member of CFS actor collaborate most with other actors in the community network; and farmers participated in CFS, including those heads of farmer groups, agricultural extension workers, and local government officials are more willing to contact with other actors in the network. To facilitate the flow of knowledge on climate change adaptation, CFS activities should be conducted regularly and CFS models that fit the situation of farmers' vulnerability to climate change should be developed.
C1 [Arifah] Pangkep State Polytech Agr, Pangkep 90652, Indonesia.
   [Salman, Darmawan; Yassi, Amir; Demmallino, Eymal Bahsar] Hasanuddin Univ, Fac Agr, Makassar 90245, Indonesia.
C3 Universitas Hasanuddin
RP Demmallino, EB (corresponding author), Hasanuddin Univ, Fac Agr, Makassar 90245, Indonesia.
EM demmallino2022@gmail.com
RI Salman, Darmawan/ABN-7304-2022; Yassi, Amir/GSD-2998-2022
OI Salman, Darmawan/0000-0003-3348-4067; , Arifah/0000-0001-9003-1940
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NR 58
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 5
PU KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
PI BEIJING
PA 16 DONGHUANGCHENGGEN NORTH ST, Building 5, Room 411, BEIJING, DONGCHENG
   DISTRICT 100009, PEOPLES R CHINA
SN 2097-0129
EI 2666-660X
J9 REG SUSTAIN
JI Reg. Sustain.
PD JUN
PY 2023
VL 4
IS 2
BP 194
EP 202
DI 10.1016/j.regsus.2023.05.005
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA O6SY8
UT WOS:001045094900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Shi, LD
   Chu, E
   Anguelovski, I
   Aylett, A
   Debats, J
   Goh, K
   Schenk, T
   Seto, KC
   Dodman, D
   Roberts, D
   Roberts, JT
   VanDeveer, SD
AF Shi, Linda
   Chu, Eric
   Anguelovski, Isabelle
   Aylett, Alexander
   Debats, Jessica
   Goh, Kian
   Schenk, Todd
   Seto, Karen C.
   Dodman, David
   Roberts, Debra
   Roberts, J. Timmons
   VanDeveer, Stacy D.
TI Roadmap towards justice in urban climate adaptation research
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID COMMUNITY-BASED ADAPTATION; MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE; CITIES; POLITICS;
   FRAMEWORK; POLICY; VULNERABILITY; PARTNERSHIPS; EXPERIENCES; RESILIENCE
AB The 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris (COP21) highlighted the importance of cities to climate action, as well as the unjust burdens borne by the world's most disadvantaged peoples in addressing climate impacts. Few studies have documented the barriers to redressing the drivers of social vulnerability as part of urban local climate change adaptation efforts, or evaluated how emerging adaptation plans impact marginalized groups. Here, we present a roadmap to reorient research on the social dimensions of urban climate adaptation around four issues of equity and justice: (1) broadening participation in adaptation planning; (2) expanding adaptation to rapidly growing cities and those with low financial or institutional capacity; (3) adopting a multilevel and multi-scalar approach to adaptation planning; and (4) integrating justice into infrastructure and urban design processes. Responding to these empirical and theoretical research needs is the first step towards identifying pathways to more transformative adaptation policies.
C1 [Shi, Linda; Debats, Jessica] MIT, Dept Urban Studies & Planning, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
   [Chu, Eric] Univ Amsterdam, Dept Geog Planning & Int Dev Studies, Nieuwe Achtergracht 127, NL-1018 WS Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Anguelovski, Isabelle] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Inst Environm Sci & Technol, E-08193 Barcelona, Spain.
   [Aylett, Alexander] Inst Natl Rech Sci, Ctr Urbanisat Culture Soc, 385 Rue Sherbrooke Est, Montreal, PQ H2X 1E3, Canada.
   [Goh, Kian] Northeastern Univ, Sch Architecture, 360 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
   [Schenk, Todd] Virginia Tech, Architecture Annex UAP, Sch Publ & Int Affairs 0113, 140 Otey St NW, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA.
   [Seto, Karen C.] Yale Univ, Sch Forestry & Environm Studies, 195 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511 USA.
   [Dodman, David] Int Inst Environm & Dev, Human Settlements Grp, 80-86 Grays Inn Rd, London WC1X 8NH, England.
   [Roberts, Debra] eThekwini Municipal, Environm Planning & Climate Protect Dept, POB 680, ZA-4000 Durban, South Africa.
   [Roberts, J. Timmons] Brown Univ, Inst Brown Environm & Soc, 85 Waterman St, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
   [VanDeveer, Stacy D.] Univ New Hampshire, Dept Polit Sci, Horton Social Sci Ctr 322, Durham, NH 03824 USA.
C3 Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); University of Amsterdam;
   Autonomous University of Barcelona; University of Quebec; Institut
   national de la recherche scientifique (INRS); Northeastern University;
   Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University; Yale University;
   Brown University; University System Of New Hampshire; University of New
   Hampshire
RP Shi, LD (corresponding author), MIT, Dept Urban Studies & Planning, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
EM lindashi@mit.edu
RI Seto, Karen/C-2722-2008; Schenk, Todd/AFR-5325-2022; Chu,
   Eric/O-6464-2015
OI Roberts, J. Timmons/0000-0002-8726-5698; Dodman,
   David/0000-0002-1304-3283; Chu, Eric/0000-0002-5648-6615; Schenk, Todd
   Edward William/0000-0002-3434-1319; Shi, Linda/0000-0002-2444-367X;
   Anguelovski, Isabelle/0000-0002-6409-5155; /0000-0003-1830-2392
FU Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie; Division Of Behavioral and
   Cognitive Sci [1229429] Funding Source: National Science Foundation;
   Directorate For Geosciences; ICER [1450657] Funding Source: National
   Science Foundation; ICER; Directorate For Geosciences [1450554] Funding
   Source: National Science Foundation
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NR 93
TC 333
Z9 374
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PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD FEB
PY 2016
VL 6
IS 2
BP 131
EP 137
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE2841
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA DE9NB
UT WOS:000370963400011
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tan, RR
   Foo, DCY
AF Tan, Raymond R.
   Foo, Dominic C. Y.
TI Integrated multi-scale water management as a climate change adaptation
   strategy
SO CLEAN TECHNOLOGIES AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
LA English
DT Article
ID PINCH ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES; CIRCULAR ECONOMY; FOOTPRINT; HUMANITY;
   INDUSTRY; STATE
AB Water management will become increasingly critical as the effects of climate change manifest. There are existing water management tools and concepts in current use for both policy and decision-making in industry, but these often look at water issues from the limited perspectives of specific decision-makers who see the problems only at particular scales. In this perspective paper, we argue for an integrated water management approach as an imperative climate change adaptation; there is an urgent need for research on the development of such a multi-scale framework to effectively manage water use in industrial systems.
C1 [Tan, Raymond R.] De La Salle Univ, Chem Engn Dept, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
   [Foo, Dominic C. Y.] Univ Nottingham, Dept Chem & Environm Engn, Malaysia Campus,Broga Rd, Semenyih 43500, Selangor, Malaysia.
C3 De La Salle University; University of Nottingham Malaysia
RP Tan, RR (corresponding author), De La Salle Univ, Chem Engn Dept, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
EM raymond.tan@dlsu.edu.ph
RI Foo, Ir/O-6335-2019
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   [No title captured]
NR 24
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 3
U2 18
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
SN 1618-954X
EI 1618-9558
J9 CLEAN TECHNOL ENVIR
JI Clean Technol. Environ. Policy
PD AUG
PY 2018
VL 20
IS 6
BP 1123
EP 1125
DI 10.1007/s10098-018-1551-1
PG 3
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA GN8VH
UT WOS:000439453500002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wing, IS
   Fisher-Vanden, K
AF Wing, Ian Sue
   Fisher-Vanden, Karen
TI Confronting the challenge of integrated assessment of climate
   adaptation: a conceptual framework
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
AB Key limitations of integrated assessment models (IAMs) are their highly stylized and aggregated representation of climate damages and associated economic responses, as well as the omission of specific investments related to climate change adaptation. This paper proposes a framework for modeling climate impacts and adaptation that clarifies the relevant research issues and provides a template for making improvements. We identify five desirable characteristics of an ideal integrated assessment modeling platform, which we elaborate into a conceptual model that distinguishes three different classes of adaptation-related activities. Based on these elements we specify an impacts- and adaptation-centric IAM, whose optimality conditions are used to highlight the types of functional relationships necessary for realistic representations of adaptation-related decisions, the specific mechanisms by which these responses can be incorporated into IAMs, and the ways in which the inclusion of adaptation is likely to affect the simulations' results.
C1 [Wing, Ian Sue] Boston Univ, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
   [Fisher-Vanden, Karen] Penn State Univ, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
C3 Boston University; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education
   (PCSHE); Pennsylvania State University; Pennsylvania State University -
   University Park
RP Fisher-Vanden, K (corresponding author), Penn State Univ, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
EM isw@bu.edu; kaf26@psu.edu
FU Directorate For Geosciences; Division Of Earth Sciences [1038614,
   1038907] Funding Source: National Science Foundation; Directorate For
   Geosciences; Division Of Earth Sciences [1038818] Funding Source:
   National Science Foundation
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NR 17
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 1
U2 24
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD APR
PY 2013
VL 117
IS 3
SI SI
BP 497
EP 514
DI 10.1007/s10584-012-0651-x
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 106FS
UT WOS:000316129000006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sullivan-Wiley, KA
   Gianotti, AGS
   Connors, JPC
AF Sullivan-Wiley, Kira A.
   Gianotti, Anne G. Short
   Connors, John P. Casellas
TI Mapping vulnerability: Opportunities and limitations of participatory
   community mapping
SO APPLIED GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
ID DISASTER RISK REDUCTION; VOLCANIC HAZARD MANAGEMENT; CLIMATE-CHANGE
   ADAPTATION; SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; STAKEHOLDER PARTICIPATION;
   SCIENTIFIC-KNOWLEDGE; NATURAL DISASTERS; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; LANDSLIDE
   HAZARD; POVERTY
C1 [Sullivan-Wiley, Kira A.] Brown Univ, IBES, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
   [Gianotti, Anne G. Short] Boston Univ, Dept Earth & Environm, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
   [Connors, John P. Casellas] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Geog, College Stn, TX 77843 USA.
   [Sullivan-Wiley, Kira A.] Boston Univ, Frederick S Pardee Ctr Study Longer Range Future, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
C3 Brown University; Boston University; Texas A&M University System; Texas
   A&M University College Station; Boston University
RP Sullivan-Wiley, KA (corresponding author), Brown Univ, IBES, Providence, RI 02912 USA.; Sullivan-Wiley, KA (corresponding author), Boston Univ, Frederick S Pardee Ctr Study Longer Range Future, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
EM kswiley@bu.edu; agshort@bu.edu; jpcc@tamu.edu
OI Casellas Connors, John/0000-0002-4212-3397; Short Gianotti,
   Anne/0000-0003-3544-4691
FU Boston University, United States Moorman-Simon Civic Fellowship;
   Graduate Research Abroad Fellowships; Society of Women Geographers'
   Evelyn L. Pruitt National Fellowship, United States
FX This research would not have been possible without the people who shared
   their time and experiences. We are grateful to the focus group and
   mapping group participants who informed this research. The authors would
   like to acknowledge the logistical assistance of the field and
   translation teams in both the Bududa and Manafwa districts of Uganda.
   This work was funded the Boston University, United States Moorman-Simon
   Civic Fellowship and Graduate Research Abroad Fellowships, and the
   Society of Women Geographers' Evelyn L. Pruitt National Fellowship,
   United States. This paper as improved by the suggestions of two
   anonymous reviewers.
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NR 98
TC 19
Z9 20
U1 1
U2 36
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0143-6228
EI 1873-7730
J9 APPL GEOGR
JI Appl. Geogr.
PD APR
PY 2019
VL 105
BP 47
EP 57
DI 10.1016/j.apgeog.2019.02.008
PG 11
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA HT3QV
UT WOS:000464479200005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Michael, K
AF Michael, Kavya
TI Migration as a Climate Change Adaptation Strategy: What Role do Emotions
   Play?
SO EMOTION REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; relational; migration; emotional landscape
AB Climate change intersecting with complex socio-economic and political processes has produced distinctive patterns of crisis migration. However there exists a significant gap in understanding and theorizing these forms of migration creating significant policy challenges. Using a case study of an interstate migrant settlement in Bengaluru, India this article unpacks migration as an adaptation strategy through the lens of emotions. The article offers significant insights into how emotions affect the choice of migration as an adaptation strategy and shapes the differential experiences of risks and vulnerability for different groups of people. Emphasizing such relational aspects of migration, the article calls for more research that develops a nuanced understanding of the emotional landscapes of migrants across migration pathways.
C1 [Michael, Kavya] Chalmers Univ Technol, Div Environm Syst Anal Technol Management & Econ, Gothenburg, Sweden.
   [Michael, Kavya] Chalmers Univ Technol, Technol Management & Econ, Gothenburg, Sweden.
C3 Chalmers University of Technology; Chalmers University of Technology
RP Michael, K (corresponding author), Chalmers Univ Technol, Technol Management & Econ, Gothenburg, Sweden.
EM kavyami@chalmers.se
RI Michael, Kavya/AAC-4846-2020
FU This work was supported by the Adaptation at Scale in Semi-Arid Regions
   (ASSAR) (grant number 107640-005), which is a consortium under the
   Collaborative Adaptation Research in Africa and Asia (CARIAA) programme
   of International Development Research Centre [107640-005]; Adaptation at
   Scale in Semi-Arid Regions (ASSAR); Asia (CARIAA) programme of
   International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada; UK Department
   for International Development (DFID)
FX This work was supported by the Adaptation at Scale in Semi-Arid Regions
   (ASSAR) (grant number 107640-005), which is a consortium under the
   Collaborative Adaptation Research in Africa and Asia (CARIAA) programme
   of International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada and the UK
   Department for International Development (DFID). The author acknowledges
   the contribution of Ladies Finger.co in creating the illustrative
   graphic sketches.
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NR 13
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 6
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 1754-0739
EI 1754-0747
J9 EMOT REV
JI Emot. Rev.
PD OCT
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 4
SI SI
BP 267
EP 270
DI 10.1177/17540739231194327
PG 4
WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Psychology
GA U7AU9
UT WOS:001086302200005
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kwan, C
   Walsh, CA
AF Kwan, Crystal
   Walsh, Christine A.
TI Climate change adaptation in low-resource countries: Insights gained
   from an eco-social work and feminist gerontological lens
SO INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL WORK
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT United Nations Sustainable Development Summit
CY SEP 25-27, 2015
CL New York, NY
DE adaptation; climate change; eco-social work; feminist gerontology;
   research
ID TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE; CULTURE
AB Climate change research requires integrative and collaborative research from multiple disciplines because of its complexity and sizeable consequences. Eco-social work has an important role to play. Relatively new, scholarship on eco-social work is growing and identifying ways in which the discipline's unique values, theories, perspectives and practices can contribute to this body of research. The aim of this article is twofold: (a) to contribute to this emerging scholarship by identifying climate change adaptation as an area of research for international social work and (b) to examine the utility of applying an integrated theoretical lens of eco-social work and feminist gerontology within this area.
C1 [Kwan, Crystal] Univ Calgary, Social Work, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada.
   [Kwan, Crystal; Walsh, Christine A.] Univ Calgary, Fac Social Work, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada.
C3 University of Calgary; University of Calgary
RP Kwan, C (corresponding author), Univ Calgary, Fac Social Work, 2500 Univ Dr NW, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada.
EM crystalyeegitkwan@hotmail.com
RI kwan, crystal/AAS-6014-2020
OI Kwan, Crystal/0000-0001-7052-5732
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NR 95
TC 4
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PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0020-8728
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J9 INT SOC WORK
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PD MAY
PY 2015
VL 58
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SI SI
BP 385
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DI 10.1177/0020872814567484
PG 16
WC Social Work
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Social Work
GA CH4CC
UT WOS:000353977900005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nagoda, S
   Nightingale, AJ
AF Nagoda, Sigrid
   Nightingale, Andrea J.
TI Participation and Power in Climate Change Adaptation Policies:
   Vulnerability in Food Security Programs in Nepal
SO WORLD DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE vulnerability; power relations; climate change adaptation; policy
   processes; food security; Nepal
ID SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; NATURAL-RESOURCES; GENDER; DECENTRALIZATION;
   RESILIENCE; GEOGRAPHY
AB The article explores the moments wherein participatory approaches in climate change adaptation (CCA) policies contribute to reinforcing, rather than transforming, the underlying causes of vulnerability. Using the case of food insecure households in the district of Humla in northwestern Nepal, the study demonstrates that the same social and power relations that are driving local vulnerability dynamics, such as caste, gender, and access to social and political networks, also play important roles in shaping the impact of CCA policies. By tracing Nepal's CCA programs, starting with the local level, through district to international-national level dynamics, the study adds insights into the barriers to exclusion that embed power relations all the way through the chain of policy development. The purpose is to better understand how CCA can perpetuate rather than alleviate the conditions that create differential vulnerability patterns at village level. It raises questions about how whether CCA programs are an adequate response to increasing vulnerability for some of the world's most marginalized people. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Nagoda, Sigrid; Nightingale, Andrea J.] Norwegian Univ Life Sci NMBU, As, Norway.
   [Nightingale, Andrea J.] Swedish Univ Agr Sci SLU, Uppsala, Sweden.
C3 Norwegian University of Life Sciences; Swedish University of
   Agricultural Sciences
RP Nagoda, S (corresponding author), Norwegian Univ Life Sci NMBU, As, Norway.
FU Norwegian Research Council; British Academy International Partnership
   and Mobility Award; Swedish Research Council [2015-03323]; Swedish
   Research Council [2015-03323] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council
FX The fieldwork was done as part of the project "The politics of Climate
   Change Adaptation: An Integrative Approach of Development and Climate
   Change Interventions in Nepal and Mongolia", funded by the Norwegian
   Research Council. We are grateful for the important inputs given by Siri
   Eriksen, Lutgart Lenaerts, Dil Khatri and Patrick Wennstrom on the
   manuscript. The work was also supported by a British Academy
   International Partnership and Mobility Award (2012-2016) and a Swedish
   Research Council Development Research grant (2015-03323), Conflict,
   Violence and Environmental Change: investigating resource governance and
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NR 72
TC 88
Z9 96
U1 1
U2 51
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0305-750X
EI 1873-5991
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JI World Dev.
PD DEC
PY 2017
VL 100
BP 85
EP 93
DI 10.1016/j.worlddev.2017.07.022
PG 9
WC Development Studies; Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Business & Economics
GA FJ7TK
UT WOS:000412961800007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Beloqui, AIA
AF Beloqui, Alida I. Alves
BA Beloqui, AIA
BF Beloqui, AIA
TI COMBINING GREEN-BLUE-GREY INFRASTRUCTURE FOR FLOOD MITIGATION AND
   ENHANCEMENT OF CO-BENEFITS SUMMARY
SO COMBINING GREEN-BLUE-GREY INFRASTRUCTURE FOR FLOOD MITIGATION AND
   ENHANCEMENT OF CO-BENEFITS
LA English
DT Editorial Material; Book Chapter
ID URBAN DRAINAGE SYSTEMS; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LIFE-CYCLE COST;
   NEW-YORK-CITY; STORMWATER MANAGEMENT; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; EVOLUTIONARY
   ALGORITHMS; INTEGRATED VALUATION; SUSTAINABLE DRAINAGE; DECISION-MAKING
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C3 IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
RP Beloqui, AIA (corresponding author), Asian Inst Technol, Montevideo, Uruguay.
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NR 183
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU CRC PRESS-BALKEMA
PI LEIDEN
PA PO BOX 11320, LEIDEN,  South Holland, NETHERLANDS
BN 978-1-000-06303-5; 978-0-367-48597-9
PY 2020
BP V
EP +
D2 10.1201/9781003041818
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering
GA BR1YI
UT WOS:000636803100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jeffers, J
AF Jeffers, James
TI Barriers to transformation towards participatory adaptation
   decision-making: Lessons from the Cork flood defences dispute
SO LAND USE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; barriers; transformation; floods; hazards; climate;
   governance; participation
ID GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK-MANAGEMENT;
   SOCIETAL TRANSFORMATION; PUBLIC-PARTICIPATION; OVERCOMING BARRIERS;
   PLACE ATTACHMENT; KNOWLEDGE
AB This paper analyses the causes and consequences of public participation failures in flood hazards management and the important lessons they offer for climate change adaptation. Despite the potential for participatory adaptation decision-making, scholarship on adaptation has remained largely separate from the literature on participatory environmental governance. This paper brings these literatures into conversation by applying the concept of transformation to both adaptation outcomes and adaptation decision-making. Through an examination of a disputed flood relief scheme in Cork, Ireland this paper develops three main arguments. (1) It demonstrates the need for analytical approaches which recognise that what constitutes transformative adaptation will vary depending on the definitions of transformation that are used, the contexts in which these definitions are applied, and the perspectives of local stakeholders. (2) It argues that by producing an intractable conflict and damaging the reputation of the organisations responsible for hazards management, public participation failures create formidable new barriers to transformative adaptation outcomes. (3) It concludes that incremental changes to the decision-making process will prove insufficient to overcome these barriers. In order to facilitate more effective public participation in hazards management and climate change adaptation, much wider change in hazards management policy and resourcing will be required.
C1 [Jeffers, James] Bath Spa Univ, Sch Sci, Hazard Risk & Disaster Res Grp, Bath, Avon, England.
C3 Bath Spa University
RP Jeffers, J (corresponding author), Bath Spa Univ, Sch Sci, Hazard Risk & Disaster Res Grp, Bath, Avon, England.
EM j.jeffers@bathspa.ac.uk
OI Jeffers, James/0000-0001-6315-9949
FU Bath Spa University
FX This project was made possible by financial support for fieldwork and
   write up provided by Bath Spa University.
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NR 47
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 1
U2 18
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0264-8377
EI 1873-5754
J9 LAND USE POLICY
JI Land Use Pol.
PD JAN
PY 2020
VL 90
AR 104333
DI 10.1016/j.landusepol.2019.104333
PG 10
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA JW5LQ
UT WOS:000503093800049
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Collado, JRN
   Wang, HH
AF Nunez Collado, Jose Rafael
   Wang, Han-Hsiang
TI Slum upgrading and climate change adaptation and mitigation: Lessons
   from Latin America
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Informal settlements; Slum upgrading; Latin America; Climate change;
   Adaptation and mitigation; Paris agreement
ID URBAN-POOR; CITY; LAND; INFRASTRUCTURE; PARTICIPATION; GOVERNANCE;
   POLITICS; OUTCOMES; PROJECT; BANGKOK
AB Residents of informal settlements are some of the most vulnerable urban groups to the effects of climate change. Different responses have emerged to intervene in these communities and slum upgrading is currently considered the best framework. How slum upgrading interventions engage with climate change adaptation and mitigation is not fully explored in the literature. This article scrutinizes three recent slum upgrading programs in Latin America to uncover the ways these tend to engage or not with climate change adaptation and mitigation. The analysis revealed that slum upgrading is both a policy mechanism to address socio-economic issues and an instrument by which built-environment interventions can enhance adaptation and mitigation in informal settlements. Six key areas emerged from the analysis of the case studies that link slum upgrading to climate change adaptation and mitigation through infrastructure and policies: (1) security of tenure, (2) relocation and barriers, (3) public space, (4) energy-efficient and improved architecture, (5) connectivity, and (6) land management. Slum upgrading can be an effective mechanism that combines mitigation and adaptation efforts whilst addressing sustainable development priorities in disadvantaged territories.
C1 [Nunez Collado, Jose Rafael] Victoria Univ Wellington, Wellington Sch Architecture, 139 Vivian St, Wellington 6011, New Zealand.
   [Wang, Han-Hsiang] Natl Cent Univ, Dept Civil Engn, 300 Jhongda Rd, Taoyuan 320, Taiwan.
   [Nunez Collado, Jose Rafael] Natl Cent Univ, IESD Program, 300 Jhongda Rd, Taoyuan 320, Taiwan.
C3 Victoria University Wellington; National Central University; National
   Central University
RP Wang, HH (corresponding author), Natl Cent Univ, Dept Civil Engn, 300 Jhongda Rd, Taoyuan 320, Taiwan.
EM jose.nunezcollado@vuw.ac.nz; hhwang@ncu.edu.tw
OI Nunez C., Jose R./0000-0002-2071-3548
FU Victoria University of Wellington
FX The authors would like to thank the reviewers and the editor for their
   constructive comments during the revision process. This research was
   supported by scholarship founding from Taiwan's ICDF and Victoria
   University of Wellington.
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NR 154
TC 28
Z9 28
U1 6
U2 74
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 104
AR 102791
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2020.102791
PG 16
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA LZ3TV
UT WOS:000541151900001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Motowidlak, U
AF Motowidlak, Urszula
TI THE POTENTIAL FOR ROAD TRANSPORT COMPANIES TO IMPLEMENT ADAPTATION
   MEASURES CONCERNING CLIMATE CHANGE
SO EKONOMIA I SRODOWISKO-ECONOMICS AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE road transport; CO2 emission; climate change; adaptation to climate
   change
ID POLICIES
AB Since transport is of great importance for sustainable socio-economic development, it is necessary to implement adaptive measures aimed at increasing the resistance of enterprises in the Transport-Forwarding-Logistics (TFL) sector to the negative effects of climate phenomena. The involvement of many entities and institutions at the national, regional, and local levels is necessary to implement effective adaptative and preventive measures. An important role in the implementation of these activities was assigned to transport companies, which are the subject of the article. Based on a survey conducted among a purposefully selected group of enterprises from the TFL sector, an assessment of the awareness of the climate change effects and the need to undertake adaptative activities was made.
C1 [Motowidlak, Urszula] Univ Lodz, Lodz, Poland.
C3 University of Lodz
RP Motowidlak, U (corresponding author), Univ Lodz, Fac Econ & Sociol, Rewolucji 1905 St 37, PL-90214 Lodz, Poland.
EM urszula.motowidlak@uni.lodz.pl
RI Motowidlak, Urszula/AAE-7839-2021
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NR 19
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 4
PU FUNDACJA EKONOMISTOW SRODOWISKA & ZASOBOW NATURALNYCH
PI BIALYSTOK
PA UL SIENKIEWICZA 22, BIALYSTOK, 15092, POLAND
SN 0867-8898
EI 2300-6420
J9 EKON SROD
JI Ekon. Srod.
PY 2020
VL 1
IS 72
BP 74
EP 86
DI 10.34659/2020/1/5
PG 13
WC Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KY5RW
UT WOS:000522630300005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chavez-Jimenez, A
   Lama, B
   Garrote, L
   Martin-Carrasco, F
   Sordo-Ward, A
   Mediero, L
AF Chavez-Jimenez, A.
   Lama, B.
   Garrote, L.
   Martin-Carrasco, F.
   Sordo-Ward, A.
   Mediero, L.
TI Characterisation of the Sensitivity of Water Resources Systems to
   Climate Change
SO WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Water scarcity; Scarcity indices; Water resources
   systems
ID CHANGE IMPACTS; RIVER-BASIN; VULNERABILITY; SCARCITY; PRECIPITATION;
   UNCERTAINTY; MODELS
AB This paper offers a methodology that enables characterisation of the behaviour of water resources systems under the impact of climate change through assessment of sensitivity patterns in a wide range of hydrologic variations produced by such change. Analysis is based on the application of two indicators that, in turn, draw on the results of a system optimisation model. Under this methodology the potential sensitivity of water resources systems in the cases of different climate projections are visualised, allowing those systems that require special attention in their adaptation to climate change to be identified. The methodology is applied to three basins located in Spain: Guadalquivir, Ebro and the Spanish part of the international basin Duero.
C1 [Chavez-Jimenez, A.] Univ Piura, Piura, Peru.
   [Chavez-Jimenez, A.; Lama, B.; Garrote, L.; Martin-Carrasco, F.; Mediero, L.] Tech Univ Madrid, Dept Civil Engn Hydraul & Energy Engn, Madrid, Spain.
   [Sordo-Ward, A.] Tech Univ Cartagena, Dept Civil Engn, Cartagena, Spain.
C3 Universidad de Piura; Universidad Politecnica de Madrid; Universidad
   Politecnica de Cartagena
RP Chavez-Jimenez, A (corresponding author), Univ Piura, Piura, Peru.
EM adriadna.chavez@udep.pe
RI Sordo-Ward, Alvaro/AAS-2893-2020; DE LAMA PEDROSA, BEATRIZ/Z-5740-2019;
   Chavez, Adriadna/LCE-8796-2024; Mediero, Luis/K-6430-2014; Garrote,
   Luis/B-5925-2013
OI DE LAMA PEDROSA, BEATRIZ/0000-0001-9989-9455; Martin-Carrasco, Francisco
   J./0000-0001-6960-293X; Chavez, Adriadna/0000-0002-2172-6260; Mediero,
   Luis/0000-0002-9346-6592; Garrote, Luis/0000-0001-9087-3638; SORDO WARD,
   ALVARO FRANCISCO/0000-0002-9186-8395
FU ARCO Project [200800050084350]; Spanish Ministry of Environment, Rural,
   and Marine Affairs (MARM); VIAGUA Action [410AC0399]
FX This research has been supported by the ARCO Project (200800050084350),
   funded by the Spanish Ministry of Environment, Rural, and Marine Affairs
   (MARM) and by VIAGUA Action (410AC0399).
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NR 50
TC 34
Z9 38
U1 3
U2 69
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0920-4741
EI 1573-1650
J9 WATER RESOUR MANAG
JI Water Resour. Manag.
PD SEP
PY 2013
VL 27
IS 12
BP 4237
EP 4258
DI 10.1007/s11269-013-0404-2
PG 22
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA 214CR
UT WOS:000324108800007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ruth, M
   Lin, AC
AF Ruth, Matthias
   Lin, Ai-Chen
TI Regional energy demand and adaptations to climate change: Methodology
   and application to the state of Maryland, USA
SO ENERGY POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; residential energy demand; commercial energy demand
ID NATURAL-GAS CONSUMPTION; ELECTRICITY; SECTOR; MODEL
AB This paper explores potential impacts of climate change on natural gas, electricity and heating oil use by the residential and commercial sectors in the state of Maryland, USA. Time series analysis is used to quantify historical temperature-energy demand relationships. A dynamic computer model uses those relationships to simulate future energy demand under a range of energy prices, temperatures and other drivers. The results indicate that climate exerts a comparably small signal on future energy demand, but that the combined climate and non-climate-induced changes in energy demand may pose significant challenges to policy and investment decisions in the state. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 Sch Publ Policy, Environm Policy Program, Hyattsville, MD 20782 USA.
RP Ruth, M (corresponding author), Sch Publ Policy, Environm Policy Program, 3139 Van Munching Hall, Hyattsville, MD 20782 USA.
EM mruth1@umd.edu
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NR 46
TC 108
Z9 123
U1 2
U2 33
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4215
EI 1873-6777
J9 ENERG POLICY
JI Energy Policy
PD NOV
PY 2006
VL 34
IS 17
BP 2820
EP 2833
DI 10.1016/j.enpol.2005.04.016
PG 14
WC Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 100CG
UT WOS:000241644200018
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pelling, M
   High, C
AF Pelling, M
   High, C
TI Understanding adaptation: What can social capital offer assessments of
   adaptive capacity?
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE social capital; community; adaptive capacity; social organisation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; CIVIL-SOCIETY; VULNERABILITY; COMMUNITIES
AB The burgeoning interest in social capital within the climate change community represents a welcome move towards a concern for the behavioural elements of adaptive action and capacity. In this paper the case is put forward for a critical engagement with social capital. There is need for an open debate on the conceptual and analytical traps and opportunities that social capital presents. The paper contrasts three schools of thought on social capital and uses a social capital lens to map out current and future areas for research on adaptation to climate change. It identifies opportunities for using social capital to research adaptive capacity and action within communities of place and communities of practice. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, London WC2R 2LS, England.
C3 University of London; King's College London
RP Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, London WC2R 2LS, England.
EM mark.pelling@kcl.ac.uk; c.high@watercrowfoot.co.uk
OI Pelling, Mark/0000-0002-6472-9875
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NR 67
TC 578
Z9 680
U1 3
U2 125
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD DEC
PY 2005
VL 15
IS 4
BP 308
EP 319
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2005.02.001
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA 988TG
UT WOS:000233623200004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hidalgo, DM
   Nunn, PD
   Beazley, H
   Sovinasalevu, JS
   Veitayaki, J
AF Medina Hidalgo, Daniela
   Nunn, Patrick D.
   Beazley, Harriot
   Sovinasalevu, Joji Sivo
   Veitayaki, Joeli
TI Climate change adaptation planning in remote contexts: insights from
   community-based natural resource management and rural development
   initiatives in the Pacific Islands
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; climate change; community; Fiji; development; planning
AB Planned climate change adaptation initiatives are being developed with both external and endogenous resources at an increasing rate, especially in developing countries. As climate change continues to pose risks to vulnerable communities, there is a growing need to identify lessons learned in the process of planning and implementing climate change adaptation strategies. This is even more pressing for communities in remote contexts where access to resources and support services is limited. This study used thematic analysis to identify key insights from a 20-year old community-based resource management and development initiative on a remote island in Fiji. Four themes emerged relating to: perceptions of environmental change, links between conservation initiatives and people's livelihoods, balance between external support and community-driven efforts, and the continuity of initiatives. Whilst acknowledging that every community in the Pacific has unique capacities for dealing with climate change, the four identified themes are considered applicable to other subsistence-dominated peripheral communities within Fiji, the Pacific Islands region and beyond. This has the potential to improve planning processes and ensure both continuity and efficacy of efforts towards supporting sustainable livelihoods in communities already experiencing the impacts of climate change.
C1 [Medina Hidalgo, Daniela; Nunn, Patrick D.; Beazley, Harriot] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr, Sippy Downs, Qld, Australia.
   [Medina Hidalgo, Daniela] CSIRO, 306 Carmody Rd, St Lucia, Qld 4067, Australia.
   [Sovinasalevu, Joji Sivo; Veitayaki, Joeli] Univ South Pacific, Sch Marine Studies, Inst Appl Sci, Laucala Campus, Suva, Fiji.
C3 University of the Sunshine Coast; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial
   Research Organisation (CSIRO); University of the South Pacific
RP Hidalgo, DM (corresponding author), CSIRO, 306 Carmody Rd, St Lucia, Qld 4067, Australia.; Hidalgo, DM (corresponding author), Univ Sunshine Coast, 90 Sippy Downs Dr, Sippy Downs, Qld 4556, Australia.
EM daniela.medina@research.usc.edu.au
RI Medina, Daniela/AEG-3953-2022; Beazley, Harriot/AAJ-2960-2020; Nunn,
   Patrick/C-7864-2011
OI Medina Hidalgo, Daniela/0000-0002-7064-0455; Beazley,
   Harriot/0000-0002-0491-5350; Nunn, Patrick/0000-0001-9295-5741
FU Australian Government, Department of Education and Training;
   Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
FX This work was supported by Australian Government, Department of
   Education and Training [grant number Research Training Program
   Scholarship]; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO) [grant number Postgraduate Scholarship.].
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NR 70
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 5
U2 22
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD NOV 26
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 10
BP 909
EP 921
DI 10.1080/17565529.2020.1867046
EA JAN 2021
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XL3LD
UT WOS:000606899000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Phuong, LTH
   Biesbroek, GR
   Wals, AEJ
AF Le Thi Hong Phuong
   Biesbroek, G. Robbert
   Wals, Arjen E. J.
TI Barriers and enablers to climate change adaptation in hierarchical
   governance systems: the case of Vietnam
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Social learning; hierarchical state; constraints; enablers; adaptive
   capacity; climate change adaptation
ID POLICY ANALYTICAL CAPACITY; MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE; DISASTER RISK;
   MANAGEMENT; CANADA; VULNERABILITY; ARRANGEMENTS; KNOWLEDGE
AB Governments fulfil important roles in increasing the adaptive capacity of local communities to respond to climate change impacts, particularly in developing countries. Existing studies on how governments enable and constrain the ways in which local level communities learn and build their adaptive capacity, however, generally adopt network or market-oriented types of governance. However, the most vulnerable regions to climate change impact in the world are generally governed through hierarchical policy systems. This research aims to understand how the hierarchical policy system in Vietnam creates enables and/or constrains the policy capacity of policy actors to contribute to effective climate change adaptation. We conducted interviews (n=26) with key actors at multiple levels of government. Our findings show the importance of clear legal institutions, available financing for implementing policies, and the training of governmental staff, particularly at district and commune levels where the policy capacities are generally too low to deal with climate change impacts. We conclude that any efforts to support local actors (i.e. smallholder farmers) should include investments in policy capacity to ensure uptake and upscaling of adaptation actions more broadly.
C1 [Le Thi Hong Phuong; Wals, Arjen E. J.] Wageningen Univ, Educ & Learning Sci Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Le Thi Hong Phuong] Hue Univ, Univ Agr & Forestry, Fac Extens & Rural Dev, Hue, Vietnam.
   [Biesbroek, G. Robbert] Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Nong Lam University; Hue University;
   Wageningen University & Research
RP Phuong, LTH (corresponding author), Wageningen Univ, Educ & Learning Sci Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.; Phuong, LTH (corresponding author), Hue Univ, Univ Agr & Forestry, Fac Extens & Rural Dev, Hue, Vietnam.
EM lethihongphuong@huaf.edu.vn; robbert.biesbroek@wur.nl; arjen.wals@wur.nl
RI Biesbroek, Robbert/GZZ-4476-2022; wals, arjen/J-6773-2015; Biesbroek,
   Robbert/I-2384-2013
OI wals, arjen/0000-0003-4735-1126; Biesbroek, Robbert/0000-0002-2906-1419
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NR 75
TC 44
Z9 48
U1 2
U2 20
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PY 2018
VL 20
IS 4
BP 518
EP 532
DI 10.1080/1523908X.2018.1447366
PG 15
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA GI4JF
UT WOS:000434336800008
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vij, S
   Warner, JF
   Biesbroek, R
   Groot, A
AF Vij, Sumit
   Warner, Jeroen F.
   Biesbroek, Robbert
   Groot, Annemarie
TI Non-decisions are also decisions: power interplay between Bangladesh and
   India over the Brahmaputra River
SO WATER INTERNATIONAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Power interplay; climate change adaptation; hegemonic vulnerabilities;
   non-decision making; Brahmaputra
ID TRANSBOUNDARY WATER COOPERATION; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SOUTH-ASIA; HEGEMONY;
   FUTURE; MANAGEMENT; CONFLICT; SECURITY; SCARCITY; POLITICS
AB This article shows how Bangladesh and India intentionally maintain the status quo for the Brahmaputra River at the transboundary level, using material and ideational resources. Results show that India wants to reduce its hegemonic vulnerabilities and Bangladesh aims to maintain its control over the Brahmaputra river, simultaneously building its technical and negotiation skills. We conclude that the underlying processes of maintaining the status quo can be comprehended as 'non-decision making'. The analysis presented will help policy actors to push towards a forward-looking climate change adaptation planning for the Brahmaputra River.
C1 [Vij, Sumit; Biesbroek, Robbert] Wageningen Univ & Res, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Warner, Jeroen F.] Wageningen Univ & Res, Sociol Dev & Change Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Groot, Annemarie] Wageningen Univ & Res, Wageningen Environm Res, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Wageningen University & Research;
   Wageningen University & Research
RP Vij, S (corresponding author), Wageningen Univ & Res, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM sumit.vij@wur.nl
RI Vij, Sumit/AAV-6617-2021; Biesbroek, Robbert/GZZ-4476-2022; Biesbroek,
   Robbert/I-2384-2013
OI Warner, Jeroen/0000-0003-2847-8770; Biesbroek,
   Robbert/0000-0002-2906-1419
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NR 75
TC 31
Z9 33
U1 2
U2 18
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0250-8060
EI 1941-1707
J9 WATER INT
JI Water Int.
PD MAY 18
PY 2020
VL 45
IS 4
SI SI
BP 254
EP 274
DI 10.1080/02508060.2018.1554767
PG 21
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA ME1VG
UT WOS:000544448600002
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Baez, JE
   Kronick, D
   Mason, AD
AF Baez, Javier E.
   Kronick, Dorothy
   Mason, Andrew D.
TI Rural Households in a Changing Climate
SO WORLD BANK RESEARCH OBSERVER
LA English
DT Article
ID LONG-TERM CONSEQUENCES; EL-NINO; RISK; INCOME; VULNERABILITY;
   CONSUMPTION; ADAPTATION; MIGRATION; POVERTY; MALARIA
AB This paper argues that climate change poses two distinct, if related, sets of challenges for poor rural households: challenges related to the increasing frequency and severity of weather shocks and challenges related to long-term shifts in temperature, rainfall patterns, water availability, and other environmental factors. Within this framework, we examine evidence from existing empirical literature to compose an initial picture of household-level strategies for adapting to climate change in rural settings. We find that although households possess numerous strategies for managing climate shocks and shifts, their adaptive capacity is insufficient for the task of maintainingulet alone improvinguhousehold welfare. We describe the role of public policy in fortifying the ability of rural households to adapt to a changing climate.
C1 [Mason, Andrew D.] World Bank, Poverty Reduct & Econ Management Dept, East Asia & Pacific Reg, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
   [Baez, Javier E.] World Bank, Poverty Reduct & Econ Management Dept, Latin Amer & Caribbean Reg, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
   [Kronick, Dorothy] Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
C3 The World Bank; The World Bank; Stanford University
RP Mason, AD (corresponding author), World Bank, Poverty Reduct & Econ Management Dept, East Asia & Pacific Reg, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
EM jbaez@worldbank.org; dkronick@stanford.edu; amason@worldbank.org
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   [No title captured]
NR 66
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 1
U2 28
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0257-3032
EI 1564-6971
J9 WORLD BANK RES OBSER
JI World Bank Res. Observ.
PD AUG
PY 2013
VL 28
IS 2
BP 267
EP 289
DI 10.1093/wbro/lks008
PG 23
WC Development Studies; Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Business & Economics
GA 198HA
UT WOS:000322911800006
OA Green Submitted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Marie, M
   Yirga, F
   Haile, M
   Tquabo, F
AF Marie, Mequannt
   Yirga, Fikadu
   Haile, Mebrahtu
   Tquabo, Filmon
TI Farmers' choices and factors affecting adoption of climate change
   adaptation strategies: evidence from northwestern Ethiopia
SO HELIYON
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation strategies; Binary logistic regression;
   Gondar zuria district; Agricultural science; Environmental science;
   Earth sciences; Biological sciences; Sociology
ID DETERMINANTS; VARIABILITY
AB Climate change is a major environmental and socioeconomic challenge in Ethiopia in recent decades. The study site is one of the climate change prone areas affected by climate variability and extreme events. Therefore, a better understanding of area-specific and adaptation is crucial to develop and implement proper adaptation strategies that can alleviate the adverse effects of climate change. Therefore, this work was aimed to identify determinants of farmers' adoption of climate change adaptation strategies in Gondar Zuria District of northwestern Ethiopia. Primary data were collected through semi-structured questionnaires, observation, and interviews. Besides, the secondary data were also obtained from journal articles, reports, governmental offices, and the internet. The Multinomial and Binary logistic regression models with the help of the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) (21th edition) were used to analyze the data. The multinomial logistic regression model was used to estimate the influence of the socioeconomic characteristics of sample households on the farmer's decision to choose climate change adaptation strategies. The result showed that age, gender, family size, farm income, and farm size had a significant influence on the farmers' choice of climate change adaptation strategies. The result also revealed that crop failure, severe soil erosion and shortages of water are major climate change-related problems than others. In order to alleviate these problems, farmers have implemented mixed farming, mixed cropping, early and late planting (changing sowing period), use of drought-resistant crop varieties, application of soil and water conservation techniques, shifting to non-farm income activities and use of irrigation. In contrast, access to climate information, total annual farm income, and market access variables are significant adoption determinants of climate change adaptation strategies by farmers' in the study site. Therefore, we recommend future adaptation-related plans should focus on improving climate change information access, improving market access and enhancing research on the use of rainwater harvesting technology.
C1 [Marie, Mequannt; Yirga, Fikadu] Oda Bultum Univ, Coll Nat Resource & Environm Sci, Chiro, Ethiopia.
   [Haile, Mebrahtu; Tquabo, Filmon] Mekelle Univ, Coll Dryland Agr & Nat Resources, Mekelle, Ethiopia.
C3 Mekelle University
RP Haile, M (corresponding author), Mekelle Univ, Coll Dryland Agr & Nat Resources, Mekelle, Ethiopia.
EM mebrahtu.haile@yahoo.com
RI Gebremariam, Filmon/D-6459-2019; Haile, Mebrahtu/V-8695-2019
OI Haile, Mebrahtu/0000-0002-7043-0976; Gebremariam, Filmon
   Tquabo/0000-0002-1076-9644
FU Ministry of Science and Higher Education, Ethiopia
FX This work was supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education,
   Ethiopia.
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NR 44
TC 123
Z9 127
U1 1
U2 17
PU CELL PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA 50 HAMPSHIRE ST, FLOOR 5, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02139 USA
EI 2405-8440
J9 HELIYON
JI Heliyon
PD APR
PY 2020
VL 6
IS 4
AR e03867
DI 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e03867
PG 10
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA LI9MM
UT WOS:000529800500181
PM 32373748
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Chatrchyan, AM
   Yin, C
   Torquebiau, E
   Nagothu, US
AF Chatrchyan, Allison Morrill
   Yin, Christina
   Torquebiau, Emmanuel
   Nagothu, Udaya Sekhar
BE Nagothu, US
TI Multi-level policy measures to support sustainable agriculture
   intensification for smallholders
SO AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION: TECHNOLOGY AND
   POLICY CHALLENGES IN THE FACE OF CLIMATE CHANGE
SE Earthscan Food and Agriculture Series
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; GOVERNANCE; INTERVENTIONS; PARTNERSHIPS
C1 [Chatrchyan, Allison Morrill] Cornell Inst Climate Smart Solut, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.
   [Chatrchyan, Allison Morrill] Cornell Univ, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA.
   [Torquebiau, Emmanuel] CIRAD, Paris, France.
   [Nagothu, Udaya Sekhar] Norwegian Inst Bioecon Res, Int Dept, As, Norway.
C3 Cornell University; CIRAD; Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research
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NR 68
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 2
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-0-203-73330-1; 978-1-138-30059-0
J9 EARTHSCAN FOOD AGRIC
PY 2018
BP 250
EP 273
PG 24
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Development Studies; Green &
   Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences; Environmental
   Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Development Studies; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BL6RL
UT WOS:000454651300012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Wang, Q
   Li, L
AF Wang Qing
   Li Liang
BE Hung, JK
   Zhao, HC
   Wu, ZJ
TI The Strategy of Chinese Insurance Industry to Address Global Climate
   Change
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2010 INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON LOW-CARBON ECONOMY
   AND TECHNOLOGY SCIENCE
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Symposium on Low-carbon Economy and Technology Science
CY OCT 29-31, 2010
CL Zibo, PEOPLES R CHINA
SP Shandong Univ Technol, M & D Forum, Shandong Univ Technol, Shandong Inst Low Carbon Econ & Technol, Beijing Zhongjing Lanshan Acad Exchange Co Ltd, Shandong Univ Technol, Sch Management, Beijing Zhongjing Shiji Investment Co Ltd, Australia Blue Mt Grp
DE climate warming; Insurance; Strategy
AB Climate change increases the frequency of extreme weather and severity, affecting the normal operation of the economy, the economic and social sustainable development posed a serious challenge. The insurance industry in the real economy has a wide range of stakeholders, and thus climate change will have significant impact on the insurance industry. Insurance industry in addressing climate change is playing a double role: it is necessary to reduce climate change on insurance business and assets of the negative business impact, but also in adapting to climate change and grasp the opportunity to provide management of climate risk insurance products and services, new energy, energy saving, new energy vehicles, and other strategic funding to support emerging industries, to contribute to the mitigation of climate change.
C1 [Wang Qing] Shandong Univ Technol, Sch Law, Jinan 255049, Peoples R China.
C3 Shandong University
EM wqzb118@126.com
CR [Anonymous], 2009, CLIMATE CHANGE HOW T
   [Anonymous], 2008, FINANCIAL TIMES
   [Anonymous], 2010, CHINA INSURANCE NEWS
NR 3
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 9
PU ST PLUM-BLOSSOM PRESS PTY LTD
PI HAWTHORN EAST
PA STE 4, LEVEL 3, 695 BURKE RD, HAWTHORN EAST, VC 3123, AUSTRALIA
BN 978-0-646-54471-7
PY 2010
BP 219
EP +
PG 2
WC Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BDJ45
UT WOS:000313542100039
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Qasmi, S
   Ribes, A
AF Qasmi, Said
   Ribes, Aurelien
TI Reducing uncertainty in local temperature projections
SO SCIENCE ADVANCES
LA English
DT Article
ID EQUILIBRIUM CLIMATE SENSITIVITY; EMERGENT CONSTRAINTS; MODEL; CMIP5;
   VARIABILITY; ENSEMBLE
AB Planning for adaptation to climate change requires accurate climate projections. Recent studies have shown that the uncertainty in global mean surface temperature projections can be considerably reduced using historical ob-servations. However, the transposition of these new results to the local scale is not yet available. Here, we adapt an innovative statistical method that combines the latest generation of climate model simulations, global obser-vations, and local observations to reduce uncertainty in local temperature projections. By taking advantage of the tight links between local and global temperature, we can derive the local implications of global constraints. The model uncertainty is reduced by 30% up to 70% at any location worldwide, allowing to substantially improve the quantification of risks associated with future climate change. A rigorous evaluation of these results within a per-fect model framework indicates a robust skill, leading to a high confidence in our constrained climate projections.
C1 [Qasmi, Said] Univ Toulouse, CNRM, Meteo France, CNRS, Toulouse, France.
C3 Meteo France; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS);
   Universite de Toulouse
RP Qasmi, S (corresponding author), Univ Toulouse, CNRM, Meteo France, CNRS, Toulouse, France.
EM said.qasmi@meteo.fr
RI Qasmi, Saïd/AAE-2339-2019
FU European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme in the
   framework of the EUCP project; CONSTRAIN project; Meteo-France; 
   [776613];  [820829]
FX This work was supported by the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research
   and Innovation Programme in the framework of the EUCP project (grant
   agreement no. 776613), CONSTRAIN project (grant agreement no. 820829),
   and Meteo-France.
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NR 61
TC 21
Z9 21
U1 3
U2 19
PU AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
PI WASHINGTON
PA 1200 NEW YORK AVE, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20005 USA
SN 2375-2548
J9 SCI ADV
JI Sci. Adv.
PD OCT 14
PY 2022
VL 8
IS 41
AR eabo6872
DI 10.1126/sciadv.abo6872
PG 14
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 6C6RA
UT WOS:000882137600005
PM 36223474
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Downing, TE
AF Downing, Thomas E.
TI Views of the frontiers in climate change adaptation economics
SO WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID POLICY
AB The shift from framing climate change adaptation as vulnerabilityimpacts to adaptation pathways is also a shift from a predict-and-provide approaches to understanding dynamic processes. Studies of the economics of adaptation relying only on the comparative statics of reference and climate impacts scenarios ignore the more challenging frontier of representing decision processes and uncertainty. The logic of the shift to dynamic-pathway approaches is widely accepted in principal. Effective analytical tools are only beginning to appear. Further case studies are required to explore the matrix of uncertainty in future climate conditions against the range of metrics for valuing impacts in decision processes. WIREs Clim Change 2012, 3:161170. doi: 10.1002/wcc.157
C1 Oxford Ctr Innovat, Oxford, England.
RP Downing, TE (corresponding author), Oxford Ctr Innovat, Oxford, England.
EM tdowning.cc@gmail.com
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NR 37
TC 46
Z9 48
U1 2
U2 24
PU WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
PI MALDEN
PA COMMERCE PLACE, 350 MAIN STREET, MALDEN, MA 02148-529 USA
SN 1757-7780
J9 WIRES CLIM CHANGE
JI Wiley Interdiscip. Rev.-Clim. Chang.
PD MAR-APR
PY 2012
VL 3
IS 2
BP 161
EP 170
DI 10.1002/wcc.157
PG 10
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 910MZ
UT WOS:000301644400004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Saldívar-Lucio, R
   Trasviña-Castro, A
   Jiddawi, N
   Chuenpagdee, R
   Lindström, L
   Jentoft, S
   Fraga, J
   de la Torre-Castro, M
AF Saldivar-Lucio, Romeo
   Trasvina-Castro, Armando
   Jiddawi, Narriman
   Chuenpagdee, Ratana
   Lindstrom, Lars
   Jentoft, Svein
   Fraga, Julia
   de la Torre-Castro, Maricela
TI Fine-Tuning Climate Resilience in Marine Socio-Ecological Systems: The
   Need for Accurate Space-Time Representativeness to Identify Relevant
   Consequences and Responses
SO FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE socio-ecological resilience; risk perception; climate adaptation;
   climate risk; coastal communities; adaptive capacity; anticipatory
   governance
ID CABO-PULMO; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTANCE; GOVERNANCE; ENGAGEMENT; PERCEPTIONS;
   COMMUNITY; INSIGHTS; FUTURE; FOCUS
AB Climate change triggers a wide mosaic of regional and local responses, often different to the large-scale variability in magnitude and direction. Because of the psychological connections (cognitive and emotional) with the frequency, intensity and age of a climatic event, people may have the capacity to recognize key variations at lower scales, especially those from which they perceive risk. Yet, the anticipatory actions and social engagement to respond or adapt to climate change are difficult to achieve, mostly when there exists a long psychological distance to climatic phenomena. Research about climate change communication provides clues about the relevance of place based discussion to gauge risk perception and improve response protocols, their design and prioritization. It argues that strategies and actions required to face climate risks may widely differ depending on the scale and accuracy of the local representations displayed during discussions of climate impacts. This work examines how local attributes (from climate to social) operate and control place-specific risks and priorities, by comparing coastal communities in two locations, Cabo Pulmo, Mexico and Zanzibar, Tanzania, which are subject to different climate dynamics. This paper discusses the need to identify relevant climate risks/responses at the local level and how psycho-social factors (e.g., psychological distance, collective memory, and social engagement) may operate positively for building climate resilience. We also illustrate a workflow to increase and enhance collaboration between researchers and local people by promoting dialogue, participation and narratives that rigorously consider the local knowledge.
C1 [Saldivar-Lucio, Romeo] CONACYT Ctr Invest Cient & Educ Super Ensenada CI, La Paz, Mexico.
   [Trasvina-Castro, Armando] CICESE Unidad La Paz, La Paz, Mexico.
   [Jiddawi, Narriman] Inst Fisheries Res, Zanzibar, Tanzania.
   [Chuenpagdee, Ratana] Mem Univ Newfoundland, Dept Geog, St John, NF, Canada.
   [Lindstrom, Lars] Stockholm Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Jentoft, Svein] UiT Arctic Univ Norway, Norwegian Coll Fishery Sci, Tromso, Norway.
   [Fraga, Julia] Ctr Invest & Estudios Avanzados, Dept Ecol Humana, Merida, Mexico.
   [de la Torre-Castro, Maricela] Stockholm Univ, Dept Phys Geog, Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 CICESE - Centro de Investigacion Cientifica y de Educacion Superior de
   Ensenada; Memorial University Newfoundland; Stockholm University; UiT
   The Arctic University of Tromso; Stockholm University
RP Saldívar-Lucio, R (corresponding author), CONACYT Ctr Invest Cient & Educ Super Ensenada CI, La Paz, Mexico.; de la Torre-Castro, M (corresponding author), Stockholm Univ, Dept Phys Geog, Stockholm, Sweden.
EM rsaldivar@cicese.edu.mx; maricela@natgeo.su.se
RI Saldívar-Lucio, Romeo/T-6275-2019
FU Swedish Research Council [2018-04138]; Unidad La Paz; Swedish Research
   Council [2018-04138] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council
FX We thank "Programa Catedras" of the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y
   Tecnologia (CONACYT) and SEAgender project financed by the Swedish
   Research Council. A planning workshop was facilitated by the project
   SEAgender, financed by the Swedish Research Council Grant No.
   (Diarienr.) 2018-04138. We also want to acknowledge the SERVANT
   Laboratory, the support of Unidad La Paz and to the Oceanography
   Division of CICESE.
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NR 49
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 15
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-7745
J9 FRONT MAR SCI
JI Front. Mar. Sci.
PD JAN 18
PY 2021
VL 7
AR 600403
DI 10.3389/fmars.2020.600403
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA PY9NZ
UT WOS:000612368600001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gustafsson, MT
   Rodriguez-Morales, JE
   Dellmuth, LM
AF Gustafsson, Maria-Therese
   Rodriguez-Morales, Jorge E.
   Dellmuth, Lisa M.
TI Private adaptation to climate risks: Evidence from the world's largest
   mining companies
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; Local communities; Extractive industries; Mining;
   Private adaptation; Political economy
ID SUSTAINABILITY; SECTOR; CORPORATIONS; GOVERNANCE; POLITICS; RESOURCE
AB Private companies have in recent years started to disclose information about their exposure and responses to climate risks. However, we still know little about how and why private actors engage in climate change adaptation, and to what extent they do so in ways that improve societal resilience. This article addresses these questions. It conceptualizes private adaptation as consisting of institutional, infrastructural and community-oriented responses to climate risks. It develops a political-economic framework about the drivers of private adaptation, where private adaptation is expected to be shaped by pressures exerted by governments, investors, and civil society actors. Empirically, the framework is explored by using an original dataset on the adaptation responses of the 37 largest mining companies worldwide. We select the mining sector as mineral extraction plays a critical role in the low-carbon transition, and can, at the same time, exacerbate climate vulnerability in extracting sites. The descriptive findings suggest that the majority of the investigated companies have set up procedures to assess climate impacts on business operations, integrated climate risks in water governance, and adapted their infrastructure. The explanatory results indicate that private adaptation is mainly driven by investor pressures, and not domestic regulations and civil society. By implication, companies rarely engage in community-oriented adaptation responses by cooperating with local communities in ways that would benefit these communities. Taken together, our findings help to better understand the limitations of private adaptation and barriers to achieve transformative change, and identify how private adaptation could help improve societal resilience.
C1 [Gustafsson, Maria-Therese] Stockholm Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Univ Vagen 10 F, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Rodriguez-Morales, Jorge E.; Dellmuth, Lisa M.] Stockholm Univ, Dept Econ Hist & Int Relat, Int Relat, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Stockholm University; Stockholm University
RP Gustafsson, MT (corresponding author), Stockholm Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Univ Vagen 10 F, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
EM Maria-therese.gustafsson@statsvet.su.se
RI Gustafsson, Maria-Therese/IVU-8939-2023
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NR 72
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 4
U2 16
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2022
VL 35
AR 100386
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2021.100386
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 0D6BN
UT WOS:000776078700006
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Adego, T
AF Adego, Tsega
TI Characterizing and tailoring climate change adaptation practices into a
   diversified agroecosystem: an evidence from smallholder farmers in
   Ethiopia
SO ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Agroecosystem characterization; Climate change adaptation; Crop
   production constraints; Equity; Local adaptation; Northwest Ethiopia;
   Rib watershed
ID MANAGEMENT
AB Smallholder farmers require viable adaptation strategies for addressing climate change. Climate change adaptation project might be maladapted unless it considers the local context. This paper argued challenges of agriculture in developing countries in general and Ethiopia in particular, are highly diversified, and thus any intervention requires embarrassing the specific agroecosystems. Cognizant of this fact, the research investigated locally viable climate change adaptation strategies (CCAS) specific to Rib watershed in Ethiopia by using agroecosystem analysis framework. The study used primary data collected from 383 randomly selected farm-households complemented with data collected with key-informant interviews and focus group discussions. The study area was characterized and mapped in two groups of agroecosystems: Fogera plain and Libo-Farta highlands. The finding portrayed that across agroecosystems, there were considerable differences in terms of productivity potential, inherit constraints, crop varieties, income level and soil type. The study found the blanket application of similar CCAS irrespective of the heterogeneities. Farmers in the plain land witnessed less income inequality that stood at a Gini coefficient of 38.3 as compared to the highlanders of 42.8. The study further identified prioritized CCAS for the respective agroecosystems. It is imperative to consider local diversities before any intervention efforts.
C1 [Adego, Tsega] Addis Ababa Univ, Coll Dev Studies, Ctr Environm & Dev Studies, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
C3 Addis Ababa University
RP Adego, T (corresponding author), Addis Ababa Univ, Coll Dev Studies, Ctr Environm & Dev Studies, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
EM tsega.adego@aau.edu.et
FU Ethiopian Ministry of Education (Addis Ababa University), Ethiopia;
   Ethiopian Ministry of Education (Aksum University), Ethiopia
FX This work was funded by Ethiopian Ministry of Education (Addis Ababa
   University and Aksum University), Ethiopia. The authors would like to
   thank local village administrators, data collectors, development agents
   and the farmers that facilitate and provide the data. Thank you for the
   two anonymous reviewers for their provision of critical comments. The
   author also acknowledges Getachew Abebe (Ph.D) and Belay Simane (Prof.)
   for providing critical comments during data collection and data
   analysis.
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NR 53
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 3
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1387-585X
EI 1573-2975
J9 ENVIRON DEV SUSTAIN
JI Environ. Dev. Sustain.
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 24
IS 11
BP 13173
EP 13197
DI 10.1007/s10668-021-01986-w
EA NOV 2021
PG 25
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 5F2OW
UT WOS:000723577000002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Reser, JP
   Swim, JK
AF Reser, Joseph P.
   Swim, Janet K.
TI Adapting to and Coping With the Threat and Impacts of Climate Change
SO AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; psychological adaptation; environmental stress; stress
   and coping; psychologically significant behavior
ID PSYCHOLOGICAL-RESEARCH; PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS; HUMAN RESILIENCE; RISK;
   STRESS; HEALTH; CONSEQUENCES; DISASTER; PERSPECTIVE; ADAPTATION
AB This article addresses the nature and challenge of adaptation in the context of global climate change. The complexity of "climate change" as threat, environmental stressor, risk domain, and impacting process with dramatic environmental and human consequences requires a synthesis of perspectives and models from diverse areas of psychology to adequately communicate and explain how a more psychological framing of the human dimensions of global environmental change can greatly inform and enhance effective and collaborative climate change adaptation and mitigation policies and research. An integrative framework is provided that identifies and considers important mediating and moderating parameters and processes relating to climate change adaptation, with particular emphasis given to environmental stress and stress and coping perspectives. This psychological perspective on climate change adaptation highlights crucial aspects of adaptation that have been neglected in the arena of climate change science. Of particular importance are intra-individual and social "psychological adaptation" processes that powerfully mediate public risk perceptions and understandings, effective coping responses and resilience, overt behavioral adjustment and change, and psychological and social impacts. This psychological window on climate change adaptation is arguably indispensable to genuinely multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary research and policy initiatives addressing the impacts of climate change.
C1 [Reser, Joseph P.] Griffith Univ, Sch Psychol, Griffith, Qld 4222, Australia.
   [Swim, Janet K.] Penn State Univ, Dept Psychol, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
C3 Griffith University; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher
   Education (PCSHE); Pennsylvania State University; Pennsylvania State
   University - University Park
RP Reser, JP (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Sch Psychol, Gold Coast Campus, Griffith, Qld 4222, Australia.
EM j.reser@griffith.edu.au
OI Swim, Janet/0000-0002-3279-1308; Reser, Joseph/0000-0002-1139-6587
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NR 138
TC 203
Z9 241
U1 5
U2 134
PU AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
PI WASHINGTON
PA 750 FIRST ST NE, WASHINGTON, DC 20002-4242 USA
SN 0003-066X
EI 1935-990X
J9 AM PSYCHOL
JI Am. Psychol.
PD MAY-JUN
PY 2011
VL 66
IS 4
SI SI
BP 277
EP 289
DI 10.1037/a0023412
PG 13
WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Psychology
GA 766IX
UT WOS:000290776900004
PM 21553953
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ndiritu, SW
AF Ndiritu, S. Wagura
TI Beef value chain analysis and climate change adaptation and investment
   options in the semi-arid lands of northern Kenya
SO JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS
LA English
DT Article
DE Beef value chain; Livestock; Climate change adaptation; Semi-arid lands;
   Kenya
ID CATTLE; MANAGEMENT; LIVESTOCK
AB The purpose of this paper is to examine the beef value chain and identify climate change adaptation and investment options in the semi-arid areas of northern Kenya. The research uses an innovative approach to value chain analysis, namely the three-step Value Chain Analysis for Resilience in Drylands (VC-ARID) that considers the specific characteristics of semi-arid systems. All the respondents interviewed along the value chain have perceived changes in rainfall, temperature and climate extremes - especially drought - over the past 15 years and have experienced the impacts of these changes on their livestock. The findings show that pastoralist producers need to invest in fattening programmes at their ranches or via feedlots to increase the quality of the beef they produce. There is significant potential to improve the fattening stage in the value chain, since it would contribute towards meeting demand in the expanding high-end markets that require finished, top-quality meats.
C1 [Ndiritu, S. Wagura] Strathmore Univ, Business Sch, Ole Sangale Rd,Madaraka Estate,POB 59857, Nairobi 00200, Kenya.
C3 Strathmore University
RP Ndiritu, SW (corresponding author), Strathmore Univ, Business Sch, Ole Sangale Rd,Madaraka Estate,POB 59857, Nairobi 00200, Kenya.
EM sndiritu@strathmore.edu
OI Ndiritu, S. Wagura/0000-0002-8463-3758
FU Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia (CARIAA)
   from the United Kingdom's Department for International Development;
   International Development and Research Centre in Canada; Kenya Market
   Trust for the Pathways to Resilience in Semi-arid Economies (PRISE)
   project; Jan Wallander and Tom Hedelius Foundation
FX The author would like to acknowledge the guidance of Elizabeth Carabine
   and Catherine Simonet of the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) in
   respect of the Value Chain Analysis for Resilience in Drylands approach.
   For their valuable comments, advice and support, I also thank the
   reviewers, wider PRISE team, Mohammed Said, and the Kenya Market Trust
   staff, as well as PRISE workshop participants. Financial support under
   the Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia
   (CARIAA) from the United Kingdom's Department for International
   Development and the International Development and Research Centre in
   Canada, managed by the ODI and Kenya Market Trust for the Pathways to
   Resilience in Semi-arid Economies (PRISE) project is highly appreciated.
   English language editing of the final submission was done by Sandie
   Fitchat through the generous support of Jesper Stage and the Jan
   Wallander and Tom Hedelius Foundation.The usual disclaimers apply.
CR Abuya R., 2019, CONTEXTUALISING PATH
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NR 47
TC 16
Z9 17
U1 1
U2 23
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0140-1963
EI 1095-922X
J9 J ARID ENVIRON
JI J. Arid. Environ.
PD OCT
PY 2020
VL 181
AR 104216
DI 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2020.104216
PG 10
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA MQ1GF
UT WOS:000552644300002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Swartling, ÅG
   Tenggren, S
   André, K
   Olsson, O
AF Swartling, Asa Gerger
   Tenggren, Sandra
   Andre, Karin
   Olsson, Olle
TI Joint knowledge production for improved climate services: Insights from
   the Swedish forestry sector
SO ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; coproduction of knowledge; climate services;
   participatory action research; science-stakeholder processes
ID ADAPTATION; SCIENCE; INFORMATION; POLICY; PARTICIPATION; MANAGEMENT;
   USABILITY; FRAMEWORK; CANADA; RISE
AB Science-stakeholder collaboration is becoming an increasingly common way to address mismatches between the knowledge needs of stakeholders and the research being done by scientists. This kind of mismatch is clearly evident in the field of climate change adaptation, arguing for the design and application of user- and decision-driven, coproduced climate services. Science-based participatory processes have shown clear benefits in establishing arenas for joint knowledge production on climate change and adaptation. However, multiple challenges remain. This paper presents and discusses findings from an assessment of a participatory climate services process conducted as part of a research program on climate change adaptation in the Swedish forestry sector. We identify enablers and barriers to successful science-stakeholder collaboration and put forward recommendations for more stakeholder-driven, participatory coproduction processes. Our analysis offers insights that could help achieve more informed decision-making and policy development and ultimately climate action under the Paris Agreement.
C1 [Swartling, Asa Gerger; Andre, Karin; Olsson, Olle] SEI, Box 24218, Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Tenggren, Sandra] AF, Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Stockholm Environment Institute; AF-Technology AB
RP Swartling, ÅG (corresponding author), SEI, Box 24218, Stockholm, Sweden.
EM asa.swartling@sei.org
RI ; Gerger Swartling, Asa/J-1420-2018
OI Andre, Karin/0000-0002-0373-0143; Gerger Swartling,
   Asa/0000-0003-3616-7323; Olsson, Olle/0000-0002-4444-9470
FU Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research, Mistra; Swedish
   Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB); Swedish International Development
   Co-operation Agency (Sida); Mistra; HazardSupport project (MSB); SEI
   Initiative on Climate Services (Sida)
FX This research was generously funded by the Swedish Foundation for
   Strategic Environmental Research, Mistra, the Swedish Civil
   Contingencies Agency (MSB) and the Swedish International Development
   Co-operation Agency (Sida). The study was carried out under the previous
   Mistra-SWECIA program (2008-2015, funded by Mistra) and cofinanced under
   the HazardSupport project (MSB) and the SEI Initiative on Climate
   Services (Sida). We would also like to thank all participants in our
   study for their time and commitment to the process. We are also grateful
   to two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments and to Caspar
   Trimmer, SEI, for editing previous drafts of the paper.
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NR 67
TC 16
Z9 17
U1 1
U2 15
PU WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA ONE MONTGOMERY ST, SUITE 1200, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104 USA
SN 1756-932X
EI 1756-9338
J9 ENVIRON POLICY GOV
JI Environ. Policy Gov.
PD MAR
PY 2019
VL 29
IS 2
SI SI
BP 97
EP 106
DI 10.1002/eet.1833
PG 10
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HU0NJ
UT WOS:000464967300003
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Payne, LB
   Shepardon, DP
AF Payne, Lindsey B.
   Shepardon, Daniel P.
TI Practitioners' Views on Useful Knowledge for Climate Change Adaptation
   Projects
SO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE transdisciplinary knowledge; practitioners; sustainable development;
   climate change
ID SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; CHALLENGE; MANAGEMENT; RESPONSES
AB In countries like Bolivia and Colombia, increased pressures on freshwater supplies are putting millions at risk, and effective adaptation strategies will be critical to mitigating the worst impacts in these regions. Transdisciplinary knowledge production frameworks can account for the interactions of natural and human-made environments, and provide a potential solution for those in developing regions. Recent scholarship has reconciled common perceptions of transdisciplinary knowledge within the literature; however, little is known about how practitioners define transdisciplinary knowledge, and whether this type of knowledge production is favored. Using the Q-methodology, this study examines the role of transdisciplinary knowledge among 22 practitioners from non-governmental organizations working on climate change adaptation projects in Bolivia and Colombia. Four statistically different perspectives emerged: 1) Engaged Multi-Dimensional Problem-Solver, 2) User-Focused Advocate, 3) Ivory Tower Producer, and 4) Development Traditionalist. These results and recommendations for using a transdisciplinary knowledge production framework to address climate change adaptation in developing regions will be discussed. Copyright (C) 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment
C1 [Payne, Lindsey B.] Purdue Univ, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA.
   [Shepardon, Daniel P.] Purdue Univ, Dept Curriculum & Instruct, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA.
   [Payne, Lindsey B.; Shepardon, Daniel P.] Purdue Univ, Dept Earth Atmospher & Planetary Sci, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA.
C3 Purdue University System; Purdue University; Purdue University System;
   Purdue University; Purdue University System; Purdue University
RP Payne, LB (corresponding author), Purdue Univ, Earth Atmospher & Planetary Sci, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA.
EM lbpayne78@gmail.com
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NR 47
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 18
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0968-0802
EI 1099-1719
J9 SUSTAIN DEV
JI Sustain. Dev.
PD NOV-DEC
PY 2015
VL 23
IS 6
BP 355
EP 368
DI 10.1002/sd.1596
PG 14
WC Development Studies; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Regional
   & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Public
   Administration
GA DB3WK
UT WOS:000368443600003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Killeen, TJ
   Solórzano, LA
AF Killeen, Timothy J.
   Solorzano, Luis A.
TI Conservation strategies to mitigate impacts from climate change in
   Amazonia
SO PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE conservation corridors; biodiversity; protected area design
ID SPECIES RICHNESS; FOREST; DIVERSIFICATION; BIODIVERSITY; DIVERSITY;
   PATTERNS; SCALE
AB Protected area systems and conservation corridors can help mitigate the impacts of climate change on Amazonian biodiversity. We propose conservation design criteria that will help species survive in situ or adjust range distributions in response to increased drought. The first priority is to protect the western Amazon, identified as the 'Core Amazon', due to stable rainfall regimes and macro-ecological phenomena that have led to the evolution of high levels of biodiversity. Ecotones can buffer the impact from climate change because populations are genetically adapted to climate extremes, particularly seasonality, because high levels of habitat diversity are associated with edaphic variability. Future climatic tension zones should be surveyed for geomorphological features that capture rain or conserve soil moisture to identify potential refugia for humid forest species. Conservation corridors should span environmental gradients to ensure that species can shift range distributions. Riparian corridors provide protection to both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Multiple potential altitudinal corridors exist in the Andes, but natural and anthropogenic bottlenecks will constrain the ability of species to shift their ranges and adapt to climate change. Planned infrastructure investments are a serious threat to the potential to consolidate corridors over the short and medium term.
C1 Ctr Appl Biodivers Sci, Conservat Int, Arlington, VA 22202 USA.
   [Killeen, Timothy J.] Museo Noel Kempff, Santa Cruz, Bolivia.
   [Solorzano, Luis A.] Gordon & Betty Moore Fdn, San Francisco, CA 94129 USA.
C3 Conservation International
RP Killeen, TJ (corresponding author), Ctr Appl Biodivers Sci, Conservat Int, 2011 Crystal Dr,Suite 500, Arlington, VA 22202 USA.
EM t.killeen@conservation.org
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NR 30
TC 54
Z9 66
U1 1
U2 38
PU ROYAL SOC
PI LONDON
PA 6-9 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE, LONDON SW1Y 5AG, ENGLAND
SN 0962-8436
J9 PHILOS T R SOC B
JI Philos. Trans. R. Soc. B-Biol. Sci.
PD MAY 27
PY 2008
VL 363
IS 1498
BP 1881
EP 1888
DI 10.1098/rstb.2007.0018
PG 8
WC Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
GA 282OQ
UT WOS:000254577500021
PM 18267917
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU van der Brugge, R
   de Graaf, R
AF van der Brugge, Rutger
   de Graaf, Rutger
TI Linking water policy innovation and urban renewal: the case of
   Rotterdam, The Netherlands
SO WATER POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Double loop diagram; Multi-level perspective;
   Policy innovation; Transitions; Water sensitive urban design
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; MANAGEMENT; DRAINAGE; STRATEGY; SYSTEMS; AREAS
AB Different strategy positions ale possible with regard to new urban water infrastructural investments A relatively new position argues that new water infrastructure needs to be linked to ongoing urban developments. This article investigates how the urban water management organizations in Rotterdam developed its climate adaptation strategy by creating urban development strategies that are sensitive to water issues A crucial factor was the recognition that water could contribute to solving urban problems by upgrading neighbourhood quality. In this case study. a multi-level analysis is used to reconstruct the urban water management cascade, that is, the turns in thinking made by the Rotterdam water professionals, leading to this new approach In particular the interactions between the envisioning project Rotterdam Watet City 2035 and the broader policy context in this cascade together with how they were managed strategically are investigated This research indicates that the Rotterdam urban water management organizations realized a successful water policy innovation; however, the institutional mechanisms needed to realize, operate and maintain the proposed multi-stakeholder projects on a city-wide scale are still missing This is currently the major challenge for realizing climate adaptation in terms of water sensitive urban development.
C1 [van der Brugge, Rutger] Erasmus Univ, Fac Social Sci, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
   [de Graaf, Rutger] Delft Univ Technol, Sect Water Resources, Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl Erasmus MC; Erasmus University
   Rotterdam; Delft University of Technology
RP van der Brugge, R (corresponding author), Erasmus Univ, Fac Social Sci, POB 1738, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
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NR 40
TC 19
Z9 20
U1 6
U2 48
PU I W A PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 1366-7017
J9 WATER POLICY
JI Water Policy
PY 2010
VL 12
IS 3
BP 381
EP 400
DI 10.2166/wp.2010.037
PG 20
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA 601GN
UT WOS:000278046400006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lyles, W
   Berke, P
   Overstreet, KH
AF Lyles, Ward
   Berke, Philip
   Overstreet, Kelly Heiman
TI Where to begin municipal climate adaptation planning? Evaluating two
   local choices
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; plan integration; land use; planner roles;
   hazard mitigation
ID MITIGATION; BARRIERS; STATE; PLANS; VULNERABILITY; FRAMEWORK; QUALITY;
   POLICY
AB Adapting to the impacts of human-caused climate change is a critical challenge facing cities worldwide. But, local climate adaptation planning is in its infancy. Early on, cities must decide whether to take a narrow-scope approach focused solely on reducing risks from climate impacts or to take a broad-scope approach embedding adaptation planning within wider ranging community concerns. They also must decide whether or not to formally involve their planning agency in adaptation planning. We used content analysis methods to assess a national sample of United States municipal plans. We find that cities with plans with a narrow-scope approach, focused on reducing risks, perform better in terms of plan integration and including more land use policies that can steer development out of hazardous areas. Formal involvement of planning agencies in adaptation planning processes is associated with more plan integration, but not necessarily inclusion of more land use policies.
C1 [Lyles, Ward; Overstreet, Kelly Heiman] Univ Kansas, Urban Planning Dept, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA.
   [Berke, Philip] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Landscape Architecture & Urban Planning, College Stn, TX USA.
C3 University of Kansas; Texas A&M University System; Texas A&M University
   College Station
RP Lyles, W (corresponding author), Univ Kansas, Urban Planning Dept, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA.
EM wardlyles@ku.edu
RI Lyles, Ward/AAL-1987-2021
FU University of Kansas [2015-2106]
FX University of Kansas: General Research Fund 2015-2106.
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NR 59
TC 46
Z9 50
U1 0
U2 19
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-0568
EI 1360-0559
J9 J ENVIRON PLANN MAN
JI J. Environ. Plan. Manag.
PY 2018
VL 61
IS 11
BP 1994
EP 2014
DI 10.1080/09640568.2017.1379958
PG 21
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA HF0LI
UT WOS:000453852300008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zaharco, S
   Petreanu, E
AF Zaharco, Silvia
   Petreanu, Elena
TI PERFORMANCE AUDIT REGARDING THE MANAGEMENT OF AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDY FUNDS
SO SCIENTIFIC PAPERS-SERIES MANAGEMENT ECONOMIC ENGINEERING IN AGRICULTURE
   AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE audit; competitiveness; sustainable development; investment;
   performance; subsidy
AB This paper studied the performance audit regarding the management of the agricultural sector subsidy funds in order to determine to what extent the actions undertaken boosted the agricultural development process in the Republic of Moldova. The analysis revealed that the activity of subsidizing agriculture is primarily aimed at increasing competitiveness and the sustainable development of the agri-food sector. This situation leads to the modernization of the agri-food chain, facilitating access to capital markets for agricultural producers, adapting to climate changes and mitigating their effects on agricultural production, increasing rural employment opportunities, developing agricultural businesses, etc. The data on the subsidy activity were taken from the database of the Agency for Intervention and Payments for Agriculture from the Republic of Moldova, which is responsible for managing the subsidy fund. The results of the study highlight a fairly efficient management of financial means for subsidizing the national agricultural sector.
C1 [Zaharco, Silvia; Petreanu, Elena] Moldova State Univ, 60 Alexe Mateev St, MD-2009 Kishinev, Moldova.
C3 Moldova State University
RP Zaharco, S (corresponding author), Moldova State Univ, 60 Alexe Mateev St, MD-2009 Kishinev, Moldova.
EM silvia.zaharco@usm.md; elena.petreanu@usm.md
RI Silvia, Zaharco/AAS-5832-2020
CR Agency for Intervention and Payments in Agriculture (AIPA), 2022, Subsidy Regulation 2017-2021 Support Measures.
   Agency for Intervention and Payments in Agriculture (AIPA), 2023, Analytical report regarding the management of financial resources allocated from the National Fund for Agricultural and Rural Areas Development
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NR 17
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 3
PU UNIV AGRONOMIC SCIENCES & VETERINARY MEDICINE BUCHAREST - USAMV
PI BUCHAREST
PA 59 MARASTI BOULEVARD, DISTRICT 1, BUCHAREST, 011464, ROMANIA
SN 2284-7995
EI 2285-3952
J9 SCI PAP-SER MANAG EC
JI Sci. Pap.-Ser. Manag. Econ. Eng. Agric. Rural Dev.
PY 2023
VL 23
IS 4
BP 951
EP 961
PG 11
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Agriculture
GA EE0Q1
UT WOS:001137127700030
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Doku, I
   Ncwadi, R
   Phiri, A
AF Doku, Isaac
   Ncwadi, Ronney
   Phiri, Andrew
TI Determinants of climate finance: Analysis of recipient characteristics
   in Sub-Sahara Africa
SO COGENT ECONOMICS & FINANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate finance; Climate readiness; System generalized methods of
   moments (GMM); Quantile regressions; Sub-Sahara Africa
ID DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; ADAPTATION; MITIGATION; GOVERNANCE
AB What are the characteristics of recipient countries that attract more climate finance in mitigating and adapting to climate change? In this study, we address this question by looking at recipients in 43 Sub-Sahara African countries for the period 2006-2017, and implement several panel regression techniques, including system generalized methods of moments estimations to address potential endogeneity concerns. We also performed sensitivity analysis using panel quantile regressions. The findings show that Sub-Sahara African countries with higher population growth rate, higher poverty levels, better ease of doing business profile, weaker governance policies, weaker control of corruption, stronger rule of law enforcement, deepened social inequality, and better ICT usage, have attracted more climate finance. Policy implications of the study are discussed.
C1 [Doku, Isaac; Ncwadi, Ronney; Phiri, Andrew] Nelson Mandela Univ, Dept Econ, Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
C3 Nelson Mandela University
RP Phiri, A (corresponding author), Nelson Mandela Univ, Fac Business & Econ Studies, Dept Econ, Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
EM isaacoberkoh27@gmail.com; Ronney.Ncwadi@mandela.ac.za;
   Andrew.Phiri@mandela.ac.za
OI Phiri, Andrew/0000-0003-1775-3546
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NR 40
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 13
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
PI OSLO
PA KARL JOHANS GATE 5, NO-0154 OSLO, NORWAY
SN 2332-2039
J9 COGENT ECON FINANC
JI Cogent Econ. Financ.
PD JAN 1
PY 2021
VL 9
IS 1
AR 1964212
DI 10.1080/23322039.2021.1964212
PG 17
WC Economics
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA UC2EO
UT WOS:000686345700001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Johnson, RJ
   Lanaspa, MA
   Fox, JW
AF Johnson, Richard J.
   Lanaspa, Miguel A.
   Fox, John W.
TI Upper Paleolithic Figurines Showing Women with Obesity may Represent
   Survival Symbols of Climatic Change
SO OBESITY
LA English
DT Article
AB Figurines of women with obesity or who are pregnant ("Venus figurines") from Upper Paleolithic Europe rank among the earliest art and endured from 38,000 to 14,000 BP (before present), one of the most arduous climatic periods in human history. We propose that the Venus representation relates to human adaptation to climate change. During this period, humans faced advancing glaciers and falling temperatures that led to nutritional stress, regional extinctions, and a reduction in the population. We analyzed Paleolithic figurines of women with obesity to test whether the more obese figurines are from sites during the height of the glacial advance and closer to the glacial fronts. Figurines are less obese as distance from the glaciers increases. Because survival required sufficient nutrition for child-bearing women, we hypothesize that the overnourished woman became an ideal symbol of survival and beauty during episodes of starvation and climate change in Paleolithic Europe.
C1 [Johnson, Richard J.; Lanaspa, Miguel A.] Univ Colorado, Div Renal Dis & Hypertens, Aurora, CO 80045 USA.
   [Fox, John W.] Amer Univ Sharjah, Dept Anthropol, Sharjah, U Arab Emirates.
C3 University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Anschutz Medical
   Campus; American University of Sharjah
RP Johnson, RJ (corresponding author), Univ Colorado, Div Renal Dis & Hypertens, Aurora, CO 80045 USA.
EM richard.johnson@ucdenver.edu
RI Lanaspa, Miguel/AAO-4971-2020
OI Johnson, Richard/0000-0003-3312-8193
FU NIH [1RO1DK108408]
FX This work was supported in part by NIH 1RO1DK108408.
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NR 14
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 1
U2 13
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1930-7381
EI 1930-739X
J9 OBESITY
JI Obesity
PD JAN
PY 2021
VL 29
IS 1
BP 11
EP 15
DI 10.1002/oby.23028
EA DEC 2020
PG 5
WC Endocrinology & Metabolism; Nutrition & Dietetics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Endocrinology & Metabolism; Nutrition & Dietetics
GA PH6PV
UT WOS:000594369800001
PM 33258218
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Da Cunha, DA
   Coelho, AB
   Féres, JG
AF Da Cunha, Denis Antonio
   Coelho, Alexandre Braganca
   Feres, Jose Gustavo
TI Irrigation as an adaptive strategy to climate change: an economic
   perspective on Brazilian agriculture
SO ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
ID IMPACTS; MODEL; FOOD
AB This paper analyzes the potential effects of climate change on Brazilian agriculture by considering irrigation as an adaptive strategy. Investigations were performed to determine how climatic variability influences irrigation and whether this adaptive measure actually reduces producers' vulnerability to climate change. We used a simultaneous equations model with endogenous switching to account for the heterogeneity in the decision of whether to use adaptive measures. We compared the expected land values under the actual and counterfactual cases of farm households that either adapt or do not adapt to climate change. Simulation results show that irrigation can be an effective tool for counteracting the harmful effects of climate change. The income of farmers tends to increase on lands where irrigation technologies are practiced. These conclusions confirm the need to invest in adaptation strategies to prepare Brazil for coping with the adverse effects of global climate change.
C1 [Da Cunha, Denis Antonio; Coelho, Alexandre Braganca] Univ Fed Vicosa, Dept Rural Econ, Ave PH Rolfs S-N,Campus Univ, BR-36570000 Vicosa, MG, Brazil.
C3 Universidade Federal de Vicosa
RP Da Cunha, DA (corresponding author), Univ Fed Vicosa, Dept Rural Econ, Ave PH Rolfs S-N,Campus Univ, BR-36570000 Vicosa, MG, Brazil.
EM denis.cunha@ufv.br; acoelho@ufv.br; jose.feres@ipea.gov.br
RI Feres, Jose/C-4139-2013; Da Cunha, Dênis/L-6029-2013; Coelho,
   Alexandre/F-2418-2014
OI Da Cunha, Denis Antonio/0000-0003-4838-3795; Coelho,
   Alexandre/0000-0002-9735-7035
FU LACEEP (Latin American and Caribbean Environmental Program); FAPEMIG
   (Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais)
FX Thanks are due to LACEEP (Latin American and Caribbean Environmental
   Program) and FAPEMIG (Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Minas
   Gerais) for the scholarships to D.A. Cunha and financial assistance; to
   NEMESIS (Nucleo de Estudos e Modelos Espaciais Sistemicos) and Estaquio
   Jose Reis for the availability of the climate and agronomic databases;
   and to Marcel Pires, Samuel Martins, Leandro Morais, Raiza Faria,
   Juliana Speranza and Rafael Barcelos for their knowledgeable
   perspectives that contributed to this research. The authors are grateful
   to three anonymous referees for helpful comments and suggestions. All
   remaining errors are the authors'.
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NR 47
TC 35
Z9 41
U1 1
U2 48
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI NEW YORK
PA 32 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, NY 10013-2473 USA
SN 1355-770X
EI 1469-4395
J9 ENVIRON DEV ECON
JI Environ. Dev. Econ.
PD FEB
PY 2015
VL 20
IS 1
BP 57
EP 79
DI 10.1017/S1355770X14000102
PG 23
WC Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CD6DE
UT WOS:000351178700004
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Aaheim, A
   Chaturvedi, RK
   Sagadevan, AD
AF Aaheim, Asbjorn
   Chaturvedi, Rajiv Kumar
   Sagadevan, Anitha D.
TI Integrated modelling approaches to analysis of climate change impacts on
   forests and forest management
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Forests; Climate change; Impacts; Adaptation; Integrated modelling
ID TERRESTRIAL BIOSPHERE MODEL; PRODUCT MARKETS; CARBON; VEGETATION;
   DYNAMICS; FUTURE; GROWTH; ECONOMICS; SYSTEM
AB This paper reviews integrated economic and ecological models that address impacts and adaptation to climate change in the forest sector. Early economic model studies considered forests as one out of many possible impacts of climate change, while ecological model studies tended to limit the economic impacts to fixed price-assumptions. More recent studies include broader representations of both systems, but there are still few studies which can be regarded fully integrated. Full integration of ecological and economic models is needed to address forest management under climate change appropriately. The conclusion so far is that there are vast uncertainties about how climate change affects forests. This is partly due to the limited knowledge about the global implications of the social and economical adaptation to the effects of climate change on forests.
C1 [Aaheim, Asbjorn] CICERO, N-0318 Oslo, Norway.
   [Chaturvedi, Rajiv Kumar; Sagadevan, Anitha D.] Indian Inst Sci, Ctr Sustainable Technol, Bangalore 560012, Karnataka, India.
C3 Indian Institute of Science (IISC) - Bangalore
RP Aaheim, A (corresponding author), CICERO, POB 1129, N-0318 Oslo, Norway.
EM asbjorn.aaheim@cicero.uio.no
OI Chaturvedi, Rajiv Kumar/0000-0001-7461-4580
FU Royal Norwegian Embassy
FX Thanks to three anonymous referees for helpful comments to an earlier
   version. Research for this publication was conducted under the project
   "Impact of climate change on tropical forest ecosystems and biodiversity
   in India", funded by the Royal Norwegian Embassy, as a collaboration
   between Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore and CICERO in Oslo. We
   thank the Royal Norwegian Embassy for their support.
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   [No title captured]
NR 67
TC 24
Z9 25
U1 2
U2 43
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD FEB
PY 2011
VL 16
IS 2
SI SI
BP 247
EP 266
DI 10.1007/s11027-010-9254-x
PG 20
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 712OG
UT WOS:000286675500009
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gao, NN
   Li, F
   Zeng, H
   Zheng, R
AF Gao, N. N.
   Li, F.
   Zeng, H.
   Zheng, Y. R.
TI THE IMPACT OF HUMAN ACTIVITIES, NATURAL FACTORS AND CLIMATE TIME-LAG
   EFFECTS OVER 33 YEARS IN THE HEIHE RIVER BASIN, CHINA
SO APPLIED ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE vegetation dynamics; climate change; climate adapting; mitigating
   climate risk; agriculture resilience
ID LAND-USE CHANGE; VEGETATION DYNAMICS; RANDOM FORESTS; BIODIVERSITY;
   RESPONSES; AGRICULTURE; SCENARIOS; COVER
AB Vegetation is a key factor adapting to and mitigating climate change. The quantitative analysis of vegetation dynamics including climate and human activities is necessary to take appropriate actions to adapt to climate change and optimize vegetation distribution to mitigate it. This article integrates the relationship between climate, soil, socioeconomic factors and vegetation change using redundancy analysis (RDA) and partial redundancy analysis (pRDA): which also considers the time-lag effect of climate change. The correlation between vegetation and dynamics of the three periods at land-use and vegetation group levels in the 14 counties in Heihe River basin (HRB) of China was revealed. Results showed that the most important driving factor was groundwater depth and mean annual temperature with 15-year lag times. More variation of vegetation change was determined at land-use level (54.7%) than that at vegetation group level (42.0%): Climate change factors explained more variations than human activities both at vegetation group and land-use level, so did the time-lag effect. Land use planning not is only necessary in urban area but also in rural area in HRB. To increase resilience of agriculture, we suggest appropriate grazing management strategy. Meanwhile time-lag effects are quite important for better evaluating vegetation dynamics under climate change.
C1 [Gao, N. N.; Zeng, H.] Peking Univ, Shenzhen Grad Sch, Sch Urban Planning & Design, Shenzhen 518055, Guangdong, Peoples R China.
   [Gao, N. N.; Li, F.] Shenzhen Inst Bldg Res Co Ltd, 29 Meiao 3rd Rd, Shenzhen 518049, Guangdong, Peoples R China.
   [Zheng, Y. R.] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Bot, Key Lab Resource Plants, West China Subalpine Bot Garden, 20 Nanxin Village, Beijing 100093, Peoples R China.
C3 Peking University; Shenzhen Institute of Building Research Co Ltd;
   Chinese Academy of Sciences
RP Gao, NN (corresponding author), Peking Univ, Shenzhen Grad Sch, Sch Urban Planning & Design, Shenzhen 518055, Guangdong, Peoples R China.; Gao, NN (corresponding author), Shenzhen Inst Bldg Res Co Ltd, 29 Meiao 3rd Rd, Shenzhen 518049, Guangdong, Peoples R China.; Zheng, R (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Bot, Key Lab Resource Plants, West China Subalpine Bot Garden, 20 Nanxin Village, Beijing 100093, Peoples R China.
EM bnugaonannan@163.com; zhengyr@ibcas.ac.cn
FU Study on the Synergetic Mechanism of Urban Energy Structure, Carbon
   Emission and Air Pollution, International Cooperation Projects of
   Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Committee, China
   [GJHZ20190822173805220]; National Key R&D Program of China
   [2017YFE0101700]; National Natural Science Foundation of China
   [91425301]
FX This research was funded by the Study on the Synergetic Mechanism of
   Urban Energy Structure, Carbon Emission and Air Pollution, International
   Cooperation Projects of Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation
   Committee, China grant number GJHZ20190822173805220; the National Key
   R&D Program of China grant number 2017YFE0101700; the National Natural
   Science Foundation of China grant number 91425301.
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NR 47
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 8
U2 44
PU ALOKI Applied Ecological Research and Forensic Inst Ltd
PI Budapest
PA Kassa u. 118, Budapest, HUNGARY
SN 1589-1623
EI 1785-0037
J9 APPL ECOL ENV RES
JI Appl. Ecol. Environ. Res.
PY 2021
VL 19
IS 3
BP 1589
EP 1606
DI 10.15666/aeer/1903_15891606
PG 18
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SL4GN
UT WOS:000656877100003
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Lykou, G
   Iakovakis, G
   Chronis, G
   Gritzalis, D
AF Lykou, Georgia
   Iakovakis, George
   Chronis, George
   Gritzalis, Dimitris
BE DAgostino, G
   Scala, A
TI Analysis and Classification of Adaptation Tools for Transport Sector
   Adaptation Planning
SO CRITICAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURES SECURITY (CRITIS 2017)
SE Lecture Notes in Computer Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 12th International Conference on Critical Information Infrastructures
   Security (CRITIS)
CY OCT 08-13, 2017
CL IMT Sch Adv Studies Lucca, Lucca, ITALY
SP NetONets, TIM
HO IMT Sch Adv Studies Lucca
AB Climate change is an upcoming and unavoidable challenge that all critical infrastructures including transport sector will have to face. Although transport sector and its network substructures are typically designed to withstand weather-related stressors, shifts in climate patterns will greatly increase potential risks. The area of climate adaptation planning is still relatively new, however a variety of processes and methodologies for assessing and reducing the vulnerability to climate change are currently being developed. These processes require and benefit from the use of geospatial analyses, software tools and web portals. In this research, we have focused on climate-related adaptation planning. We provide detailed classification of a set of tools that can facilitate adaptation assessment and risk planning. Our goal is to present a multifaceted taxonomy and analysis of available Climate Change Adaptation tools which can support transport sector for risk management policies.
C1 [Lykou, Georgia; Iakovakis, George; Chronis, George; Gritzalis, Dimitris] Athens Univ Econ & Business, Informat Secur & Crit Infrastruct Protect Lab INF, Athens, Greece.
C3 Athens University of Economics & Business
RP Gritzalis, D (corresponding author), Athens Univ Econ & Business, Informat Secur & Crit Infrastruct Protect Lab INF, Athens, Greece.
EM lykoug@aueb.gr; giakovakis@aueb.gr; p3120209@aueb.gr; dgrit@aueb.gr
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NR 11
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 0302-9743
EI 1611-3349
BN 978-3-319-99843-5; 978-3-319-99842-8
J9 LECT NOTES COMPUT SC
PY 2018
VL 10707
BP 37
EP 47
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-99843-5_4
PG 11
WC Computer Science, Information Systems; Computer Science, Theory &
   Methods
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Computer Science
GA BQ6GE
UT WOS:000611548700004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ou-Yang, C
   Kunreuther, H
   Michel-Kerjan, E
AF Ou-Yang, Chieh
   Kunreuther, Howard
   Michel-Kerjan, Erwann
TI An Economic Analysis of Climate Adaptations to Hurricane Risk in St.
   Lucia
SO GENEVA PAPERS ON RISK AND INSURANCE-ISSUES AND PRACTICE
LA English
DT Article
DE catastrophe modeling; benefit-cost analysis; natural disaster;
   adaptation; climate change; hurricane
AB We introduce a catastrophic risk model that captures the cumulative impact of climate change on future expected losses from hurricane risk. The annual growth rates of expected losses due to change in climate patterns (or "climate change factor") are estimated based upon historical storm activities in the Atlantic Basin and catastrophe modelling. The percentiles of the climate change factor are then used to measure expected hurricane losses in the Caribbean Island of St. Lucia. We also undertake benefit-cost analyses on four adaptation measures for homes in St. Lucia and determine when those are cost-effective for different time horizons and discount rates with and without climate change. Adaptation makes an enormous difference and can offset additional losses even with a high climate change factor by making houses much more resilient. Enforcing these protection measures will be critical.
C1 [Ou-Yang, Chieh] City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Econ & Finance, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Kunreuther, Howard; Michel-Kerjan, Erwann] Univ Penn, Wharton Sch, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
C3 City University of Hong Kong; University of Pennsylvania
RP Ou-Yang, C (corresponding author), City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Econ & Finance, 83 Tat Chee Ave, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
FU Divn Of Social and Economic Sciences; Direct For Social, Behav &
   Economic Scie [0951516] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
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NR 29
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 39
PU PALGRAVE MACMILLAN LTD
PI BASINGSTOKE
PA BRUNEL RD BLDG, HOUNDMILLS, BASINGSTOKE RG21 6XS, HANTS, ENGLAND
SN 1018-5895
EI 1468-0440
J9 GENEVA PAP R I-ISS P
JI Geneva Pap. Risk Insur.-Issues Pract.
PD JUL
PY 2013
VL 38
IS 3
SI SI
BP 521
EP 546
DI 10.1057/gpp.2013.18
PG 26
WC Business, Finance
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA 179LC
UT WOS:000321520800006
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Benge, L
   Neef, A
AF Benge, Lucy
   Neef, Andreas
BE Neef, A
   Pauli, N
TI PLANNED RELOCATION AS A CONTENTIOUS STRATEGY OF CLIMATE CHANGE
   ADAPTATION IN FIJI
SO CLIMATE-INDUCED DISASTERS IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC REGION: Response,
   Recovery, Adaptation
SE Community Environment and Disaster Risk Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Climate-induced migration; climate change adaptation; planned
   relocation; forced displacement; development opportunity; Fiji
ID MIGRATION; REFUGEES; FRAMEWORK
AB 'Planned relocation' has emerged in the international climate policy arena as an 'adaptation' solution with the potential to enhance resilience, address underdevelopment and debunk age-old narratives around migration as a risk to peace and security. In 2018, Fiji became one of the first countries to develop Planned Relocation Guidelines, with upwards of 80 villages thought to require relocation over the coming years due to the impact of climate change. Through interviews carried out with representatives from organisations involved in planning for community relocations in Fiji, this chapter explores the creation of planned relocation form of climate change adaptation and development. Looking specifically at the value-based challenges of implementation in Fiji, this research provides insight into what happens when dominant international policy narratives play out in practice. Through the presentation of culturally nuanced ways of understanding the problem of climate-induced migration, this chapter invites policymakers to seek out these voices when devising displacement solutions.
C1 [Benge, Lucy] Univ Auckland, Dev Studies, Arts, Auckland, New Zealand.
   [Neef, Andreas] Univ Auckland, Dev Studies, Auckland, New Zealand.
C3 University of Auckland; University of Auckland
RP Benge, L (corresponding author), Univ Auckland, Dev Studies, Arts, Auckland, New Zealand.
RI Neef, Andreas/F-6102-2010
OI Neef, Andreas/0000-0002-5079-3323
FU Asia-Pacific Network for Global Change Research [CAF2016-RR05-CMY-Neef]
FX We are indebted to all research participants in Fiji who generously
   shared their knowledge, perspectives and insights. Funding and support
   for this research was provided by the Asia-Pacific Network for Global
   Change Research (CAF2016-RR05-CMY-Neef, `Climate Change Adaptation in
   Post-Disaster Recovery Processes: Flood-Affected Communities in Cambodia
   and Fiji').
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NR 60
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 8
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY, W YORKSHIRE BD16 1WA, ENGLAND
SN 2040-7262
BN 978-1-83909-986-1; 978-1-83909-987-8
J9 COMM ENV DISAST RISK
PY 2021
VL 22
BP 193
EP 212
DI 10.1108/S2040-726220200000022008
PG 20
WC Environmental Studies; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health;
   Sociology
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Sociology
GA BT7OB
UT WOS:000850272200010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Begum, MEA
   Rashid, MA
   Hossain, MI
   Hossain, MA
   Rashid, MH
   Shahadat, MK
   Mainuddin, M
AF Begum, Mst. Esmat Ara
   Rashid, Md. Abdur
   Hossain, Mohammad Ismail
   Hossain, Md. Anower
   Rashid, Md. Harunor
   Shahadat, Mustafa Kamal
   Mainuddin, Mohammed
TI Farmers' choices and factors driving adoption of climate change
   adaptation strategies in saline coastal area of Bangladesh
SO AFRICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION & DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation strategies; binary logit regression; climate change; coastal
   Bangladesh; driving factors; perceptions
ID LEVEL ADAPTATION; WATER SCARCITY; DROUGHT-PRONE; DETERMINANTS; IMPACTS;
   REGION
AB Growing climate change adaptation issues are driving the demand for efficient solutions in the agriculture sector, which will improve farmers' livelihoods and economic situations. This study examined the perceptions of major climate risks and factors driving adoption of climate adaptation strategies in saline coastal areas of Bangladesh. Survey data were collected from 100 farmers producing Rabi crops by using a semi-structured questionnaire. A binary logistic model was used to identify the driving factors of the adoption of adaptation strategies. Results revealed that farmers' group membership and perception of a decrease in rain frequency influenced adoption of intercropping, while experience in farming, owned farmland size and perception of increase in soil salinity influenced adoption of mulching. In addition, age, group membership and perception of a decrease in rain frequency had a positive influence on adoption of use of mini pond. Furthermore, household size and access to training influenced adoption of changing sowing time, while farming experience had a positive influence on change in cropping pattern. These findings suggest an opportunity for institution-led support for providing farmers with hands-on training. Developing collaboration with research institutes, the ministry of agriculture, extension, development partners and civic leaders for enhancing farmers' group membership capacity would be of benefit on increasing the adaptive capacity of farmers.
C1 [Begum, Mst. Esmat Ara; Rashid, Md. Abdur] Bangladesh Agr Res Inst, Agr Econ Div, Joydebpur, Gazipur, Bangladesh.
   [Hossain, Mohammad Ismail] Bangladesh Agr Univ, Dept Agribusiness & Mkt, Mymensingh, Bangladesh.
   [Hossain, Md. Anower] Bangladesh Agr Res Inst, Irrigat & Water Management Div, Joydebpur, Gazipur, Bangladesh.
   [Rashid, Md. Harunor; Shahadat, Mustafa Kamal] Bangladesh Agr Res Inst, Onfarm Res Div, Khulna, Bangladesh.
   [Mainuddin, Mohammed] CSIRO Environm, Water Secur Program, Canberra, Australia.
C3 Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute (BARI); Bangladesh
   Agricultural University (BAU); Bangladesh Agricultural Research
   Institute (BARI); Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute (BARI);
   Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Begum, MEA (corresponding author), Bangladesh Agr Res Inst, Agr Econ Div, Joydebpur, Gazipur, Bangladesh.
EM esmatbau@yahoo.com
RI Mainuddin, Mohammed/I-8667-2012; Hossain, Mohammad/AAT-8348-2020; Begum,
   Mst. Esmat Ara/GNN-0172-2022
OI Hossain, Mohammad Ismail/0000-0002-3213-2337
FU Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR);
   Krishi Gobeshona Foundation (KGF)
FX The study is supported jointly by the Australian Centre for
   International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) and Krishi Gobeshona
   Foundation (KGF) as a project entitled"Mitigating risk and scaling-out
   profitable cropping system intensification practices in the
   salt-affected coastal zones of the Ganges Delta."Weextend our
   appreciation to the enumerators and farmers for their significant
   contribution.
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NR 89
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 7
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 2042-1338
EI 2042-1346
J9 AFR J SCI TECHNOL IN
JI Afr. J. Sci. Technol. Innov. Dev.
PD JAN 2
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 1
BP 113
EP 127
DI 10.1080/20421338.2023.2271703
EA JAN 2024
PG 15
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA GL0V1
UT WOS:001115057600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU David, O
   Connaughton, M
AF David, O.
   Connaughton, M.
BE Oztekin, GB
   Aktas, H
TI Climatic adaptation strategy under urban agriculture rainwater cropping
   systems: a case study from watermelon ( <i>Citrullus lanatus</i>) as
   live mulch
SO XXX INTERNATIONAL HORTICULTURAL CONGRESS IHC2018: INTERNATIONAL
   SYMPOSIUM ON TROPICAL AND SUBTROPICAL VEGETABLE PRODUCTION: TACKLING
   PRESENT AND FUTURE GLOBAL BIOTIC AND ABIOTIC STRESSORS
SE Acta Horticulturae
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 30th International Horticultural Congress (IHC) - Bridging the World
   through Horticulture / International Symposium on Tropical and
   Subtropical Vegetable Production - Tackling Present and Future Global
   Biotic and Abiotic Stressors
CY AUG 12-16, 2018
CL Turkish Soc Hort Sci, Istanbul, TURKEY
SP Republ Turkey, Minist Agr & Forestry, Bayer, Turkish Exporters Assembly Aegean Exporters Assoc, ANADOLU ETAP, ISHS, Div Vegetables, Roots & Tubers
HO Turkish Soc Hort Sci
DE cropping system; climate change; humid tropics; temperature; moisture;
   watermelon
AB In-situ live mulch crops such as watermelon can reduce soil temperature, improve soil moisture, and provide additional income for food security in mixed cropping systems. These investigations quantify the impact of in-situ watermelon live mulch densities on yield potential, climatic change adaptation capability and food security strategies in tropical urban amaranth production systems. Imposed were 3 sowing densities of watermelon: 1.5x0.45 m; 1.5x0.90 m; 1.5x1.50 m. Grain amaranth was transplanted at 0.75x0.75 m spacing in an RCB design. Averaged over 2 consecutive cropping's, amaranth grain and watermelon yields were significantly highest at 1.5x0.90 m watermelon plant spacing density optimum for yield potential, climate change adaptability and food security resilient strategy. This corresponded to the reduction in maximum soil temperature of 2 degrees C by amaranth and 3.5 degrees C by watermelon compared to the control without mulch. There was a check plot without amaranth and watermelon but weeds monitored. Soil moisture content was significantly (P=0.05) conserved in the live mulch treatments by 18.2% compared to the bare not mulched soil control of 14%. This research demonstrates that live mulch is useful in rainwater conservation and reduced temperature; and we believe offers opportunities for food security, carbon sequestration and landscape restoration in the humid tropics of sub Saharan Africa countries under rain-fed agriculture climate change scenarios.
C1 [David, O.] Natl Hort Res Inst NIHORT, PMB 5432, Ibadan, Nigeria.
   [Connaughton, M.] Winrock USDA Int, 2101 Riverfront Dr, Little Rock, AR 72202 USA.
RP David, O (corresponding author), Natl Hort Res Inst NIHORT, PMB 5432, Ibadan, Nigeria.
EM drdavidojo@gmail.com
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NR 13
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU INT SOC HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE
PI LEUVEN 1
PA PO BOX 500, 3001 LEUVEN 1, BELGIUM
SN 0567-7572
EI 2406-6168
BN 978-94-62612-54-9
J9 ACTA HORTIC
PY 2019
VL 1257
BP 169
EP 173
DI 10.17660/ActaHortic.2019.1257.24
PG 5
WC Agronomy; Plant Sciences; Horticulture
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Plant Sciences
GA BW8ZR
UT WOS:001209198800024
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Petesch, P
   Fisher, E
   Almeida, OE
   Hellin, J
   Bullock, R
AF Petesch, Patti
   Fisher, Eleanor
   Almeida, Olivia Ebenstal
   Hellin, Jon
   Bullock, Renee
TI A field methodology to advance social equity and transformative
   adaptation to climate change in smallholder communities
SO CURRENT RESEARCH IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Methodology; Social equity; Participation; Gender; Climate;
   Transformative adaptation; Kenya; Philippines
ID INSIGHTS
AB Global climate policies recognize the urgent need to address the inequitable impacts of climate change on smallholder agricultural communities, but there is limited understanding of how to accomplish this in practice. We contribute to closing this gap through the design of a participatory qualitative methodology intended to nurture locally-led "transformative adaptation pathways" that strengthen social equity and sustainability. Our conceptual framework draws upon theories of social equity and justice rooted in participatory parity-values and norms that encourage people to interact with one another as equals and synergistically nurture recognitional, distributional, representational and intergenerational equities. Recognizing that social equity is enhanced when poor and vulnerable people gain decision-making power that expands their access to resources and opportunities, we question how people understand and experience social equity and its relationship to their capacity to adapt. We also ask how norms about gender, generation, and socio-economic status shape people's understandings and experiences of social equity and adaptation. To address these questions, we illustrate the methodological approach with evidence gathered from pilot tests conducted in smallholder communities of Kenya and Philippines. Our findings show how understandings of fairness provide a basis for learning, eliciting comparative and contextualized findings that can inform community-based adaptation. Overall, we demonstrate that in the face of social processes that typically fuel inequities, participatory tools and learning tactics can serve to empower low-income women and men to identify, contribute to, and monitor actions that nurture their community's progress towards strong and equitable climate adaptation capacity.
C1 [Petesch, Patti] 5631 Sugarbush Lane, Rockville, MD 20852 USA.
   [Fisher, Eleanor] Nord Africa Inst, Box 1703, SE-75147 Uppsala, Sweden.
   [Hellin, Jon] Int Rice Res Inst, UPLB Post Off, POB 34499, Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
   [Bullock, Renee] Int Livestock Res Inst, POB 30709, Nairobi 00100, Kenya.
C3 CGIAR; International Rice Research Institute (IRRI); CGIAR;
   International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
RP Petesch, P (corresponding author), 5631 Sugarbush Lane, Rockville, MD 20852 USA.
EM patti@pattipetesch.com; eleanor.fisher@nai.uu.se;
   olivia.ebenstal@gmail.com; j.hellin@irri.org; r.bullock@cgiar.org
FU Nordic Africa Institute; CGIAR Research Initiative on Livestock and
   Climate
FX This article is an output from the CGIAR Research Initiative on Climate
   Resilience (ClimBeR) . The authors would like to thank all funders who
   support this initiative through their contributions to the CGIAR Trust
   Fund. Eleanor Fisher and Olivia Ebenstal Almeida acknowledge the support
   of the Nordic Africa Institute. Renee Bullock acknowledges the support
   of the CGIAR Research Initiative on Livestock and Climate. We extend our
   deep gratitude to the study participants and field team members who
   contributed to the development of the methodology, including from the
   Kenya field team: Caroline Jemase Yator (field team leader) , Benson
   Kimosop Ngetich, Winnie Jeruto Chelagat, Reuben Kiptoo Cherutich, Daisy
   Jepchirchir Kimaru and Wilson Kimaru; and from the Philippines field
   team: Chona Echavez (team leader) , Michael Montejo, Perry Rockwell,
   Sonica Luzano Salcedo, Mitchelle Manipol, and Daryll Macaraig. We extend
   our thanks as well to Fiona Flintan of the International Livestock
   Research Institute for helping realize the Kenya fieldwork, to Tilde
   Lindback for research support at the Nordic Africa Institute, to Ken
   Otieno and Irene Mukalo and the RECONCILE team and to Rico Locaba and
   the IIRR team who generously shared their time and expertise,
   contributing to the methodology's development. We are also grateful to
   two anonymous reviewers who helped us improve the article through their
   feedback.
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NR 51
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2666-0490
J9 CURR RES ENVIRON SUS
JI Curr. Res. Environmental Sustainability
PY 2024
VL 8
AR 100272
DI 10.1016/j.crsust.2024.100272
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA P4U2D
UT WOS:001377869600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Allsopp, N
   Anderson, PML
   Holmes, PM
   Melin, A
   O'Farrell, PJ
AF Allsopp, Nicky
   Anderson, Pippin M. L.
   Holmes, Patricia M.
   Melin, Annalie
   O'Farrell, Patrick J.
BE Allsopp, N
   Colville, JF
   Verboom, GA
TI People, the Cape Floristic Region, and sustainability
SO FYNBOS: ECOLOGY, EVOLUTION, AND CONSERVATION OF A MEGADIVERSE REGION
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; BIODIVERSITY
   CONSERVATION; TABLE MOUNTAIN; WESTERN CAPE; NATURAL ECOSYSTEMS;
   IRRIGATION WATER; SOUTH-AFRICA; BEHAVIOR; ECOLOGY
C1 [Allsopp, Nicky] SAEON, Fynbos Node, South Africa.
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   [Holmes, Patricia M.] City Cape Town, Environm Resource Management Dept, Cape Town, South Africa.
   [Holmes, Patricia M.] Univ Stellenbosch, Ctr Invas Biol, ZA-7600 Stellenbosch, South Africa.
   [Melin, Annalie] Univ Cape Town, Dept Biol Sci, ZA-7700 Rondebosch, South Africa.
   [Melin, Annalie] South African Natl Biodivers Inst, Kirstenbosch Res Ctr, Durban, South Africa.
   [O'Farrell, Patrick J.] CSIR, Nat Resources & Environm, Stellenbosch, South Africa.
C3 National Research Foundation - South Africa; South African Environmental
   Observation Network (SAEON); University of Cape Town; University of Cape
   Town; Stellenbosch University; University of Cape Town; South African
   National Biodiversity Institute; Council for Scientific & Industrial
   Research (CSIR) - South Africa
RP Allsopp, N (corresponding author), SAEON, Fynbos Node, South Africa.
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NR 138
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 2
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI NEW YORK
PA 198 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK, NY 10016 USA
BN 978-0-19-179194-9; 978-0-19-967958-4
PY 2014
BP 337
EP 360
PG 24
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BC6SO
UT WOS:000354464600016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Russel, D
AF Russel, Duncan
BE Keskitalo, ECH
   Preston, BL
TI Enabling conditions for the mainstreaming of adaptation policy and
   practice
SO RESEARCH HANDBOOK ON CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION POLICY
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; INTEGRATION; BARRIERS; STATE; EU
C1 [Russel, Duncan] Univ Exeter, Dept Polit, Environm Policy, Exeter, Devon, England.
C3 University of Exeter
RP Russel, D (corresponding author), Univ Exeter, Dept Polit, Environm Policy, Exeter, Devon, England.
OI Russel, Duncan/0000-0003-3843-7892
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NR 52
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 0
PU EDWARD ELGAR PUBLISHING LTD
PI CHELTENHAM
PA THE LYPIATTS, 15 LANSDOWN RD, CHELTENHAM GL50 2JA, GLOS, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-78643-252-0; 978-1-78643-251-3
PY 2019
BP 108
EP 124
D2 10.4337/9781786432520
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Law
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Government & Law
GA BP8YZ
UT WOS:000568538000006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Filho, WL
   Wolf, F
   Moncada, S
   Salvia, AL
   Balogun, ALB
   Skanavis, C
   Kounani, A
   Nunn, PD
AF Leal Filho, Walter
   Wolf, Franziska
   Moncada, Stefano
   Salvia, Amanda Lange
   Balogun, Abdul-Lateef Babatunde
   Skanavis, Constantina
   Kounani, Aristea
   Nunn, Patrick D.
TI Transformative adaptation as a sustainable response to climate change:
   insights from large-scale case studies
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Transformational adaptation; Climate change; Sustainability; Responses;
   Livelihoods
ID RESILIENCE; ISLANDS; IMPACT; POLICY; CITIES; INTERVENTIONS; AGRICULTURE;
   ECOSYSTEMS; GOVERNANCE; ENGAGEMENT
AB Many climate change responses focus on form rather than substance. As a result, they invariably look at the consequences but ignore the drivers of climate change. Since past approaches towards climate change adaptation have had limited success, the most effective and sustainable way to minimize future climate change impacts on humanity is through transformative adaptation (TA). This paper defines and characterizes the conceptual foundations of this term and outlines how TA influences current and future climate change adaptation challenges. This paper reviews the meaning and purpose of transformation in climate change adaptation and, by means of a set of case studies, explains how their commonalities can help define good TA practice. Deploying a range of situations, this study shows how this approach is being implemented in a set of countries, and considers its potential transformative impact, its benefits, and challenges. The results obtained have shown that when implemented with due care, TA can yield long-term benefits to local communities. The paper conclude by listing some measures by which TA may be further deployed as a means of helping communities to meet the future challenges posed by a changing climate.
C1 [Leal Filho, Walter] Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, Res & Transfer Ctr Sustainabil & Climate Change M, Ulmenliet 20, D-21033 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Leal Filho, Walter] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Dept Nat Sci, Chester St, Manchester M1 5GD, Lancs, England.
   [Wolf, Franziska] Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, European Sch Sustainabil Sci & Res, Ulmenliet 20, D-21033 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Moncada, Stefano] Univ Malta, Inst European Studies, Isl & Small States Inst, Msida, Malta.
   [Salvia, Amanda Lange] Univ Passo Fundo, Av Brasil Leste 285, BR-99052900 Passo Fundo, RS, Brazil.
   [Balogun, Abdul-Lateef Babatunde] Univ Teknol PETRONAS, Civil & Environm Engn Dept, Geospatial Anal & Modelling Res GAMR Grp, Bandar Seri Iskandar 32610, Perak, Malaysia.
   [Skanavis, Constantina] Univ West Attica, Dept Publ & Community Hlth, 196 Alexandras Ave, Athens 11521, Greece.
   [Kounani, Aristea] Univ Aegean, Dept Environm, Res Ctr Environm Educ & Commun, Univ Hill, Mitilini 81100, Greece.
   [Nunn, Patrick D.] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr ML28, Locked Bag 4, Maroochydore, Qld 4558, Australia.
C3 Hochschule Angewandte Wissenschaft Hamburg; Manchester Metropolitan
   University; Hochschule Angewandte Wissenschaft Hamburg; University of
   Malta; Universidade de Passo Fundo; Universiti Teknologi Petronas;
   University of West Attica; University of Aegean; University of the
   Sunshine Coast
RP Wolf, F (corresponding author), Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, European Sch Sustainabil Sci & Res, Ulmenliet 20, D-21033 Hamburg, Germany.
EM walter.leal2@haw-hamburg.de; franziska.wolf@haw-hamburg.de;
   stefano.moncada@um.edu.mt; amandasalvia@gmail.com;
   geospatia163@gmail.com; kskanavi@uniwa.gr; akounani@yahoo.gr;
   pnunn@usc.edu.au
RI Skanavis, Constantina/AAN-3546-2020; Wolf, Franziska/GWZ-9701-2022;
   Moncada, Stefano/R-4178-2016; Nunn, Patrick/ABA-2943-2021; Leal,
   Walter/ACX-9082-2022; Balogun, Abdul-Lateef/AAH-2963-2020; Kounani,
   Aristea/CAA-1102-2022; Nunn, Patrick/C-7864-2011; Lange Salvia,
   Amanda/T-3483-2017
OI Balogun, Abdul-Lateef/0000-0002-0418-3487; Kounani,
   Aristea/0000-0002-9976-4291; Wolf, Franziska/0000-0002-9724-5586; Leal
   Filho, Walter/0000-0002-1241-5225; Nunn, Patrick/0000-0001-9295-5741;
   Lange Salvia, Amanda/0000-0002-4549-7685
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NR 125
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 1
U2 30
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD MAR
PY 2022
VL 27
IS 3
AR 20
DI 10.1007/s11027-022-09997-2
PG 26
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YX8TO
UT WOS:000754368700003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thom, D
   Rammer, W
   Seidl, R
AF Thom, Dominik
   Rammer, Werner
   Seidl, Rupert
TI Disturbances catalyze the adaptation of forest ecosystems to changing
   climate conditions
SO GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; forest dynamics; forest ecosystem management;
   Kalkalpen National Park; natural disturbance; novel ecosystems; species
   turnover; succession
ID ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENT; CHANGE IMPACTS; UNITED-STATES; DIVERSITY; EUROPE;
   MODEL; CONSERVATION; UNCERTAINTY; SIMULATION; VEGETATION
AB The rates of anthropogenic climate change substantially exceed those at which forest ecosystems - dominated by immobile, long-lived organisms - are able to adapt. The resulting maladaptation of forests has potentially detrimental effects on ecosystem functioning. Furthermore, as many forest-dwelling species are highly dependent on the prevailing tree species, a delayed response of the latter to a changing climate can contribute to an extinction debt and mask climate-induced biodiversity loss. However, climate change will likely also intensify forest disturbances. Here, we tested the hypothesis that disturbances foster the reorganization of ecosystems and catalyze the adaptation of forest composition to climate change. Our specific objectives were (i) to quantify the rate of autonomous forest adaptation to climate change, (ii) examine the role of disturbance in the adaptation process, and (iii) investigate spatial differences in climate-induced species turnover in an unmanaged mountain forest landscape (Kalkalpen National Park, Austria). Simulations with a process-based forest landscape model were performed for 36 unique combinations of climate and disturbance scenarios over 1000 years. We found that climate change strongly favored European beech and oak species (currently prevailing in mid-to low-elevation areas), with novel species associations emerging on the landscape. Yet, it took between 357 and 706 years before the landscape attained a dynamic equilibrium with the climate system. Disturbances generally catalyzed adaptation and decreased the time needed to attain equilibrium by up to 211 years. However, while increasing disturbance frequency and severity accelerated adaptation, increasing disturbance size had the opposite effect. Spatial analyses suggest that particularly the lowest and highest elevation areas will be hotspots of future species change. We conclude that the growing maladaptation of forests to climate and the long lead times of autonomous adaptation need to be considered more explicitly in the ongoing efforts to safeguard biodiversity and ecosystem services provisioning.
C1 [Thom, Dominik; Rammer, Werner; Seidl, Rupert] Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci BOKU Vienna, Dept Forest & Soil Sci, Inst Silviculture, Peter Jordan Str 82, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.
C3 BOKU University
RP Thom, D (corresponding author), Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci BOKU Vienna, Dept Forest & Soil Sci, Inst Silviculture, Peter Jordan Str 82, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.
EM dominik.thom@boku.ac.at
RI Seidl, Rupert/ABE-6078-2020; Thom, Dominik/AAE-5649-2020
OI Thom, Dominik/0000-0001-8091-6075; Seidl, Rupert/0000-0002-3338-3402
FU Austrian Science Fund FWF [P 25503-B16]; European Community
   [PCIG12-GA-2012 334104]
FX This study was supported by the Austrian Science Fund FWF (grant P
   25503-B16). R. Seidl acknowledges further support through a Marie Curie
   Career Integration Grant of the European Community (PCIG12-GA-2012
   334104). The simulation results presented here have been generated at
   the Vienna Scientific Cluster (VSC). We thank three anonymous Reviewers
   for their helpful comments on an earlier version of the manuscript.
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NR 75
TC 109
Z9 117
U1 7
U2 131
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1354-1013
EI 1365-2486
J9 GLOBAL CHANGE BIOL
JI Glob. Change Biol.
PD JAN
PY 2017
VL 23
IS 1
BP 269
EP 282
DI 10.1111/gcb.13506
PG 14
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EF3IP
UT WOS:000390218300023
PM 27633953
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carr, TW
   Addo, F
   Palazzo, A
   Havlik, P
   Pérez-Guzmán, K
   Ali, Z
   Green, R
   Hadida, G
   Segnon, AC
   Zougmoré, R
   Scheelbeek, P
AF Carr, Tony W.
   Addo, Felicity
   Palazzo, Amanda
   Havlik, Petr
   Perez-Guzman, Katya
   Ali, Zakari
   Green, Rosemary
   Hadida, Genevieve
   Segnon, Alcade C.
   Zougmore, Robert
   Scheelbeek, Pauline
TI Addressing future food demand in The Gambia: can increased crop
   productivity and climate change adaptation close the supply-demand gap?
SO FOOD SECURITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Food security; Food system model; Climate change adaptation; Crop
   productivity; Diets; Food imports
ID AFRICA; AGRICULTURE; COUNTRIES; SECURITY; TRADE
AB With rising demand for food and the threats posed by climate change, The Gambia faces significant challenges in ensuring sufficient and nutritious food for its population. To address these challenges, there is a need to increase domestic food production while limiting deforestation and land degradation. In this study, we modified the FABLE Calculator, a food and land-use system model, to focus on The Gambia to simulate scenarios for future food demand and increasing domestic food production. We considered the impacts of climate change on crops, the adoption of climate change adaptation techniques, as well as the potential of enhanced fertiliser use and irrigation to boost crop productivity, and assessed whether these measures would be sufficient to meet the projected increase in food demand. Our results indicate that domestic food production on existing cropland will not be sufficient to meet national food demand by 2050, leading to a significant supply-demand gap. However, investments in fertiliser availability and the development of sustainable irrigation infrastructure, coupled with climate change adaptation strategies like the adoption of climate-resilient crop varieties and optimised planting dates, could halve this gap. Addressing the remaining gap will require additional strategies, such as increasing imports, expanding cropland, or prioritising the production of domestic food crops over export crops. Given the critical role imports play in The Gambia's food supply, it is essential to ensure a robust flow of food imports by diversifying partners and addressing regional trade barriers. Our study highlights the urgent need for sustained investment and policy support to enhance domestic food production and food imports to secure sufficient and healthy food supplies amidst growing demand and climate change challenges.
C1 [Carr, Tony W.; Green, Rosemary; Hadida, Genevieve; Scheelbeek, Pauline] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Dept Populat Hlth, London, England.
   [Addo, Felicity; Palazzo, Amanda; Havlik, Petr; Perez-Guzman, Katya] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Laxenburg, Austria.
   [Ali, Zakari] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Gambia, MRC Unit, Nutr & Planetary Hlth Theme, Banjul, Gambia.
   [Green, Rosemary; Scheelbeek, Pauline] Ctr Climate Change & Planetary Hlth, London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, London, England.
   [Segnon, Alcade C.; Zougmore, Robert] Int Ctr Trop Agr CIAT, Dakar, Senegal.
   [Segnon, Alcade C.] Univ Abomey Calavi, Fac Agron Sci, Cotonou, Benin.
C3 University of London; London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine;
   International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); University
   of London; London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; University of
   London; London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; University of
   Abomey Calavi
RP Carr, TW (corresponding author), London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Dept Populat Hlth, London, England.
EM tony.carr@lshtm.ac.uk
RI Palazzo, Alexander/B-1270-2013; Segnon, Alcade C./L-3908-2016; Ali,
   Zakari/ABB-6962-2020
OI Carr, Tony/0000-0002-1754-0842; Segnon, Alcade C./0000-0001-9751-120X;
   Palazzo, Amanda/0000-0001-8167-9403; Ali, Zakari/0000-0002-8129-2230
FU Wellcome Trust [216021/Z/19/Z]; Wellcome Trust; Wellcome Climate Change
   and Health Award Scheme; Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research
   for Africa - International Development Association (IDA) of the World
   Bank
FX This study was developed as part of the Food system Adaptation in
   Changing Environments in Africa (FACE-Africa) project, which was funded
   by the Wellcome Trust (grant no. 216021/Z/19/Z) under the Wellcome
   Climate Change and Health Award Scheme. ACS and RBZ acknowledge
   financial supports by the Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research
   for Africa (AICCRA) project, funded by a grant from the International
   Development Association (IDA) of the World Bank. We would like to
   express our gratitude to the participants of the stakeholder workshop
   for their invaluable insights and to Sulayman M'boob of Kombo Farms for
   his significant contributions to stakeholder engagement. We also extend
   our appreciation to Aline Mosnier and the FABLE team for providing the
   initial data for the Gambia version of the FABLE Calculator, which
   greatly facilitated our research. We would also like to thank the two
   anonymous reviewers who helped to improve this study.
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NR 52
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 8
U2 12
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 1876-4517
EI 1876-4525
J9 FOOD SECUR
JI Food Secur.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 3
BP 691
EP 704
DI 10.1007/s12571-024-01444-1
EA APR 2024
PG 14
WC Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Food Science & Technology
GA RK0F4
UT WOS:001208617700001
PM 38770159
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hamilton, M
   Lubell, M
   Namaganda, E
AF Hamilton, Matthew
   Lubell, Mark
   Namaganda, Emilinah
TI Cross-level linkages in an ecology of climate change adaptation policy
   games
SO ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; cross-level linkages; East Africa;
   exponential random graph models (ERGM); policy networks
ID GOVERNANCE; NETWORKS; SYSTEMS; SCALE; ORGANIZATION; INFORMATION;
   COUNTRIES; DYNAMICS; MODELS; COSTS
AB Social and ecological outcomes of environmental governance systems are shaped by interplay across the spatial levels at which policy actors and decision-making forums operate. We focus on the conditions under which actors participate in policy forums operating at higher or lower levels than the actors' own level. We draw upon theories of network science and transaction costs to formulate and test predictions about the overall prevalence of such cross-level linkages as well as the conditions under which policy actors engage in these linkages. We estimate an exponential random graph model using data collected from a survey of climate change adaptation policy actors participating in decision-making forums operating at different spatial levels within the Lake Victoria region in East Africa. Within this governance system, efforts to improve adaptive capacity across national boundaries and diverse vulnerable populations hinge on how well policy forums operating at regional and higher levels attract the participation of actors with access to information about local conditions, the efficiency with which actors can disseminate funding and technical resources through more local policy forums, as well as other processes that occur via cross-level linkages. We find that actors are less likely to engage in cross-level linkages compared to within-level linkages. Conditioning on this general tendency, actors are even less likely to participate in forums operating at lower levels in which their collaborators also participate. By contrast, actors are more likely to participate in forums operating at lower levels when influential actors jointly participate. These findings, which highlight distinct roles of social and political capital in cross-level forum participation, have implications for efforts to improve climate change adaptation governance in the Lake Victoria region, as well as other multilevel governance systems.
C1 [Hamilton, Matthew] Univ Michigan, Sch Environm & Sustainabil, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Lubell, Mark] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Environm Sci & Policy, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
   [Namaganda, Emilinah] Makerere Univ, Dept Geog Geoinformat & Climat Sci, Kampala, Uganda.
C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of
   California System; University of California Davis; Makerere University
RP Hamilton, M (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Sch Environm & Sustainabil, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
RI Lubell, Mark/H-5018-2012; Hamilton, Matt/HJP-9671-2023
OI Hamilton, Matthew/0000-0003-0509-4467; Namaganda,
   Emilinah/0000-0003-3095-5484; Lubell, Mark/0000-0001-5757-7116
FU NSF Division of Graduate Education (DGE) [0801430]; Responding to Rapid
   Environmental Change (REACH) IGERT; UC Davis; Division Of Graduate
   Education; Direct For Education and Human Resources [0801430] Funding
   Source: National Science Foundation
FX We thank Shuaib Lwasa, Paul Onyango, and Charles Mundia for valuable
   recommendations and logistical assistance preceding and during
   fieldwork. Earlier versions of this paper were presented at the 2016
   American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting in San Francisco, CA,
   the 2016 Midwest Political Science Association Annual Conference in
   Chicago, IL, and the 2017 Environmental Politics and Governance
   Conference in Bloomington, IN. We thank conference participants and
   discussants for valuable feedback. Research was partially supported by
   NSF Division of Graduate Education (DGE) #0801430, the Responding to
   Rapid Environmental Change (REACH) IGERT awarded to UC Davis, and a
   Jastro-Shields grant from UC Davis. We thank two anonymous reviewers for
   their helpful suggestions.
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NR 67
TC 30
Z9 31
U1 0
U2 27
PU Resilience Alliance
PI Dedham
PA 231 Bussey St., Beckwith and Brown, Dedham, Massachusetts, UNITED STATES
SN 1708-3087
J9 ECOL SOC
JI Ecol. Soc.
PY 2018
VL 23
IS 2
AR 36
DI 10.5751/ES-10179-230236
PG 15
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GL7QP
UT WOS:000437397400040
OA gold, Green Submitted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vizinho, A
   Avelar, D
   Branquinho, C
   Lourenço, TC
   Carvalho, S
   Nunes, A
   Sucena-Paiva, L
   Oliveira, H
   Fonseca, AL
   Santos, FD
   Roxo, MJ
   Penha-Lopes, G
AF Vizinho, Andre
   Avelar, David
   Branquinho, Cristina
   Capela Lourenco, Tiago
   Carvalho, Silvia
   Nunes, Alice
   Sucena-Paiva, Leonor
   Oliveira, Hugo
   Fonseca, Ana Lucia
   Duarte Santos, Filipe
   Roxo, Maria Jose
   Penha-Lopes, Gil
TI Framework for Climate Change Adaptation of Agriculture and Forestry in
   Mediterranean Climate Regions
SO LAND
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; landscape planning; farm adaptation;
   municipal adaptation; agroforestry; efficacy; decision making
ID GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS; CONTOUR HEDGEROW SYSTEMS; CHANGE IMPACTS;
   PHYTOPHTHORA-CINNAMOMI; CARBON SEQUESTRATION; CONSERVATION TILLAGE;
   ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; CHANGE MITIGATION; WATER; SOIL
AB Planning the adaptation of agriculture and forestry landscapes to climate change remains challenging due to the need for integrating substantial amounts of information. This information ranges from climate scenarios, geographical site information, socio-economic data and several possible adaptation measures. Thus, there is an urgent need to have a framework that is capable of organizing adaptation strategies and measures in the agriculture and forestry sectors in Mediterranean climatic regions. Additionally, this framework should provide a cause effect relation with climate vulnerability to adequately support the development of adaptation planning at municipal and local (farm) level. In this context, we propose to test and evaluate a framework for climate adaptation of the agriculture and forestry sectors, based on the local causal-effect relation between adaptation strategies and measures and the level of vulnerability reduction achieved for Mediterranean areas. The framework was developed based on the combination of the DPSIR (Driving forces, Pressures, State, Impacts, Responses) and Vulnerability frameworks and reviewed 162 practical adaptation measures, further organized into strategies, complemented by a set of efficacy indicators. The framework was tested with 70 stakeholders in six stakeholder workshops for the planning of two farms and one municipal climate adaptation study, that are now in actual implementation and monitoring. The framework is composed by a set of eight adaptation strategies in which adaptation measures are clustered and assessed using efficacy indicators. In the evaluation of the adaptation framework, 96% of stakeholders considered its content as good or very good and 89% considered the final outcomes as good or very good. Finally, the framework was also used to assess and compare the adaptation strategies and measures presented in the climate adaptation plans of the three case studies. On average, 52.2% of the adaptation measures selected by the three case studies are dedicated to Ecosystem Resilience, 30.9% to Adaptive Capacity, 9.1% to Microclimates, 7.4% to Protection, and 0.3% to Mitigation strategies. This framework was considered effective in supporting adaptation planning at farm and municipal levels and useful to assess and compare adaptation plans in the frame of vulnerability reduction. Future studies can further contribute to support adaptation planning in these sectors by using, developing and streamlining this framework to additional and different socio-ecological contexts.
C1 [Vizinho, Andre; Avelar, David; Branquinho, Cristina; Capela Lourenco, Tiago; Carvalho, Silvia; Nunes, Alice; Sucena-Paiva, Leonor; Oliveira, Hugo; Fonseca, Ana Lucia; Duarte Santos, Filipe; Penha-Lopes, Gil] Univ Lisbon, Fac Ciencias, Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes Ce3c, Bloco C2,Piso 5, P-1749016 Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Roxo, Maria Jose] Univ Nova Lisboa, Fac Ciencias Sociais & Humanas, Ave Berna 26-C, P-1069061 Lisbon, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Lisboa; Universidade Nova de Lisboa
RP Vizinho, A (corresponding author), Univ Lisbon, Fac Ciencias, Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes Ce3c, Bloco C2,Piso 5, P-1749016 Lisbon, Portugal.
EM andrevizinho@fc.ul.pt; dnavelar@fc.ul.pt; cmbranquinho@fc.ul.pt;
   tcapela@fc.ul.pt; sccarvalho@fc.ul.pt; amanunes@fc.ul.pt;
   mlpaiva@fc.ul.pt; hfoliveira@fc.ul.pt; alfonseca@fc.ul.pt;
   fdsantos@fc.ul.pt; mj.roxo@fcsh.unl.pt; gppenha-lopes@fc.ul.pt
RI Vizinho, André/JFA-6463-2023; Oliveira, Hugo/AAS-3507-2020; Capela
   Lourenço, Tiago/B-4947-2008; Carvalho, Silvia/O-8162-2015; Santos,
   Filipe/M-7709-2013; Nunes, Alice/B-4817-2014; Branquinho,
   Cristina/B-3670-2008; Penha-Lopes, Gil/N-1475-2015
OI Oliveira, Hugo/0000-0001-5953-3686; Sucena-Paiva,
   Leonor/0000-0003-3138-5428; Carvalho, Silvia/0000-0002-8414-6503;
   Santos, Filipe/0000-0001-7316-1479; Capela Lourenco,
   Tiago/0000-0002-8796-5993; Fonseca, Ana Lucia/0000-0001-5711-0698;
   Vizinho, Andre/0000-0002-0503-3624; Nunes, Alice/0000-0002-6900-3838;
   Branquinho, Cristina/0000-0001-8294-7924; Penha-Lopes,
   Gil/0000-0002-1024-1954
FU BASE Bottom up Adaptation for a Sustainable Europe [308337]; EEA
   Grants/Programa AdaPT project AdaptForChange (2015-2016); EU LIFE
   Programme [LIFE15 CCA/PT/000043]; Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia
   [PD/BD/113929/2015]; FCT [IF/00940/2015]; cE3c FCT Unit
   [UIDB/00329/2020]; Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
   [PD/BD/113929/2015] Funding Source: FCT
FX This research was funded by BASE Bottom up Adaptation for a Sustainable
   Europe (2012-2016) (Grant Agreement No. 308337), EEA Grants/Programa
   AdaPT project AdaptForChange (2015-2016) and the EU LIFE Programme with
   project LIFE Montado-Adapt (LIFE15 CCA/PT/000043) (2016-2021). This
   research was also funded by Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia who
   supported the PhD grant PD/BD/113929/2015 of Andre Vizinho, as well as
   the FCT Investigator contract (IF/00940/2015) of Gil Penha-Lopes. The
   APC was funded by the cE3c FCT Unit funding UIDB/00329/2020.
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NR 243
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 7
U2 48
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-445X
J9 LAND-BASEL
JI Land
PD FEB
PY 2021
VL 10
IS 2
AR 161
DI 10.3390/land10020161
PG 33
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA QN8HI
UT WOS:000622692900001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yoon, EJ
   Thorne, JH
   Park, C
   Lee, DK
   Kim, KS
   Yoon, H
   Seo, C
   Lim, CH
   Kim, H
   Song, YI
AF Yoon, Eun Joo
   Thorne, James H.
   Park, Chan
   Lee, Dong Kun
   Kim, Kwang Soo
   Yoon, Heeyeun
   Seo, Changwan
   Lim, Chul-Hee
   Kim, Haeryung
   Song, Young-Il
TI Modeling spatial climate change landuse adaptation with multi-objective
   genetic algorithms to improve resilience for rice yield and species
   richness and to mitigate disaster risk
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE scenario planning; landslides; economic value; landuse conversion;
   trade-offs; South Korea
ID USE ALLOCATION; OPTIMIZATION APPROACH; MANAGEMENT; BIODIVERSITY;
   NETHERLANDS; SIMULATION; TOOLS; AREAS
AB As climate change is ongoing, many studies have recently focused on adaptation to climate change from a spatial perspective. However little is known about how changing the spatial composition of landuse could improve climate change resilience. Consideration of climate change impacts when spatially allocating landuse could be a useful and fundamental long term adaptation strategy, particularly for regional planning. Here, we identify climate adaptation scenarios based on existing extents of three landuse classes using multi-objective genetic algorithms for a 9982 km 2 region with 3.5 million inhabitants in South Korea. We selected five objectives for adaptation based on predicted climate change impacts and regional economic conditions: minimization of disaster damage and existing landuse conversion, maximization of rice yield, protection of high species richness areas, and economic value. We generated 17 Pareto landuse scenarios by six weighted combinations of the adaptation objectives. Most scenarios, although varying in magnitude, showed better performance than the current spatial landuse composition for all adaptation objectives, suggesting that some alteration of current landuse patterns could increase overall climate resilience. Given the flexible structure of the optimization model, we expect that regional stakeholders could efficiently generate other scenarios by adjusting model parameters (weighting combinations) or replacing input data (impact maps), and selecting a scenario depending on preference or a number of problem-related factors.
C1 [Yoon, Eun Joo; Kim, Haeryung] Seoul Natl Univ, Interdisciplinary Program Landscape Architecture, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
   [Thorne, James H.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Environm Sci & Policy, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
   [Park, Chan] Univ Seoul, Dept Landscape Architecture, Seoul 02504, South Korea.
   [Lee, Dong Kun; Yoon, Heeyeun] Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Landscape Architecture & Rural Syst Engn, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
   [Kim, Kwang Soo] Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Plant Sci, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
   [Seo, Changwan] Natl Inst Ecol, Div Ecol Survey Res, Seocheon Gun 33657, South Korea.
   [Lim, Chul-Hee] Korea Univ, Inst Life Sci & Nat Resources, Seoul 02481, South Korea.
   [Song, Young-Il] Korea Environm Inst, Korea Adaptat Ctr Climate Change, Sejong 30121, South Korea.
C3 Seoul National University (SNU); University of California System;
   University of California Davis; University of Seoul; Seoul National
   University (SNU); Seoul National University (SNU); National Institute of
   Ecology; Korea University; Korea Environment Institute (KEI)
RP Lee, DK (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Landscape Architecture & Rural Syst Engn, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
EM dklee7@snu.ac.kr
OI Hae-ryung, Kim/0000-0001-5474-3430; Yoon, Eun Joo/0000-0002-6531-206X;
   Kim, Kwang Soo/0000-0003-2284-4389
FU Korean Ministry of Environment (MOE) [2014001310006]; BK21 Plus Project
   in 2018 (Seoul National University Interdisciplinary Program in
   Landscape Architecture, Global leadership program towards innovative
   green infrastructure)
FX This work was supported by the Korean Ministry of Environment (MOE) as
   the 'Climate Change Correspondence Program (Project number:
   2014001310006)' and supported by the BK21 Plus Project in 2018 (Seoul
   National University Interdisciplinary Program in Landscape Architecture,
   Global leadership program towards innovative green infrastructure).
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NR 55
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 10
U2 60
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD FEB
PY 2019
VL 14
IS 2
AR 024001
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/aaf0cf
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA HI3FX
UT WOS:000456334200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Muldowney, J
   Mounsey, J
   Kinsella, L
AF Muldowney, J.
   Mounsey, J.
   Kinsella, L.
TI Agriculture in the climate change negotiations; ensuring that food
   production is not threatened
SO ANIMAL
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT 5th Greenhouse Gases and Animal Agriculture (GGAA) Conference
CY JUN 23-26, 2013
CL Dublin, IRELAND
SP Univ Coll Dublin, Teagasc
DE agriculture; greenhouse gases; adaptation; climate change; food
   production
ID EMISSIONS; IMPACTS
AB With the human population predicted to reach nine billion by 2050, demand for food is predicted to more than double over this time period, a trend which will lead to increased greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from agriculture. Furthermore, expansion in food production is predicted to occur primarily in the developing world, where adaptation to climate change may be more difficult and opportunities to mitigate emissions limited. In the establishment of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), ensuring that food production is not threatened' is explicitly mentioned in the objective of the Convention. However, the focus of negotiations under the Convention has largely been on reducing GHG emissions from energy, and industrial activities and realizing the potential of forestry as a carbon sink. There has been little attention by the UNFCCC to address the challenges and opportunities for the agriculture sector. Since 2006, concerted efforts have been made to raise the prominence of agriculture within the negotiations. The most recent The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report and The Emissions Gap Report' by the UNEP highlighted the significant mitigation potential of agriculture, which can help contribute towards keeping global temperature rises below the 2 degrees C limit agreed in Cancun. Agriculture has to be a part of the solution to address climate change, but this will also require a focus on how agriculture systems can adapt to climate change in order to continue to increase food output. However, to effectively realize this potential, systematic and dedicated discussion and decisions within the UNFCCC are needed. UNFCCC discussions on a specific agriculture agenda item started in 2012, but are currently inconclusive. However, Parties are generally in agreement on the importance of agriculture in contributing to food security and employment as well as the need to improve understanding of agriculture and how it can contribute to realizing climate objectives. Discussions on agriculture are continuing with a view to finding an acceptable approach to address the climate change related challenges faced by agriculture worldwide and to ensure that food production is not threatened'.
C1 [Muldowney, J.; Mounsey, J.; Kinsella, L.] Grattan Business Ctr, Climate Change & Bioenergy Policy Div, Dept Agr Food & Marine, Portlaoise, Ireland.
RP Muldowney, J (corresponding author), Grattan Business Ctr, Climate Change & Bioenergy Policy Div, Dept Agr Food & Marine, Portlaoise, Ireland.
EM John.Muldowney@agriculture.gov.ie
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NR 31
TC 10
Z9 12
U1 4
U2 70
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1751-7311
EI 1751-732X
J9 ANIMAL
JI Animal
PD JUN
PY 2013
VL 7
SU 2
BP 206
EP 211
DI 10.1017/S175173111300089X
PG 6
WC Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science; Veterinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Veterinary Sciences
GA 272ZO
UT WOS:000328502300002
PM 23739463
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mitchell, N
   Herdtle, C
   Jacob, K
AF Mitchell, Nicole
   Herdtle, Carolin
   Jacob, Klaus
TI Examining the dynamics of social cohesion: A call for a different
   perspective on scaling impacts of real-world laboratories
SO GAIA-ECOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES FOR SCIENCE AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; real-world laboratory; scaling; small towns;
   social cohesion
AB Social cohesion is an important impact category for scaling real -world laboratory experiments. This idea has been largely overlooked in the transformative research debate. Based on observations within real -world laboratories that focused on iterative, co -creative, and practice -based climate change adaptation, we identify social cohesion, first, as a prerequisite for real -world laboratory impacts. Second, social cohesion can itself be an impact, enhancing the scaling potential of real -world laboratories. Cooperation can pave the way for amplifying real -world laboratories' activities temporally and spatially.
C1 [Mitchell, Nicole; Herdtle, Carolin; Jacob, Klaus] Free Univ Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
C3 Free University of Berlin
RP Mitchell, N (corresponding author), Free Univ Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
EM nicole.mitchell@fu-berlin.de; carolin.herdtle@outlook.com;
   klaus.jacob@fu-berlin.de
RI Jacob, Klaus/ABD-9583-2020
FU German Ministry for Education and Research (Bundesministerium fur
   Bildung und Forschung) [01LR2018A]
FX The project Keeping a cool head in hot times - how governance by
   integrative visions supports small towns to become heat resilient
   (GoingVis) (Mit kuehlem Kopf in hei ss e Zeiten. Wie Governance durch
   integrative Visionen Staedte auf ihrem Weg zur Hitzeresilienz
   unterstuetzen kann; GoingVis) is funded by the German Ministry for
   Education and Research (Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung)
   under the funding code 01LR2018A. The responsibility for the content of
   this publication lies with the authors.
CR Augenstein K, 2020, GAIA, V29, P143, DOI 10.14512/gaia.29.3.3
   Brunnengraber A., 2012, Okologisches Wirtschaften, V27, P15, DOI [10.14512/oew.v27i3.1213, DOI 10.14512/OEW.V27I3.1213]
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   Mitchell Nicole, 2022, Kleinstadtforschung, P195
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   van den Bosch S., 2008, DEEPENING BROADENING
NR 17
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 0
PU OEKOM VERLAG GMBH
PI MUNICH
PA WALTHERSTR 29, MUNICH, 80337, GERMANY
SN 0940-5550
EI 2625-5413
J9 GAIA
JI GAIA
PY 2024
VL 33
SU 1
SI SI
BP 51
EP 56
DI 10.14512/gaia.33.S1.8
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA QO2R0
UT WOS:001221753000016
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Bao, W
AF Bao Wen
BE Jiang, Y
   Min, JH
TI Economic Development Needs for Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation
   of China
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2010 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON APPLICATION OF
   MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICS, VOL 1: ADVANCES ON SPACE WEATHER, METEOROLOGY
   AND APPLIED PHYSICS
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference on Application of Mathematics and Physics
   (AMP2010)
CY MAY 08-09, 2010
CL Nanjing, PEOPLES R CHINA
DE Economic development; climate change; adaptation and mitigation
ID EPISTEMIC COMMUNITIES; POLICY
AB Economic development remains a priority of Chinese government. However it is, increasingly being measured by the effectiveness of the steps taken to protect the environment, including control of Greenhouse Gases (GHGs) emissions. Climate change adaptation and mitigation not an altruistic pursuit but pressing imperatives for a sustainable and strong national economy. As a responsible country, we are committed to leveraging our people, capital, and ideas to help find effective market-based solutions to address climate change, ecosystem degradation, and other critical environmental issues, and to seek new business opportunities that benefit the environment.
C1 Chengdu Univ Informat Technol, Sch Business, Chengdu 610103, Peoples R China.
C3 Chengdu University of Information Technology
RP Bao, W (corresponding author), Chengdu Univ Informat Technol, Sch Business, Chengdu 610103, Peoples R China.
EM baowenimde@126.com
CR Brenner M, 2007, ENERG POLICY, V35, P1771, DOI 10.1016/j.enpol.2006.04.016
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   STERN N, 2007, EC CLIMATE CHANGE ST, P125
NR 8
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU WORLD ACAD UNION-WORLD ACAD PRESS
PI LIVERPOOL
PA 113, ACADEMIC HOUSE, MILL LANE, WAVERTREE TECHNOLOGY PARK, LIVERPOOL,
   L13 4 AH, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-84626-081-0
PY 2010
BP 58
EP 62
PG 5
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Physics, Applied
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Geology; Physics
GA BPP28
UT WOS:000279588900011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yasuhara, K
   Komine, H
   Murakami, S
   Chen, G
   Mitani, Y
   Duc, DM
AF Yasuhara, K.
   Komine, H.
   Murakami, S.
   Chen, G.
   Mitani, Y.
   Duc, D. M.
TI Effects of climate change on geo-disasters in coastal zones and their
   adaptation
SO GEOTEXTILES AND GEOMEMBRANES
LA English
DT Article
DE Global warming; Climate change; Compound disaster; Torrential rainfall;
   Great earthquake; Adaptation
AB Results of recent investigations suggest that climate change tends to exacerbate geo-disasters. Therefore, it is understood clearly that adaptation to climate change has rapidly become the most important and urgent issue for the future existence of human beings on Earth. These inferences form the background of this research. In comparison to those examining water disasters, few studies have examined climate-change-induced geo-disasters. This study aims at upgrading the methodology for estimating effects on geo-disasters of combined events, e.g., global warming with increased typhoon and rainfall severity or occurrence of great earthquakes. Such a methodology is expected to contribute to progress in the fields of natural disaster mitigation and land preservation, particularly near seacoasts and rivers. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Yasuhara, K.] Ibaraki Univ, Inst Global Change Adaptat Sci, Mito, Ibaraki 3108512, Japan.
   [Komine, H.; Murakami, S.] Ibaraki Univ, Dept Urban & Civil Engn, Hitachi, Ibaraki 3168511, Japan.
   [Chen, G.; Mitani, Y.] Kyushu Univ, Grad Sch Civil Engn, Nishi Ku, Fukuoka 8190395, Japan.
   [Duc, D. M.] Vietnam Natl Univ, Hanoi Univ Sci, Dept Geotech, Hanoi, Vietnam.
C3 Ibaraki University; Ibaraki University; Kyushu University; Vietnam
   National University Hanoi (VNU Hanoi) System; VNU University of Science
   (VNU-HUS)
RP Yasuhara, K (corresponding author), Ibaraki Univ, Inst Global Change Adaptat Sci, 2-1-1 Bunkyo, Mito, Ibaraki 3108512, Japan.
EM yasuhara@mx.ibaraki.ac.jp
RI Do Minh, Duc/ABA-7635-2021
OI Do Minh, Duc/0000-0002-5561-7409
FU Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [23254004] Funding Source: KAKEN
CR [Anonymous], J GLOBAL ENV ENG JSC
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NR 23
TC 35
Z9 36
U1 5
U2 51
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0266-1144
EI 1879-3584
J9 GEOTEXT GEOMEMBRANES
JI Geotext. Geomembr.
PD FEB
PY 2012
VL 30
SI SI
BP 24
EP 34
DI 10.1016/j.geotexmem.2011.01.005
PG 11
WC Engineering, Geological; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Geology
GA 883BF
UT WOS:000299606900005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Manton, MJ
   Belward, A
   Harrison, DE
   Kuhn, A
   Lefale, P
   Rösner, S
   Simmons, A
   Westermeyer, W
   Zillman, J
AF Manton, M. J.
   Belward, A.
   Harrison, D. E.
   Kuhn, A.
   Lefale, P.
   Roesner, S.
   Simmons, A.
   Westermeyer, W.
   Zillman, J.
BE Sivakumar, MVK
   Nyenzi, BS
   Tyagi, A
TI Observation Needs for Climate Services and Research
SO WORLD CLIMATE CONFERENCE - 3
SE Procedia Environmental Sciences
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 3rd World Climate Conference (WCC) on Climate Prediction and Information
   for Decision-Making
CY AUG 31-SEP 04, 2009
CL Geneva, SWITZERLAND
DE Needs assessment; health; energy; water; biodiversity and natural
   resources management; sustainable cities; food security
ID SECTOR
AB Climate data are usefully applied to many economic and societal sectors. Sustained, high quality and uninterrupted climate are vital for the development of all countries, because climate variability and change impact significantly on economies and societies. The sectors treated in this paper include the key areas of human health, energy and water. The special needs for research and for the development of strategies to mitigate and adapt to climate change are also considered. All countries should be encouraged to give high priority to national needs for observations in their national adaptation planning. The full implementation of the Global Climate Observing System is required to ensure that countries are able to understand and manage climate variability and change over the twenty-first century.
C1 [Manton, M. J.] Monash Univ, Clayton, Vic 3800, Australia.
   [Belward, A.] Joint Res Ctr, Ispra, Italy.
   [Harrison, D. E.] NOAA, Pacif Marine Environm Lab, Seattle, WA USA.
   [Kuhn, A.; Westermeyer, W.] GCOS Secretariat, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Lefale, P.] Meteorol Serv New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand.
   [Roesner, S.] Deutscher Wetterdienst, Offenbach, Germany.
   [Simmons, A.] European Ctr Medium Range Weather Forecasts, Reading, Berks, England.
   [Zillman, J.] Univ Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
C3 Monash University; European Commission Joint Research Centre; EC JRC
   ISPRA Site; National Oceanic Atmospheric Admin (NOAA) - USA; Deutscher
   Wetterdienst; European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
   (ECMWF); University of Melbourne
RP Manton, MJ (corresponding author), Monash Univ, Clayton, Vic 3800, Australia.
EM Michael.Manton@sci.monash.edu.au
RI Westermeyer, William/JDM-6946-2023
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NR 17
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 5
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1878-0296
J9 PROCEDIA ENVIRON SCI
PY 2010
VL 1
BP 184
EP 191
DI 10.1016/j.proenv.2010.09.012
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BDO59
UT WOS:000314234800009
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dibella, J
   Burch, S
AF Dibella, Jose
   Burch, Sarah
TI Building parliamentary capacities for advancing the disaster risk
   reduction agenda: Notes and reflections from a capacity-building field
   training for parliamentarians of the Americas and the Caribbean
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Parliamentarians; Disaster risk reduction; Science diplomacy;
   Co-production; Experiential learning; Climate adaptation; Climate risk
AB As the escalating impacts of climate change exert greater pressure on national governments and their constituents, particularly in marginalized communities, legislators will need to leverage their roles to support national and local efforts to build disaster resilience. This will require a better understanding of risk, but also of the interconnections between the climate and disaster agendas. This is vital for legislators to strategically apply their capabilities to achieving the targets outlined by their respective national governments. The role of individual national parliamentarians in advancing the priorities of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction remains largely unexplored in scholarly research. However, these individuals play pivotal social and political roles with varying degrees of power, networks, and local influence. Such roles can enhance communities' capacity to participate in building disaster resilience. A significant hurdle for parliamentarians is comprehending the priorities and mechanisms necessary to develop a robust and coherent disaster risk management system. This involves navigating the intricate conceptual dimensions of the disaster risk reduction agenda and bridging these concepts with their everyday functions as parliamentarians. We contend that field briefings and co-production offer an effective platform for enhancing parliamentarians' capacity to grasp the concepts surrounding climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction. This article presents reflections drawn from a parliamentary training on climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction with insights from the three-day capacity-building workshop with national legislators from the Americas and the Caribbean. The project was done in partnership between the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) and an inter-parliamentary organization.
C1 [Dibella, Jose; Burch, Sarah] Waterloo Climate Inst, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
   [Burch, Sarah] Univ Waterloo, Dept Geog & Environm Management, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
C3 University of Waterloo
RP Dibella, J (corresponding author), Waterloo Climate Inst, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
EM jose.dibella@uwaterloo.ca
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NR 32
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD OCT 1
PY 2023
VL 96
AR 103970
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103970
EA SEP 2023
PG 13
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA T6LT6
UT WOS:001079088800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Johnston, W
   Cooper, A
AF Johnston, Wendy
   Cooper, Andrew
TI Small islands and climate change: analysis of adaptation policy in the
   Cayman Islands
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Cayman Islands; Adaptation; Small island nations; Climate change policy
ID DISASTER RISK REDUCTION; SEA-LEVEL RISE; COASTAL ADAPTATION; DEVELOPING
   STATES; IMPACTS
AB Small, low-lying islands are highly vulnerable to the effects of climate change and development of effective adaptation strategies is regarded as an urgent need. Through an analysis of existing and emerging climate adaptation policies, this paper assesses the climate adaptation response in the Cayman Islands. Despite its strong economic status and several developments in the areas of Planning, Environment and Tourism, alongside a draft Climate Change Policy, the study reveals a focus on symbolic policies and a lack of adopted "concrete" climate change adaptation policies. Although the draft National Climate Change Policy (2011) contains a comprehensive range of substantial policies, none has been formally adopted by the Cayman Islands Government. The practical implications of this situation in the face of climate change-related hazards are assessed in the context of Seven Mile Beach, the most heavily developed stretch of the Cayman Islands coast. Here, the prevailing response to shoreline change is stabilisation and, despite several opportunities to change the situation, recent policy developments have not stimulated changes in practice.
C1 [Johnston, Wendy; Cooper, Andrew] Ulster Univ, Sch Geog & Environm Sci, Cromore Rd, Coleraine BT52 1, Londonderry, North Ireland.
   [Cooper, Andrew] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Discipline Geol, Private Bag X54001, Durban, South Africa.
C3 Ulster University; University of Kwazulu Natal
RP Cooper, A (corresponding author), Ulster Univ, Sch Geog & Environm Sci, Cromore Rd, Coleraine BT52 1, Londonderry, North Ireland.; Cooper, A (corresponding author), Univ KwaZulu Natal, Discipline Geol, Private Bag X54001, Durban, South Africa.
EM wendy1979williams@gmail.com; jag.cooper@ulster.ac.uk
RI Cooper, Andrew/AAH-4251-2020
OI Cooper, Andrew/0000-0003-4972-8812
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NR 79
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U1 4
U2 32
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 22
IS 2
AR 45
DI 10.1007/s10113-022-01887-2
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZU6RU
UT WOS:000769969300001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Oliver-Smith, A
AF Oliver-Smith, Anthony
BE Johnson, C
   Jain, G
   Lavell, A
TI The choice of perils: understanding resistance to resettlement for urban
   disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation
SO RETHINKING URBAN RISK AND RESETTLEMENT IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID POLITICS
C1 [Oliver-Smith, Anthony] Univ Florida, Anthropol, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
   [Oliver-Smith, Anthony] Tulane Univ New Orleans, Stone Ctr Latin Amer Studies, Latin Amer Studies, New Orleans, LA 70118 USA.
   [Oliver-Smith, Anthony] Network Social Studies Disaster Prevent Latin Ame, London, England.
C3 State University System of Florida; University of Florida; Tulane
   University
RP Oliver-Smith, A (corresponding author), Univ Florida, Anthropol, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.; Oliver-Smith, A (corresponding author), Tulane Univ New Orleans, Stone Ctr Latin Amer Studies, Latin Amer Studies, New Orleans, LA 70118 USA.; Oliver-Smith, A (corresponding author), Network Social Studies Disaster Prevent Latin Ame, London, England.
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NR 53
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU Univ Coll London Press - UCL Press
PI London
PA UCL Press c/o UCL, Gower Street, London, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-78735-829-4; 978-1-78735-828-7; 978-1-78735-830-0
PY 2021
BP 133
EP 153
D2 10.14324/111.9781787358287
PG 21
WC Environmental Studies; Management; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics; Public
   Administration
GA BV7CJ
UT WOS:001065008300011
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thonicke, K
   Bahn, M
   Lavorel, S
   Bardgett, RD
   Erb, K
   Giamberini, M
   Reichstein, M
   Vollan, B
   Rammig, A
AF Thonicke, Kirsten
   Bahn, Michael
   Lavorel, Sandra
   Bardgett, Richard D.
   Erb, Karlheinz
   Giamberini, Mariasilvia
   Reichstein, Markus
   Vollan, Bjoern
   Rammig, Anja
TI Advancing the Understanding of Adaptive Capacity of Social-Ecological
   Systems to Absorb Climate Extremes
SO EARTHS FUTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate extremes; social-ecological systems; adaptation;
   social-ecological resilience; disturbance
ID URBAN HEAT ISLANDS; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE;
   CARBON-CYCLE; RESILIENCE; ADAPTATION; INFRASTRUCTURE; SUSTAINABILITY;
   VULNERABILITY; FRAMEWORK
AB Enhancing the capacity of social-ecological systems (SES) to adapt to climate change is of crucial importance. While gradual climate change impacts have been the main focus of much recent research, much less is known about how SES are impacted by climate extremes and how they adapt. Here, based on an advanced conceptualization of social-ecological resilience, performed by an interdisciplinary group of scientists, we outline three major challenges for operationalizing the resilience concept with particular focus on climate extremes. First, we discuss the necessary steps required to identify and measure relevant variables for capturing the full response spectrum of the coupled social and ecological components of SES. Second, we examine how climate extreme impacts on coupling flows in SES can be quantified by learning from past societal transitions or adaptations to climate extremes and resulting changes in ecosystem service supply. Last, we explore how to identify management options for maintaining and enhancing social-ecological resilience under a changing regime of climate extremes. We conclude that multiple pathways within adaptation and mitigation strategies which enhance the adaptive capacity of SES to absorb climate extremes will open the way toward a sustainable future.
C1 [Thonicke, Kirsten; Rammig, Anja] Leibniz Assoc, Res Dept 1 Earth Syst Anal, Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, Potsdam, Germany.
   [Bahn, Michael] Univ Innsbruck, Dept Ecol, Innsbruck, Austria.
   [Lavorel, Sandra] Univ Savoie Mt Blanc, Lab Ecol Alpine, UMR 5553, CNRS,Univ Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble, France.
   [Bardgett, Richard D.] Univ Manchester, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Manchester, Lancs, England.
   [Erb, Karlheinz] Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci Vienna, Inst Social Ecol, Vienna, Austria.
   [Giamberini, Mariasilvia] CNR, Inst Geosci & Earth Resources, Pisa, Italy.
   [Reichstein, Markus] Max Planck Inst Biogeochem, Jena, Germany.
   [Vollan, Bjoern] Philipps Univ Marburg, Sch Business & Econ, Marburg, Germany.
   [Rammig, Anja] Tech Univ Munich, TUM Sch Life Sci Weihenstephan, Freising Weihenstephan, Germany.
C3 Potsdam Institut fur Klimafolgenforschung; University of Innsbruck;
   Universite Savoie Mont Blanc; Centre National de la Recherche
   Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - Institute of Ecology & Environment (INEE);
   Communaute Universite Grenoble Alpes; Universite Grenoble Alpes (UGA);
   University of Manchester; BOKU University; Consiglio Nazionale delle
   Ricerche (CNR); Istituto di Geoscienze e Georisorse (IGG-CNR); Max
   Planck Society; Philipps University Marburg; Technical University of
   Munich
RP Thonicke, K (corresponding author), Leibniz Assoc, Res Dept 1 Earth Syst Anal, Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, Potsdam, Germany.
EM kirsten.thonicke@pik-potsdam.de
RI Bardgett, Richard/E-5599-2014; Lavorel, Sandra/AGM-2903-2022; Rammig,
   Anja/LVS-0052-2024; Bahn, Michael/I-3536-2013; Reichstein,
   Markus/A-7494-2011; Vollan, Bjorn/AAN-9265-2020; GIAMBERINI,
   MARIASILVIA/KZU-1771-2024
OI Bahn, Michael/0000-0001-7482-9776; Reichstein,
   Markus/0000-0001-5736-1112; Vollan, Bjorn/0000-0002-5592-4185;
   GIAMBERINI, MARIASILVIA/0000-0002-2408-7310
FU Austrian Academy of Sciences; BACI [H2020-EO-2014-640176]; Robert Bosch
   Stiftung [32.5.F082.0001.0/MA01]; BMBF [FKZ 01LP1610A]; Belmont Forum
   [FKZ 01LP1610A]; Bavarian Ministry of Science and the Arts; ERANet
   "Sumforest" project; Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P28572] Funding
   Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
FX The paper was kicked off at the Future Earth workshop "Cross community
   workshop on Extreme Events and Environments from Climate to Society
   (E3S)" in Berlin, 14-16 February 2016. We thank Jasper Bloemen,
   Stanislava Brnkalakova, Simone Gingrich, Stefan Liehr, Ilan Chabay,
   Rebecca Oliver, and all participants of the workshop for their
   thoughtful comments and contributions which laid the foundation of this
   work. M.B. acknowledges funding from the Austrian Academy of Sciences
   projects "ClimLUC: Climate extremes and land-use change: effects on
   ecosystem processes and services" and "ClimGrassHydro". K. H. E
   acknowledges funding from the Austrian Academy of Sciences, project
   "Clim-LUC", and the links provided by the project H2020-EO-2014-640176
   (BACI). B. V. acknowledges funding from Robert Bosch Stiftung, project
   "The shadow of the future and the shadow of the past: Studying the
   impact of climate change on human behavior," Grant
   32.5.F082.0001.0/MA01. A. R. and K. T. acknowledge funding from the
   BMBF-and Belmont Forum-funded project "CLIMAX: Climate services through
   knowledge co-production: A Euro-South American initiative for
   strengthening societal adaptation response to extreme events", FKZ
   01LP1610A. A. R. acknowledges funding from the Bavarian Ministry of
   Science and the Arts in the context of the Bavarian Climate Research
   Network (bayklif) and from the ERANet "Sumforest" project "Forests and
   extreme weather events: Solutions for risk resilient management in a
   changing climate" (FOREXCLIM).
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NR 121
TC 33
Z9 36
U1 13
U2 89
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
EI 2328-4277
J9 EARTHS FUTURE
JI Earth Future
PD FEB
PY 2020
VL 8
IS 2
AR UNSP e2019EF001221
DI 10.1029/2019EF001221
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA KU5HA
UT WOS:000519739500007
OA Green Submitted, Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kita, SM
AF Kita, Stern Mwakalimi
TI Barriers or enablers? Chiefs, elite capture, disasters, and resettlement
   in rural Malawi
SO DISASTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE chiefs; disaster risk reduction; elite capture; Malawi; resettlement
ID COMMUNITY-DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK REDUCTION;
   COLLECTIVE ACTION; TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY; LOWER ZAMBEZI; SOCIAL FUNDS;
   GOVERNANCE; STATE; CHALLENGES
AB Chiefs are at the centre of household and community development efforts in most low-income countries around the world. Yet, researchers and scholars have paid limited attention to the institution of chieftaincy and to understanding its role in the management of climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction. This paper draws on a micro ethnographic evaluation conducted in two predominantly rural districts of Malawi in southeast Africa to assess two different manifestations of elite control. In the first case, a resettlement programme was implemented where chiefs were co-opted and took the lead. In the second case, a food insecurity response programme was designed to exclude chiefs. The study finds that neither co-opting nor countering chiefs prevents elite capture. Rather, the majority of chiefs oscillate between malevolent and benevolent capture. The findings require that states focus on the cultural and political dimensions of rural life when designing climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction programmes.
C1 [Kita, Stern Mwakalimi] Dept Disaster Management Affairs, Off Vice President, Private Bag 336, Lilongwe, Malawi.
RP Kita, SM (corresponding author), Dept Disaster Management Affairs, Off Vice President, Private Bag 336, Lilongwe, Malawi.
EM stenkita@gmail.com
OI Kita, Stern Mwakalimi/0000-0002-8339-1697
FU University of Sussex, United Kingdom; Department of Disaster Management
   Affairs in Malawi
FX The research on which this paper is based was part of a larger PhD study
   by the author that was supported by a Chancellor's International
   Research Scholarship at the University of Sussex, United Kingdom. The
   author would also like to thank the support of four research assistants,
   a driver, and Jane Maher of Trinity College Dublin, Republic of Ireland,
   for assisting with data collection and entry. The support of the
   Department of Disaster Management Affairs in Malawi is acknowledged,
   too. Comments on initial drafts by Professor Clionadh Raleigh and three
   anonymous peer reviewers assisted in shaping the paper.
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NR 96
TC 18
Z9 20
U1 2
U2 17
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0361-3666
EI 1467-7717
J9 DISASTERS
JI Disasters
PD JAN
PY 2019
VL 43
IS 1
BP 135
EP 156
DI 10.1111/disa.12295
PG 22
WC Environmental Studies; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA HE3VX
UT WOS:000453291900007
PM 29968930
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lasco, RD
   Pulhin, FB
   Jaranilla-Sanchez, PA
   Delfino, RJP
   Gerpacio, R
   Garcia, K
AF Lasco, Rodel D.
   Pulhin, Florencia B.
   Jaranilla-Sanchez, Patricia Ann
   Delfino, Rafaela Jane P.
   Gerpacio, Roberta
   Garcia, Kristine
TI Mainstreaming adaptation in developing countries: The case of the
   Philippines
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; development; mainstreaming; Philippines
AB The Philippines, as an archipelago and a developing country, is very vulnerable to climate change. Current efforts to address the impacts of climate change exist but may not be sufficient. The first part of this paper reviews current knowledge on mainstreaming climate change adaptation into development. It then assesses how far climate change has been mainstreamed into key development plans and programmes in the Philippines. Interviews with key informants were also conducted. The results show that there is no mainstreaming in the Philippines. All the major development plans and policies reviewed did not contain any reference to climate change adaptation. Interviews with key stakeholders reveal a similar trend. The main reason preventing mainstreaming are that national priorities are biased towards concerns deemed more pressing, and that there is a pervasive lack of awareness about the impacts of climate change on sustainable development. However, there are massive investments in infrastructure projects designed to adapt to weather-related hazards. Projects such as these could provide an entry point for integrating climate change adaptation into development plans and policy in the Philippines.
C1 [Lasco, Rodel D.; Pulhin, Florencia B.; Jaranilla-Sanchez, Patricia Ann; Delfino, Rafaela Jane P.] World Agroforestry Ctr ICRAF, College Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
   [Pulhin, Florencia B.] UPLB, Forestry Dev Ctr, CFNR, College Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
   [Pulhin, Florencia B.; Garcia, Kristine] UPLB, Environm Forestry Programme, CFNR, College Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
   [Gerpacio, Roberta] UPLB, SE Asian Reg Ctr Grad Study & Res Agr, College Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
C3 CGIAR; World Agroforestry (ICRAF); University of the Philippines System;
   University of the Philippines Los Banos; University of the Philippines
   System; University of the Philippines Los Banos; University of the
   Philippines System; University of the Philippines Los Banos
RP Lasco, RD (corresponding author), World Agroforestry Ctr ICRAF, Khush Hall,IRRI Campus, College Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
EM r.lasco@cgiar.org
RI Delfino, Rafaela Jane/HKW-6540-2023; Rodel, Lasco/AAA-6206-2022
OI Delfino, Rafaela Jane/0000-0001-8612-0342; Lasco,
   Rodel/0000-0003-3675-4237
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NR 36
TC 31
Z9 32
U1 0
U2 39
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2009
VL 1
IS 2
BP 130
EP 146
DI 10.3763/cdev.2009.0009
PG 17
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA V17BY
UT WOS:000207913900003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jaison, C
   Reid, M
   Simatele, MD
AF Jaison, Chatsiwa
   Reid, Memory
   Simatele, Mulala Danny
TI Asset Portfolios in Climate Change Adaptation and Food Security: Lessons
   From Gokwe South District, Zimbabwe
SO JOURNAL OF ASIAN AND AFRICAN STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; asset adaptation; food security and Zimbabwe
ID AGROECOLOGICAL ZONES; FARMING HOUSEHOLDS; FRAMEWORK; IMPACTS
AB Climate variability and change are projected to continue impacting many of the poor and small-scale farmers in sub-Saharan Africa. This study aimed to examine how small-scale farmers in the Gokwe South district of Zimbabwe are building their adaptive capacity and resilience against climate change and achieving food security. Primary data was collected using questionnaires both in structured and semi-structured interviews, and participatory observations through a transect walk for physical observations. The study utilised the participatory climate change asset adaptation appraisal (PCCAA), as a methodological and analytical framework, to explore the different ways in which the small-scale farmers in the Gokwe South district of Zimbabwe are building their adaptive capacity and resilience against climate change. The study also explores the factors that influence small-scale farmers' adoption of climate change adaptation and food security. The small-scale and rural farmers in Zimbabwe are not passive actors but are actively involved in developing innovative local adaptation strategies using an array of available assets. Findings from this study noted that asset absence or its replacement with the 'wrong' mix of assets and asset erosion exacerbated the food insecurity in the Gokwe South district.
C1 [Jaison, Chatsiwa; Reid, Memory; Simatele, Mulala Danny] Univ Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
   [Jaison, Chatsiwa] Univ Witwatersrand, Dept Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of Witwatersrand; University of Witwatersrand
RP Jaison, C (corresponding author), Univ Witwatersrand, Dept Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
EM 1803536@students.wits.ac.za
RI Simatele, Mulala/AAS-9958-2020
OI Reid, Memory/0000-0003-0861-734X; Chatsiwa, Jaison/0000-0002-4833-7265
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NR 72
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 6
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0021-9096
EI 1745-2538
J9 J ASIAN AFR STUD
JI J. Asian Afr. Stud.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 59
IS 8
BP 2522
EP 2542
DI 10.1177/00219096231158340
EA MAR 2023
PG 21
WC Area Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies
GA L3G1A
UT WOS:000948444400001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chingombe, W
   Musarandega, H
AF Chingombe, Wisemen
   Musarandega, Happwell
TI Understanding the Logic of Climate Change Adaptation: Unpacking Barriers
   to Climate Change Adaptation by Smallholder Farmers in Chimanimani
   District, Zimbabwe
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; adaptation barrier; smallholder farmers;
   adaptive capacity
AB Smallholder farmers in Chimanimani District, Zimbabwe, have grappled for a long time with the effects of climate change despite the locally and externally driven resilience-building initiatives in place. This paper adopts a qualitative approach to explore the encountered adaptation barriers. Smallholder farmers, Agricultural Technical and Extension Services (AGRITEX) officers, and the traditional leadership fraternity were randomly selected from the district's 22 rural wards as study participants. Data were solicited using focus group discussions and face-to-face interviews that were corroborated by researcher observation methods. The data were analysed using thematic content analysis of key perspectives drawn from smallholder farmers, traditional leaders, and extension officers who work with farmers. What was unveiled is an assortment of barrier dynamics related to climate, finance, infrastructure, generational change, water resources, inefficient bureaucracy, gender inequality, and health barriers. Vensim PLE 7.3 software was used to illustrate barrier components as they act together to cripple smallholder farmers' efforts to raise their adaptive capacity. Adaptation barriers are complex and, therefore, cannot be addressed using policies that are fragmented. The paper recommends a multidimensional approach by policy makers to analyse adaptive barriers to build more climate resilience within smallholder farmer communities.
C1 [Chingombe, Wisemen] Univ Mpumalanga, Sch Biol & Environm Sci, Private Bag X11283, ZA-1200 Mbombela, South Africa.
   [Musarandega, Happwell] Univ Ft Hare, Dept Geog & Environm Sci, Private Bag X1314, ZA-5700 Alice, South Africa.
C3 University of Fort Hare
RP Chingombe, W (corresponding author), Univ Mpumalanga, Sch Biol & Environm Sci, Private Bag X11283, ZA-1200 Mbombela, South Africa.
EM Wisemen.Chingombe@ump.ac.za; hmusarandega@gmail.com
RI Chingombe, Wisemen/B-5896-2017
OI Musarandega, Happwell/0000-0003-0625-176X; Chingombe,
   Wisemen/0000-0001-7203-4822
FU University of Fort Hare
FX This research formed part of the baseline research activities led by
   Wisemen Chingombe from 2016 to 2020. Happwell Musarandega supported this
   research whilst studying for his PhD dissertation, Understanding climate
   change risk and vulnerability: Unpacking adaptation strategies for small
   scale holder farmers in Chimanimani District, Zimbabwe. The University
   of Fort Hare. A copy of the full research report is available from
   Happwell Musarandega, email: hmusarandega@gmail.com.
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NR 50
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 3
U2 16
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD APR
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 7
AR 3773
DI 10.3390/su13073773
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA RL3ZC
UT WOS:000638914700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Klose, M
   Auerbach, M
   Herrmann, C
   Kumerics, C
   Gratzki, A
AF Klose, Martin
   Auerbach, Markus
   Herrmann, Carina
   Kumerics, Christine
   Gratzki, Annegret
BE Sassa, K
   Mikos, M
   Yin, Y
TI Landslide Hazards and Climate Change Adaptation of Transport
   Infrastructures in Germany
SO ADVANCING CULTURE OF LIVING WITH LANDSLIDES, VOL 1: ISDR-ICL SENDAI
   PARTNERSHIPS 2015-2025
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 4th World Landslide Forum
CY MAY 29-JUN 02, 2017
CL Ljubljana, SLOVENIA
SP Int Consortium Landslides, Int Programme Landslides, Global Promot Comm, Geol Survey Slovenia Ljubljana, Univ Ljubljana, Republ Slovenia Minist Environm & Spatial Planning, Republic Slovenia Minist Infrastructure, Slovenian Natl Platform Disaster Risk Reduct, Int Programme Landslides, Slovenian Chamber Engineers, Int Assoc Hydrogeologists Slovene Comm, Water Management Soc Slovenia, Geomorphol Assoc Slovenia, Inst Water Republ Slovenia, Slovenian Geol Soc, Slovenian Geotechn Soc, Slovenian Natl Comm IHP, Slovenian Assoc Geodesy & Geophys
DE Landslide hazards; Transport infrastructure; Climate change adaptation;
   Germany
ID STATE; RISK
AB This paper provides insights into a new landslide hazards project which is part of a national research program on safe and sustainable transport in Germany funded by the Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure (BMVI). Here we report on a work in progress and present selected results of a pilot study conducted prior to the launch of the research program in 2016. The main goal of the landslide hazards project is to assess the future landslide hazard potential for the federal transport system under the influence of climate change. A federal road-related pilot study with focus on developing an approach to this type of hazard assessment was a first step in this direction. The developed approach is based upon a Geographic Information System (GIS) as mapping tool to combine a landslide susceptibility map with spatial datasets of regional climate change projections. Here we present the basic framework of this approach only, and provide information on landslide activity and climate change. This information refers to findings from three example landslide sites in Germany. The purpose of this paper is to introduce these landslide projects of German transport research against the backdrop of the existing national strategy of climate change adaptation.
C1 [Klose, Martin; Auerbach, Markus] Fed Highway Res Inst BASt, Bruderstr 53, D-51427 Bergisch Gladbach, Germany.
   [Herrmann, Carina] Fed Railway Author EBA, Heinemannstr 6, D-53175 Bonn, Germany.
   [Kumerics, Christine] Johannes Gutenberg Univ Mainz, Landslide Res Ctr, Mombacher Str 49-53, D-55122 Mainz, Germany.
   [Gratzki, Annegret] German Meteorol Serv DWD, Frankfurter Str 135, D-63067 Offenbach, Germany.
C3 Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz; Deutscher Wetterdienst
RP Klose, M (corresponding author), Fed Highway Res Inst BASt, Bruderstr 53, D-51427 Bergisch Gladbach, Germany.
EM Klose@bast.de; AuerbachM@bast.de; HerrmannC@eba.bund.de;
   fsr@geo-international.info; Annegret.Gratzki@dwd.de
FU Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure (BMVI);  [FE
   89.238/2009/AP];  [FE 05.0170/2011/MRB]
FX This research work was funded by the Federal Ministry of Transport and
   Digital Infrastructure (BMVI). It is part of the BMVI-Expertennetzwerk
   Wissen-Konnen-Handeln. The funding of this national research program is
   gratefully acknowledged. The authors would like to thank Dipl.-Geol.
   Michael Burger, Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt), for his
   personal advice and the supervision of previous research projects. The
   pilot study discussed in the paper refers to the projects FE
   89.238/2009/AP and FE 05.0170/2011/MRB commissioned by the BASt. We very
   much appreciate the support received from all parties involved in the
   two projects. Special thanks are due to the Landslide Research Centre at
   the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz which conducted both projects on
   behalf of the BASt. We would also like to thank the different research
   institutes and agencies that provided data material for these projects.
   A detailed list of these research institutes and agencies is given in
   Fig. 3. The authors are grateful to Dipl.-Ing. Jens Kirsten, BASt, who
   supported the preparation of Fig. 1.
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NR 17
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 12
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
BN 978-3-319-59469-9; 978-3-319-53500-5
PY 2017
BP 535
EP 541
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-59469-9_48
PG 7
WC Engineering, Civil; Engineering, Geological
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering
GA BK3NQ
UT WOS:000435273300048
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hoogendoorn, G
   Stockigt, L
   Saarinen, J
   Fitchett, JM
AF Hoogendoorn, Gijsbert
   Stockigt, Lara
   Saarinen, Jarkko
   Fitchett, Jennifer M.
TI Adapting to climate change: the case of snow-based tourism in Afriski,
   Lesotho
SO AFRICAN GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE Snow-based tourism; climate change; Lesotho; adaptation; snowmaking
ID SOUTHERN AFRICA; SKI TOURISM; ALPS; PERCEPTIONS; ADAPTATION; AUSTRIA;
   IMPACT
AB Climate change poses significant challenges to the tourism sector, with snow-based tourism particularly threatened. Snow-based tourism is largely dependent on adaptation, including snowmaking practices and product diversification. In the global south, the limited snow-based tourism products face similar challenges to the global north, but with significantly higher vulnerability and lower adaptive capacity. By making use of a questionnaire survey and personal in-depth interviews this paper examines adaptation mechanisms and the perceptions held by tourists and managers at Afriski, Lesotho. While Afriski already implements adaptive mechanisms, considering the current global environmental change projections for southern Africa, greater adaptive action is necessary.
C1 [Hoogendoorn, Gijsbert; Stockigt, Lara] Univ Johannesburg, Dept Geog Environm Management & Energy Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa.
   [Saarinen, Jarkko] Univ Oulu, Geog Res Unit, Oulu, Finland.
   [Saarinen, Jarkko] Univ Johannesburg, Sch Tourism & Hospitality, Johannesburg, South Africa.
   [Fitchett, Jennifer M.] Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of Johannesburg; University of Oulu; University of
   Johannesburg; University of Witwatersrand
RP Fitchett, JM (corresponding author), Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa.
EM Jennifer.fitchett@wits.ac.za
RI Fitchett, Jennifer/ABE-7179-2021; Saarinen, Jarkko/AAD-3227-2019;
   Fitchett, Jennifer/R-8276-2019
OI Hoogendoorn, Gijsbert/0000-0001-7969-7952; Fitchett,
   Jennifer/0000-0002-0854-1720
FU University of Johannesburg
FX This work was funded by University of Johannesburg;DSI-NRF Centre of
   Excellence for Palaeoscience;
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NR 57
TC 17
Z9 21
U1 3
U2 21
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1937-6812
EI 2163-2642
J9 AFR GEOGR REV
JI Afr. Geogr. Rev.
PD JAN 2
PY 2021
VL 40
IS 1
BP 92
EP 104
DI 10.1080/19376812.2020.1773878
EA JUN 2020
PG 13
WC Geography
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geography
GA QL6RC
UT WOS:000546960200001
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gibbons, ED
AF Gibbons, Elizabeth D.
TI Climate Change, Children's Rights, and the Pursuit of Intergenerational
   Climate Justice
SO HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS
LA English
DT Article
AB Frequently forgotten in the global discussions and agreements on climate change are children and young people, who both disproportionately suffer the consequences of a rapidly changing climate, yet also offer innovative solutions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions ( climate change mitigation) and adapt to climate change. Existing evidence is presented of the disproportionately harmful impact of climate-induced changes in precipitation and extreme weather events on today's children, especially in the Global South. This paper examines the existing global climate change agreements under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change for evidence of attention to children and intergenerational climate justice, and suggests the almost universally ratified Convention on the Rights of the Child be leveraged to advance intergenerational climate justice.
C1 Harvard Univ, FXB Ctr Hlth & Human Rights, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
C3 Harvard University
RP Gibbons, ED (corresponding author), Harvard Univ, FXB Ctr Hlth & Human Rights, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
EM egibbons@hsph.harvard.edu
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NR 39
TC 50
Z9 56
U1 3
U2 43
PU HARVARD UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA 79 GARDEN ST, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02138 USA
SN 1079-0969
EI 2150-4113
J9 HEALTH HUM RIGHTS
JI Health Hum. Rights
PD JUN
PY 2014
VL 16
IS 1
BP 19
EP 31
PG 13
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA AM7GS
UT WOS:000340034100004
PM 25474607
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Shodieva, D
   Vakhitova, N
   Abbazova, L
AF Shodieva, Diloromkhon
   Vakhitova, Nadejda
   Abbazova, Liliya
TI Promoting Women's Capacity Building to Adapt to Climate Change in
   Uzbekistan
SO ASIAN JOURNAL OF WOMENS STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Mountain ecosystem; climate change; women of mountains; training
   methods; adaptation
AB In developing economies, such as Uzbekistan, the state does not have adequate finances for environment and health protection and the situation has not improved over the years. There is a need for mobilizing the population to make an effort to protect local ecosystems and people's health. The goal of the local women's groups is therefore to ensure reduction of diseases in families and the negative impact of climate change on the environment by increasing levels of awareness, by providing appropriate training to women and youth. For this they need to make effective use of available resources, rather than demanding major investments, by using pedagogical and psychological methods to influence ordinary inhabitants.
C1 [Abbazova, Liliya] Women Mt, Billings, MT USA.
RP Shodieva, D (corresponding author), Grp Women Mt, Portland, OR 97215 USA.
CR Abbazova L., 2013, ENV SAFETY FAMILY 2
   JODHA NS, 1992, SUSTAINABLE MOUNTAIN
   UNDP, 2008, UZB ENV REV BAS IND
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NR 5
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 17
PU EWHA WOMANS UNIV PRESS
PI SEOUL
PA 11-1 DAEHYUN-DONG, SEODAEMUN-GU, SEOUL 120-750, SOUTH KOREA
SN 1225-9276
J9 ASIAN J WOMEN STUD
JI Asian J. Women Stud.
PY 2014
VL 20
IS 3
BP 132
EP 144
PG 13
WC Women's Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Women's Studies
GA AQ4RZ
UT WOS:000342788700007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tacoli, C
AF Tacoli, Cecilia
TI Crisis or adaptation? Migration and climate change in a context of high
   mobility
SO ENVIRONMENT AND URBANIZATION
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; income diversification; migration; mobility; population
   distribution
ID URBAN; URBANIZATION; AFRICA; IMPACT
AB The impacts of climate change are likely to affect population distribution and mobility. While alarmist predictions of massive flows of refugees are not supported by past experiences of responses to droughts and extreme weather events, predictions for future migration flows are tentative at best. What we do know is that mobility and migration are key responses to environmental and non-environmental transformations and pressures. They should therefore be a central element of strategies of adaptation to climate change. This requires a radical change in policy makers' perceptions of migration as a problem and a better understanding of the role of local and national institutions in supporting and accommodating mobility.
C1 IIED, Human Settlements Grp, London WC1H 0DD, England.
RP Tacoli, C (corresponding author), IIED, Human Settlements Grp, 3 Endsleigh St, London WC1H 0DD, England.
EM cecilia.tacoli@iied.org
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NR 56
TC 353
Z9 401
U1 6
U2 136
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0956-2478
EI 1746-0301
J9 ENVIRON URBAN
JI Environ. Urban.
PD OCT
PY 2009
VL 21
IS 2
BP 513
EP 525
DI 10.1177/0956247809342182
PG 13
WC Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Urban Studies
GA 500GF
UT WOS:000270286100012
OA Green Submitted, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sovacool, BK
   Linnér, BO
   Klein, RJT
AF Sovacool, Benjamin K.
   Linner, Bjorn-Ola
   Klein, Richard J. T.
TI Climate change adaptation and the Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF):
   Qualitative insights from policy implementation in the Asia-Pacific
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Adaptive capacity; Resilience; Vulnerability
AB Least developed countries often lack the requisite capacity to implement climate change adaptation projects. The Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF) is a scheme where industrialized countries have (as of early 2016) disbursed $934.5 million in voluntary contributions, raised more than four times that amount in co-financing, and supported 213 adaptation projects across 51 least developed countries. But what sorts of challenges have arisen during implementation? Based on extensive field research in five least developed countries-Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, the Maldives, and Vanuatu-and original data collected from almost 150 research interviews, this article qualitatively explores both the benefits and challenges of LDCF projects in the Asia-Pacific. It finds that while LDCF projects do contribute to enhancing multiple types of infrastructural, institutional, and community-based adaptive capacity, they also suffer from uncertainty, a convoluted management structure, and an inability to fully respond to climate risks. Based on these findings, the study concludes that adaptation must be pursued as a multidimensional process; and that LDCF activities have tended to promote marginal rather than more radical or systematic transformations.
C1 [Sovacool, Benjamin K.] Aarhus Univ, Dept Business & Technol, Birk Ctr Pk 15, DK-7400 Herning, Denmark.
   [Sovacool, Benjamin K.] Univ Sussex, Sch Business, Sci Policy Res Unit, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
   [Linner, Bjorn-Ola] Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, SE-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Linner, Bjorn-Ola] Univ Oxford, Inst Sci Innovat & Soc, Oxford, England.
   [Klein, Richard J. T.] Stockholm Environm Inst, Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Aarhus University; University of Sussex; Linkoping University;
   University of Oxford; Stockholm Environment Institute
EM BenjaminSo@hih.au.dk; bjorn-ola.linner@liu.se;
   richard.klein@sei-international.org
RI Sovacool, Benjamin/Y-2392-2019; Linnér, Björn-Ola/AAL-2040-2020; Klein,
   Richard J.T./B-1148-2009
OI Klein, Richard J.T./0000-0002-9458-0944
FU Academic Research Council at the Ministry of Education in Singapore
FX This article deepens and extends arguments presented in a book published
   in 2013 with Palgrave entitled Energy & Ethics: Justice and the Global
   Energy Challenge. Dr. Robert K. Dixon, Head of the Climate Change and
   Chemical Teams at the Global Environment Facility, and Roland Sundstrom
   from the Adaptation Cluster at the Global Environment Facility,
   generously provided helpful suggestions for revision, along with two
   anonymous reviewers. The authors are appreciative to the Academic
   Research Council at the Ministry of Education in Singapore for a grant
   entitled "Building Adaptive Capacity and Resilience to Climate Change in
   Asian Least Developed Countries," which has supported elements of the
   work reported here, notably the research interviews and field research
   conducted in 2010. Despite this support, any opinions, findings, and
   conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of
   the authors alone.
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NR 35
TC 48
Z9 53
U1 0
U2 40
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JAN
PY 2017
VL 140
IS 2
BP 209
EP 226
DI 10.1007/s10584-016-1839-2
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA EI3XL
UT WOS:000392425900009
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Lin, HC
   Lo, LH
   Wu, Y
   Lee, ACT
AF Lin, H. C.
   Lo, L. H.
   Wu, Y.
   Lee, Albert C. T.
BE Kocaoglu, DF
   Anderson, TR
   Daim, TU
   Kozanoglu, DC
   Niwa, K
   Perman, G
TI Designing a Mechanism for Collaborative Governance of Climate Change
   Adaptation Planning for Water System in Taiwan
SO PORTLAND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MANAGEMENT OF ENGINEERING AND
   TECHNOLOGY (PICMET 2016): TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT FOR SOCIAL INNOVATION
SE Portland International Conference on Management of Engineering and
   Technology
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Portland International Conference on Management of Engineering and
   Technology (PICMET)
CY SEP 04-08, 2016
CL Honolulu, HI
SP Portland State Univ, Dept Engn & Technol Management, Portland State Univ Fdn, InFocus Corp
AB According to the Global Risks Landscape 2015 published by World Economic Forum, water crises and failure of climate-change adaptation are perceived as more likely and impactful than many other risks in the next I0 years. Water security is also deemed as cross-cutting issue for many-other related policy domains such as energy, agriculture, infrastmetare, biodiversity, disaster risk reduction and health. hi Taiwan, increased water risk and growing uncertainty about future conditions has also reported by local scientific research, which may exacerbate existing water security challenges and complicate the adaptation planning of water system.
   This research focuses on designing a mechanism for collaborative governance of climate change adaptation planning for water system in order to form integrated adaptation responses to climate change. Also, a risk-based framework, which was developed by International Risk Governance Council (IRGC), is also integrated into our mechanism to provide a systematic approach for the analysis, assessment and governance of adapting water systems to climate change, in order to enhance the adaptation planning methodology widely used in Taiwan status quo, such as down scaling techniques and traditional risk assessment methodology.
C1 [Lin, H. C.; Lo, L. H.; Wu, Y.; Lee, Albert C. T.] NARLabs, Sci & Technol Policy Res & Informat Ctr STPI, Taipei, Taiwan.
RP Lin, HC (corresponding author), NARLabs, Sci & Technol Policy Res & Informat Ctr STPI, Taipei, Taiwan.
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   [No title captured]
NR 16
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 6
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
SN 2159-5100
J9 PORTL INT CONF MANAG
PY 2016
BP 2430
EP 2444
PG 15
WC Engineering, Electrical & Electronic; Operations Research & Management
   Science
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering; Operations Research & Management Science
GA BH8BA
UT WOS:000403104502028
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barry, M
   Wreford, A
   Knook, J
   Teixeira, E
   Monge, J
   Parker, A
AF Barry, Michelle
   Wreford, Anita
   Knook, Jorie
   Teixeira, Edmar
   Monge, Juan
   Parker, Amber
TI Diversification as a climate change adaptation strategy in viticulture
   systems: winegrowers' insights from Marlborough, New Zealand
SO AGROECOLOGY AND SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Diversification; climate change adaptation; viticulture; Marlborough;
   New Zealand; wine
ID ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES; CHANGE IMPACTS; WINE; AGRICULTURE; DEMANDS
AB Viticulture systems face risks from a changing climate due to grapevine sensitivity and the large degree of specialization that often exists. Diversification of agricultural production systems has been proposed as an effective adaptation strategy. Elements of diversification have featured in viticulture adaptation studies, but the understanding of diversification and its potential as a climate change adaptation strategy has not been explicitly explored with winegrowers. To develop insights in this area we identified regional climate challenges, defined climate change related threats and opportunities, and envisaged diversification solutions. Data collection involved a literature review on climate change impacts, adaptation and diversification in viticulture systems, followed by a focus group with industry stakeholders. Agroecological practices, plant material and vineyard location were the core diversification themes identified in the literature. The study found that winegrowers' understanding of the potential for diversification include implementing agroecological practices, diversification of plant material (clones, rootstocks), alternative vineyard locations, integrating different crops and growing alternative varieties. The study expands on current literature by explicitly assessing winegrower understanding of the potential for diversification as a climate change adaptation strategy in winegrowing systems.
C1 [Barry, Michelle; Wreford, Anita] Lincoln Univ, Agribusiness & Econ Res Unit, Ellesmere Junct Rd, Lincoln 7647, Canterbury, New Zealand.
   [Barry, Michelle] Bragato Res Inst, Marlborough, New Zealand.
   [Knook, Jorie] Lincoln Univ, Dept Land Management & Syst, Canterbury, New Zealand.
   [Teixeira, Edmar] Plant & Food Res, Lincoln, New Zealand.
   [Monge, Juan] Market Econ Ltd, Auckland, New Zealand.
   [Parker, Amber] Lincoln Univ, Dept Wine Food & Mol Biosci, Canterbury, New Zealand.
C3 Lincoln University - New Zealand; Lincoln University - New Zealand; New
   Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research Ltd; Lincoln University -
   New Zealand
RP Barry, M (corresponding author), Lincoln Univ, Agribusiness & Econ Res Unit, Ellesmere Junct Rd, Lincoln 7647, Canterbury, New Zealand.
EM michelle.barry2@lincolnuni.ac.nz
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NR 83
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 2168-3565
EI 2168-3573
J9 AGROECOL SUST FOOD
JI Agroecol. Sustain. Food Syst.
PD 2024 NOV 28
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/21683565.2024.2426490
EA NOV 2024
PG 24
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA N5D2M
UT WOS:001364538000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ji, JQ
   Yu, Y
   Zhang, ZC
   Hua, T
   Zhu, YP
   Zhao, HT
AF Ji, Jiaqian
   Yu, Yang
   Zhang, Zhengchao
   Hua, Ting
   Zhu, Yanpeng
   Zhao, Haotian
TI Notable conservation gaps for biodiversity, ecosystem services and
   climate change adaptation on the Tibetan Plateau, China
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Protected areas; Nature reserves; Conservation gaps; Representativeness
   analysis; Tibetan Plateau
ID SOIL LOSS; VELOCITY; AREAS
AB Incorporating biodiversity, ecosystem services (ESs) and climate change adaptation into the conservation targets of protected areas (PAs) is being acknowledged. Targeting conservation actions requires a thorough understanding of the relationship between PAs and these important regions. However, few studies have identified conservation gaps while simultaneously considering these three aspects. Here, we assessed the representativeness of the PAs network for biodiversity, ESs and climate refugia (as a proxy for climate change adaptation ability) on the Tibetan Plateau (TP). Our analysis showed that these priority conservation regions were primarily located in the south and southeast of the TP, while they were impacted by intense human pressure. Most ESs and all types of species richness showed a significant positive correlation. Additionally, a positive correlation between multiple climate refugia and different types of species richness was detected. Representativeness analysis revealed notable conservation gaps for these three aspects in existing PAs, highlighting the urgency of adjusting their distribution and improving their representativeness. By integrating these conservation targets, priority regions for future conservation were further delineated. Taken together, our findings contribute to improving the efficiency of PAs and optimizing conservation planning.
C1 [Ji, Jiaqian; Yu, Yang; Zhang, Zhengchao] Beijing Forestry Univ, Sch Soil & Water Conservat, Qinghua East Rd 35, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
   [Yu, Yang] Beijing Forestry Univ, Sch Soil & Water Conservat, Jixian Natl Forest Ecosyst Observat & Res Stn, CNERN, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
   [Ji, Jiaqian] China Agr Univ, Coll Land Sci & Technol, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Zhengchao] Qingdao Agr Univ, Coll Grassland Sci, Key Lab Natl Forestry, Qingdao 266109, Shandong, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Zhengchao] Qingdao Agr Univ, Coll Grassland Sci, Grassland Adm Grassland Resources & Ecol Yellow Ri, Qingdao 266109, Shandong, Peoples R China.
   [Hua, Ting] Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, State Key Lab Earth Surface Proc & Resource Ecol, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.
   [Zhu, Yanpeng] Chinese Res Inst Environm Sci, State Environm Protect Key Lab Reg Ecoproc & Funct, Beijing 100012, Peoples R China.
   [Zhao, Haotian] Sichuan Geol Environm Survey & Res Ctr, Chengdu 610081, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
C3 Beijing Forestry University; Beijing Forestry University; China
   Agricultural University; Qingdao Agricultural University; Qingdao
   Agricultural University; Beijing Normal University; Chinese Research
   Academy of Environmental Sciences
RP Yu, Y (corresponding author), Beijing Forestry Univ, Sch Soil & Water Conservat, Qinghua East Rd 35, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
EM yangyu@bjfu.edu.cn
RI Yu, Yang/HGE-1940-2022
OI Yu, Yang/0000-0003-4431-2279
FU Natural Science Foundation of Sichuan [2023NSFSC0784]
FX This research was funded by the Natural Science Foundation of Sichuan
   (2023NSFSC0784) . The authors express their appreciation to the
   anony-mous reviewers for their constructive remarks to improve the
   manuscript.
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NR 52
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 10
U2 71
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD OCT 15
PY 2023
VL 895
AR 165032
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165032
EA JUL 2023
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA N0JQ4
UT WOS:001033986800001
PM 37355118
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zembe, A
   Nemakonde, LD
   Chipangura, P
AF Zembe, Annegrace
   Nemakonde, Livhuwani D.
   Chipangura, Paul
TI Policy coherence between food security, disaster risk reduction and
   climate change adaptation in South Africa: A summative content analysis
   approach
SO JAMBA-JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; disaster risk reduction; food security;
   policy coherence; legislations
ID NUTRITION; EXAMPLES
AB Climate change through extreme weather events threatens food security (FS) and the eradication of poverty. Thus, improving FS will require adapting to the impacts of climate change as well as reducing the risks of disasters. However, the nexus between FS, disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) is not always reflected in policies, resulting in fragmented implementation. The purpose of this article is to evaluate if there is coherence in the policies for FS, DRR and CCA in South Africa. A qualitative research design was applied, and data were collected through a summative content analysis on 34 policy and legislative documents and 24 key informant interviews (KII). The study found that there are still incoherencies between the current main policy and legislative documents that address CCA, DRR and FS. This study recommends a review of old policy and legislative frameworks promulgated in the 1990s to incorporate cross-cutting issues such as DRR, CCA and FS. This will enhance and strengthen synergies and interconnections between the three policy areas.
C1 [Zembe, Annegrace; Nemakonde, Livhuwani D.] North West Univ, Fac Nat & Agr Sci, African Ctr Disaster Studies, Unit Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
   [Chipangura, Paul] Natl Univ Sci & Technol, Inst Dev Studies, Disaster Management, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.
C3 North West University - South Africa; National University of Science &
   Technology - Zimbabwe
RP Zembe, A (corresponding author), North West Univ, Fac Nat & Agr Sci, African Ctr Disaster Studies, Unit Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
EM zembeannegrace@gmail.com
RI ; Nemakonde, Livhuwani David/JOK-5197-2023
OI Chipangura, Paul/0000-0001-7805-7697; Zembe,
   Annegrace/0000-0002-8963-3634; Nemakonde, Livhuwani
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NR 43
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 10
PU AOSIS
PI Durbanville
PA Postnet Suite 110, Private Bag x 19, Durbanville, SOUTH AFRICA
SN 1996-1421
EI 2072-845X
J9 JAMBA-J DISASTER RIS
JI Jamba-J. Disaster Risk Stud.
PD FEB 22
PY 2022
VL 14
AR a1173
DI 10.4102/jamba.v14i1.1173
PG 11
WC Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA ZH2MO
UT WOS:000760778500001
PM 35284042
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Husa, M
   Kosenius, AK
AF Husa, Miikka
   Kosenius, Anna-Kaisa
TI Non-industrial private forest owners' willingness to manage for climate
   change and biodiversity
SO SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Non-industrial private forest owners; carbon sequestration; climate
   change adaptation; biodiversity; commercial forests; forest management
ID CARBON SEQUESTRATION; CONTINUOUS COVER; CONSERVATION; INCENTIVES;
   ADAPTATION; MITIGATION; STRATEGIES; PROVISION; ECONOMICS; ATTITUDES
AB In boreal commercial forests, carbon sequestration, climate change adaptation, and biodiversity conservation can be promoted through various measures. This study examines the factors affecting non-industrial private forest (NIPF) owners' preferences for such forest management practices. A systematic literature review serves as a reference for the empirical analysis of a survey data on the Finnish NIPF owners' stated willingness to adopt thirteen distinct forest management practices. Binary logit models reveal socio-demographic factors, site-specific characteristics, previous forest management, and motivations for forest ownership that are associated with the stated adoption of management practices. Especially, environmental and financial motivations play an important role in decisions concerning forest management practices. Statistically significant factors vary depending on the forest management practice, reflecting the NIPF owner heterogeneity. Younger and highly educated forest owners are more supportive for various management practices that promote biodiversity, while older forest owners are reluctant towards deadwood retention. The results underline the importance of accounting for heterogeneous preferences regarding forest management practices when designing and implementing policies and advisory services aiming at enhancing carbon sequestration, climate change adaptation, or biodiversity in boreal commercial forests.
C1 [Husa, Miikka; Kosenius, Anna-Kaisa] Univ Helsinki, Dept Econ & Management, POB 27, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Husa, Miikka] Nat Resources Inst Finland Luke, Latokartanonkaari 9, FI-00790 Helsinki, Finland.
C3 University of Helsinki; Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke)
RP Kosenius, AK (corresponding author), Univ Helsinki, Dept Econ & Management, POB 27, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
EM anna-kaisa.kosenius@helsinki.fi
RI Kosenius, Anna-Kaisa/F-9417-2017
OI Kosenius, Anna-Kaisa/0000-0002-1528-8145
FU Strategic Research Funding/Academy of Finland [SRC
   2017/312637/IBC-Carbon]
FX This work was supported by the Strategic Research Funding/Academy of
   Finland [Grant Number SRC 2017/312637/IBC-Carbon].
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NR 59
TC 18
Z9 18
U1 0
U2 33
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
PI OSLO
PA KARL JOHANS GATE 5, NO-0154 OSLO, NORWAY
SN 0282-7581
EI 1651-1891
J9 SCAND J FOREST RES
JI Scand. J. Forest Res.
PD NOV 17
PY 2021
VL 36
IS 7-8
BP 614
EP 625
DI 10.1080/02827581.2021.1981433
EA OCT 2021
PG 12
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Forestry
GA XV1TN
UT WOS:000707870900001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Laves, G
   Kenway, S
   Begbie, D
   Roiko, A
   Carter, RW
   Waterman, P
AF Laves, G.
   Kenway, S.
   Begbie, D.
   Roiko, A.
   Carter, R. W.
   Waterman, P.
TI The research-policy nexus in climate change adaptation: experience from
   the urban water sector in South East Queensland, Australia
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Water supply; Research; South East
   Queensland; Millennium Drought; Water tanks
ID OZONATION; RAINWATER; IMPACTS; ENERGY
AB Despite an exponential growth in the volume of adaptation research over the last decade, there is still a research gap in regard to the provision of suitable information to adequately inform climate change adaptation policy makers. Contributing to this gap is a paucity of research reporting on the effectiveness of implemented adaptation strategies. This paper reports on the success, failures and future risks of the responses taken by the South East Queensland (SEQ) water sector during the Millennium Drought. The adaptation strategy employed a portfolio approach mixing 'hard' and 'soft' adaptations. Strategies included the following: large-scale water manufacturing facilities and distribution networks; the exploitation of local water resources; regulatory instruments; institutional reforms; support for research and training and a range of demand management programmes. The strategies employed were innovative and in many cases required rigorous scientific evidence for their development, implementation and follow-up assessments. However, we show that there has been considerable disparity between anticipated and actual policy outcomes, which points to maladaptive consequences. By revisiting the effectiveness of implemented adaptation strategies in the SEQ water sector, our paper provides evidence for the need for integrative studies with genuine policy integration.
C1 [Laves, G.; Roiko, A.] Griffith Univ, Urban Res Program, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Kenway, S.; Begbie, D.] Urban Water Secur Res Alliance, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Carter, R. W.; Waterman, P.] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sunshine Coast, Qld, Australia.
C3 Griffith University; University of the Sunshine Coast
RP Laves, G (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Urban Res Program, Nathan Campus, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia.
EM lavesware@msn.com; g.laves@griffith.edu.au
RI Roiko, Anne/AAU-3221-2021; Kenway, Steven/J-8031-2013; Carter,
   Rodney/T-8996-2019
OI Kenway, Steven/0000-0002-2095-9388; Carter, Rodney/0000-0003-3545-825X;
   Roiko, Anne/0000-0003-0395-307X
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NR 71
TC 10
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 34
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD APR
PY 2014
VL 14
IS 2
SI SI
BP 449
EP 461
DI 10.1007/s10113-013-0556-x
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AD5BY
UT WOS:000333267700003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pearce, T
   Currenti, R
   Doran, B
   Sidle, R
   Ford, J
   Leon, J
AF Pearce, Tristan
   Currenti, Renee
   Doran, Brendan
   Sidle, Roy
   Ford, James
   Leon, Javier
TI "Even if it doesn't come, you should be prepared": Natural hazard
   perception, remoteness, and implications for disaster risk reduction in
   rural Fiji
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; ISLAND; KNOWLEDGE;
   PERSPECTIVE; COMMUNITY; STRESSORS; PACIFIC; IMPACTS; CONTEXT
C1 [Pearce, Tristan] Univ Northern British Columbia, 3333 Univ Way, Prince George, BC, Canada.
   [Pearce, Tristan; Currenti, Renee; Doran, Brendan; Leon, Javier] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr, Sunshine Coast, Australia.
   [Sidle, Roy] Univ Cent Asia, Mt Soc Res Inst, Khorugh, Tajikistan.
   [Ford, James] Univ Leeds, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
C3 University of Northern British Columbia; University of the Sunshine
   Coast; University of Central Asia; University of Leeds
RP Pearce, T (corresponding author), Univ Northern British Columbia, 3333 Univ Way, Prince George, BC, Canada.
EM tristan.pearce@unbc.ca
RI Pearce, Tristan/L-9139-2019; Ford, James/A-4284-2013; Leon,
   Javier/J-3971-2012
OI Ford, James/0000-0002-2066-3456; Leon, Javier/0000-0002-4201-5804
FU University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia; Australian Government
   Research Training Program, Australia; Canada Research Chairs Program,
   University of Northern British Columbia, Canada
FX Vinaka vakalevu to the people of Nawairuku for their generous
   hospitality and to those who shared their knowledge and experiences that
   are the heart of this paper. Due acknowledgement is given to Kiniviliame
   Salabogi, Teresia Salabogi, Luke Vuli and Roger Kitson for research
   assistance and intellectual contributions. Thank you, Lui Manuel,
   Nadroga-Navosa Provincial Council, Jeremy Hills, University of South
   Pacific, Suva campus, and Teresa Rietberg for your partnership and
   incountry support. Thank you, Marie Puddister, University of Guelph for
   Fig. 1. The research was made possible through financial support from:
   Research Fellowship Grant, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia;
   Graduate Research Scholarship, Australian Government Research Training
   Program, Australia; and Canada Research Chairs Program, University of
   Northern British Columbia, Canada.
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NR 47
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 8
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 48
AR 101591
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2020.101591
PG 7
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA MV7TX
UT WOS:000556556400003
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Torda, G
   Donelson, JM
   Aranda, M
   Barshis, DJ
   Bay, L
   Berumen, ML
   Bourne, DG
   Cantin, N
   Foret, S
   Matz, M
   Miller, DJ
   Moya, A
   Putnam, HM
   Ravasi, T
   van Oppen, MJH
   Thurber, RV
   Vidal-Dupiol, J
   Voolstra, CR
   Watson, SA
   Whitelaw, E
   Willis, BL
   Munday, PL
AF Torda, Gergely
   Donelson, Jennifer M.
   Aranda, Manuel
   Barshis, Daniel J.
   Bay, Line
   Berumen, Michael L.
   Bourne, David G.
   Cantin, Neal
   Foret, Sylvain
   Matz, Mikhail
   Miller, David J.
   Moya, Aurelie
   Putnam, Hollie M.
   Ravasi, Timothy
   van Oppen, Madeleine J. H.
   Thurber, Rebecca Vega
   Vidal-Dupiol, Jeremie
   Voolstra, Christian R.
   Watson, Sue-Ann
   Whitelaw, Emma
   Willis, Bette L.
   Munday, Philip L.
TI Rapid adaptive responses to climate change in corals
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID DNA METHYLATION; EPIGENETIC INHERITANCE; OCEAN ACIDIFICATION;
   GENE-EXPRESSION; TRANSGENERATIONAL PLASTICITY; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY;
   COMMUNITY DYNAMICS; ADAPTATION; DIVERSITY; VIRUSES
AB Pivotal to projecting the fate of coral reefs is the capacity of reef-building corals to acclimatize and adapt to climate change. Transgenerational plasticity may enable some marine organisms to acclimatize over several generations and it has been hypothesized that epigenetic processes and microbial associations might facilitate adaptive responses. However, current evidence is equivocal and understanding of the underlying processes is limited. Here, we discuss prospects for observing transgenerational plasticity in corals and the mechanisms that could enable adaptive plasticity in the coral holobiont, including the potential role of epigenetics and coral-associated microbes. Well-designed and strictly controlled experiments are needed to distinguish transgenerational plasticity from other forms of plasticity, and to elucidate the underlying mechanisms and their relative importance compared with genetic adaptation.
C1 [Torda, Gergely; Donelson, Jennifer M.; Bay, Line; Foret, Sylvain; Miller, David J.; Moya, Aurelie; van Oppen, Madeleine J. H.; Watson, Sue-Ann; Willis, Bette L.; Munday, Philip L.] James Cook Univ, ARC Ctr Excellence Coral Reef Studies, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Torda, Gergely; Bay, Line; Bourne, David G.; Cantin, Neal; van Oppen, Madeleine J. H.] Australian Inst Marine Sci, PMB 3, Townsville, Qld 4810, Australia.
   [Aranda, Manuel; Berumen, Michael L.; Voolstra, Christian R.] KAUST, Red Sea Res Ctr, Div Biol & Environm Sci, Thuwal 239556900, Saudi Arabia.
   [Aranda, Manuel; Berumen, Michael L.; Voolstra, Christian R.] KAUST, Engn Div BESE, Thuwal 239556900, Saudi Arabia.
   [Barshis, Daniel J.] Old Dominion Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Norfolk, VA 23529 USA.
   [Bourne, David G.; Willis, Bette L.] James Cook Univ, Coll Sci & Engn, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Foret, Sylvain] Australian Natl Univ, Res Sch Biol, Evolut Ecol & Genet, GPO Box 4, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
   [Matz, Mikhail] Univ Texas Austin, Dept Integrat Biol, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
   [Miller, David J.] James Cook Univ, Dept Mol & Cell Biol, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Putnam, Hollie M.] Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Biol Sci, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
   [Ravasi, Timothy] King Abdullah Univ Sci & Technol, KAUST Environm Epigenet Program, Div Biol & Environm Sci & Engn, Thuwal 239556900, Saudi Arabia.
   [van Oppen, Madeleine J. H.] Univ Melbourne, Sch BioSci, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia.
   [Thurber, Rebecca Vega] Oregon State Univ, 454 Nash Hall, Corvallis, OR 97330 USA.
   [Vidal-Dupiol, Jeremie] IFREMER, UMR EIO 241, LabexCorail, BP 7004, F-98719 Tahiti, French Polynesi, France.
   [Vidal-Dupiol, Jeremie] Univ Montpellier, Univ Perpignan, CNRS, IFREMER,IHPE,UMR 5244, Via Domitia, F-34095 Montpellier, France.
   [Whitelaw, Emma] La Trobe Inst Mol Sci, Dept Biochem & Genet, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia.
C3 James Cook University; ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies;
   Australian Institute of Marine Science; King Abdullah University of
   Science & Technology; King Abdullah University of Science & Technology;
   Old Dominion University; James Cook University; Australian National
   University; University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin;
   James Cook University; University of Rhode Island; King Abdullah
   University of Science & Technology; University of Melbourne; Oregon
   State University; Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD);
   Ifremer; Ifremer; Universite de Montpellier; Centre National de la
   Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - Institute of Ecology & Environment
   (INEE); Universite Perpignan Via Domitia
RP Torda, G (corresponding author), James Cook Univ, ARC Ctr Excellence Coral Reef Studies, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.; Torda, G (corresponding author), Australian Inst Marine Sci, PMB 3, Townsville, Qld 4810, Australia.
EM gergely.torda@jcu.edu.au
RI Moya, Aurelie/E-9948-2011; Torda, Gergely/ABE-6400-2020; Putnam,
   Hollie/AFJ-8174-2022; Bay, Line/D-4037-2009; van Oppen,
   Madeleine/C-3261-2008; Vidal-Dupiol, Jeremie/ABG-8874-2020; Bourne,
   David/AFP-9349-2022; Ravasi, Timothy/B-8777-2008; Berumen,
   Michael/F-7745-2011; Aranda Lastra, Manuel/D-9530-2011; Voolstra,
   Christian R./H-7158-2014; Matz, Mikhail/K-4392-2017; Watson,
   Sue-Ann/C-3172-2013; Munday, Philip/F-5443-2011; Donelson,
   Jennifer/M-5531-2018
OI van Oppen, Madeleine JH/0000-0003-4607-0744; Miller,
   David/0000-0003-0291-9531; Vidal-Dupiol, Jeremie/0000-0002-0577-2953;
   Berumen, Michael/0000-0003-2463-2742; Ravasi,
   Timothy/0000-0002-9950-465X; Aranda Lastra, Manuel/0000-0001-6673-016X;
   Voolstra, Christian R./0000-0003-4555-3795; Matz,
   Mikhail/0000-0001-5453-9819; Watson, Sue-Ann/0000-0002-9818-7429;
   Munday, Philip/0000-0001-9725-2498; Donelson,
   Jennifer/0000-0002-0039-5300
FU ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies; King Abdullah
   University of Science and Technology (KAUST); KAUST Office of
   Competitive Research Funds [OCRF-2016-CRG4-25410101]; Division Of Ocean
   Sciences; Directorate For Geosciences [1442306] Funding Source: National
   Science Foundation
FX We dedicate this paper to our close friend and colleague, Dr. Sylvain
   Foret, a leader in coral genomics and invertebrate epigenetics who
   passed away unexpectedly days before this paper was submitted. The
   workshop where this paper was conceived was organized and funded by the
   ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies with additional support
   from the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)
   (M.A., M.L.B., T.R. and C.R.V.) and the KAUST Office of Competitive
   Research Funds award OCRF-2016-CRG4-25410101 (T.R. and M.L.B.). The
   authors would like to thank Xavier Pita for his help with Figs 1-3, Heno
   Hwang for his help with the figure in Box 1, and Hillary Smith for her
   help with Figs 2 and 3.
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NR 114
TC 288
Z9 307
U1 19
U2 348
PU NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
PI LONDON
PA MACMILLAN BUILDING, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD SEP
PY 2017
VL 7
IS 9
BP 627
EP 636
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE3374
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA FF3BC
UT WOS:000408769500012
OA Green Submitted, Bronze
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hossard, L
   Blanc, L
   Lambarraa-Lehnhardt, F
   Dordas, C
   Papakaloudis, P
   Michalitsis, A
   Lampurlanes, J
   Latati, M
   Touama, R
   Kherif, O
   Métral, R
   Plaza-Bonilla, D
AF Hossard, Laure
   Blanc, Louise
   Lambarraa-Lehnhardt, Fatima
   Dordas, Christos
   Papakaloudis, Paschalis
   Michalitsis, Andreas
   Lampurlanes, Jorge
   Latati, Mourad
   Touama, Rima
   Kherif, Omar
   Metral, Raphael
   Plaza-Bonilla, Daniel
TI Co-design of diversified cropping systems in the Mediterranean area
SO EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY
LA English
DT Article
DE Participatory workshop; SWOT analysis; Vines; Cereals; Legumes; Semi
   -arid climate
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; GRAIN-LEGUMES; DECISION-MAKING; WHEAT; FUTURE;
   IRRIGATION; IMPACTS; EVAPOTRANSPIRATION; AGRICULTURE; TEMPERATURE
AB Agriculture today faces opposing challenges: reducing its environmental impacts while feeding a growing pop-ulation and adapting to climate change. Diversification of cropping systems has been proposed as a solution to address these issues and promote sustainable and resilient agricultural systems. While alternatives have been proposed by research and development, changing the agricultural systems remains a huge challenge. Engaging local actors when considering those changes is important for their successful implementation. While co-designing with stakeholders is gaining interest in the scientific community, approaches that consider varying local contexts remain uncommon. In this study, our aim was to co-design, during workshops with local stakeholders, diver-sification options in five case studies located in the Mediterranean countries of Algeria, France, Greece, and Spain. Prior to the co-design process, we conducted a SWOT/PESTLE analysis in each case study to analyze the local context of current and potential agricultural systems. Our hypothesis was that co-designed systems would differ between case studies, according to their environmental, social and political contexts leading to fine-tuned locally ad hoc systems. Options for intercropping and diversifying rotations were considered for both cereal -based systems and vine systems. Additionally, these options included adapted management practices for cereal-based systems and more innovative diversification, such as photovoltaic panels or agroforestry, for vine systems. While some of these options could serve as adaptations to climate change, they may not be sufficient to address future climate conditions. Interestingly, we did not observe significant differences among the system options designed for the various case studies, even though the local contexts were very different. Indeed, options only partially addressed the issues identified by stakeholders: primarily, economic and environmental threats. This study points to the advantage of participatory research in diverse contexts along with cross-case analyses, and to the need to consider the future of these Mediterranean regions, where crop diversification is limited by water deficit. To foster the transition next steps should consider assessing experimentally these systems with farmers to stimulate learning, while considering market possibilities.
C1 [Hossard, Laure] Univ Montpellier, Inst Agro, INRAE, CIRAD,INNOVATION, F-34060 Montpellier, France.
   [Blanc, Louise; Lampurlanes, Jorge; Plaza-Bonilla, Daniel] Univ Lleida, Engn Agrotecnio CERCA Ctr, Dept Agr & Forest Sci, Ave Rovira Roure 191, Lleida 25198, Spain.
   [Lambarraa-Lehnhardt, Fatima] Leibniz Ctr Agr Landscape Res ZALF, D-15374 Muncheberg, Germany.
   [Dordas, Christos; Papakaloudis, Paschalis; Michalitsis, Andreas] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Fac Agr Forestry & Nat Environm, Sch Agr, Thessaloniki 54124, Greece.
   [Latati, Mourad; Touama, Rima; Kherif, Omar] Ecole Natl Super Agron ES1603, Dept Prod Vegetales, Lab Ameliorat Integrat Prod Vegetales C2711100, Ave Hassane Badi, Algiers 16200, Algeria.
   [Metral, Raphael] Univ Montpellier, Inst Agro, ABSys, CIRAD,INRAE, F-34060 Montpellier, France.
C3 Universite de Montpellier; CIRAD; INRAE; Institut Agro; Universitat de
   Lleida; Leibniz Association; Leibniz Zentrum fur
   Agrarlandschaftsforschung (ZALF); Aristotle University of Thessaloniki;
   CIRAD; INRAE; Institut Agro; Universite de Montpellier
RP Hossard, L (corresponding author), Univ Montpellier, Inst Agro, INRAE, CIRAD,INNOVATION, F-34060 Montpellier, France.
EM laure.hossard@inrae.fr
RI Plaza-Bonilla, Daniel/L-5075-2013; latati, mouradr21/AAS-4934-2020;
   Hossard, Laure/HTM-4066-2023
OI METRAL, Raphael/0000-0002-0093-241X; Blanc, Louise/0009-0001-3564-8291;
   Michalitsis, Andreas/0009-0001-2182-2500
FU PRIMA Foundation; European Union [aid PCI2020 - 112297]; ANR for France
   [RYC-2018-024536-I]; Directorate General of Scientific Research and
   Technological Development (DGRSDT-MESRS_Algiers) for Algeria; General
   Secretariat for Research and Technology of the Ministry of Development
   and Investments for Greece; State Research Agency for Spain
   [ANR-19-P026-0008-01]; MICIN/AEI; European Social Fund; Agence Nationale
   de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-19-P026-0008] Funding Source: Agence
   Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)
FX The study was developed in the framework of Biodiversify project (Boost
   ecosystem services through high Biodiversity-based Mediterranean Farming
   systems) from PRIMA Foundation, call 2019-Section 2, a program supported
   by the European Union, and funded by national agencies: ANR for France
   (grant number: ANR-19-P026-0008-01) , Directorate General of Scientific
   Research and Technological Development (DGRSDT-MESRS_Algiers) for
   Algeria, General Secretariat for Research and Technology of the Ministry
   of Development and Investments for Greece, and the State Research Agency
   (aid PCI2020 - 112297 founded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and
   European Union Next Generation EU/PRTR) for Spain. PRIMA is an Art.185
   initiative supported and co-funded under Horizon 2020, the European
   Union ' s Program for Research and Innovation. Daniel Plaza- Bonilla is
   Ram <acute accent> on y Cajal fellow (RYC-2018-024536-I) co-funded by
   MICIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and European Social Fund. Louise Blanc
   was granted with a University of Lleida predoctoral contract.
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NR 85
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 5
U2 15
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1161-0301
EI 1873-7331
J9 EUR J AGRON
JI Eur. J. Agron.
PD FEB
PY 2024
VL 153
AR 127050
DI 10.1016/j.eja.2023.127050
EA DEC 2023
PG 13
WC Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA DV0L4
UT WOS:001134738300001
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gannon, KE
   Conway, D
   Hardman, M
   Nesbitt, A
   Dorling, S
   Borchert, J
AF Gannon, Kate Elizabeth
   Conway, Declan
   Hardman, Mark
   Nesbitt, Alistair
   Dorling, Stephen
   Borchert, Johannes
TI Adaptation to climate change in the UK wine sector
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Private sector adaptation; Adaptation along value chains; Organisational
   adaptation and learning; Adaptation to inter-annual variability and;
   longer-term climate change; Lock-in; UK wine sector
ID ORGANIZATIONAL ROUTINES; GROWING REGIONS; CHANGE RISK; FUTURE; GRAPE;
   VULNERABILITY; VITICULTURE; VARIABILITY; SUITABILITY; CHALLENGES
AB This research contributes to literature on private sector adaptation, examining business-level adaptation to climate change in the UK wine sector. The research adopts a temporal and relational view of adaptation, through a sector-wide, value chain lens and through considering adaptation to both climate variability and longer-term change. Using the lens of 'a good year' and 'a bad year' in the sector, we consider the role of extreme events in adaptation decision-making and learning. We focus, unusually, on both opportunities and risks of climate change. Results show businesses increasingly see climate change as an opportunity for the UK wine sector. Yet climate risks remain and propagate along value chains, through supply and demand. This produces winners and losers in 'good years' and 'bad years', as well as over longer timescales. We find businesses along the value chain take steps to engage in extensive proactive adaptation behaviour, often right from business design and development. Business relationships condition climate risk exposure and adaptive capacity and adaptation decisions within one business can influence risks and opportunities throughout the value chain. Our results also reflect and develop organisational adaptation theories. We find businesses continually refine their adaptation strategies in response to climate variability and extreme events. They enhance adaptation learning by experimenting with new technologies and strategies. Irregular and extreme events can become important focal or tipping points in creative iteration and innovation of adaptation strategies, including for longer-term climate change. Our results stand in contrast to earlier literatures which suggest that businesses consider climate change to be too uncertain, or long-term, to engage in adaptation. Instead, climate change has become a master-narrative within the wine industry, through which sector actors often interpret their experiences and orient their business design and activities. Results indicate a strong dependence on own experience in adaptation decision making, that risks creating adaptation lock-in. We propose a typology of proactive private sector adaptation responses.
C1 [Gannon, Kate Elizabeth; Conway, Declan] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, London, England.
   [Hardman, Mark] UCL, Inst Educ, London, England.
   [Nesbitt, Alistair] Vinescapes Ltd, Dorking, England.
   [Dorling, Stephen] Univ East Anglia, Sch Environm Sci, Norwich, England.
   [Borchert, Johannes] One Acre Fund, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 University of London; London School Economics & Political Science;
   University of London; University College London; UCL Institute of
   Education; University of East Anglia
RP Gannon, KE (corresponding author), London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, London, England.
EM k.e.gannon@lse.ac.uk
RI Conway, Declan/HCH-7778-2022
OI Gannon, Kate/0000-0001-6742-8982; Conway, Declan/0000-0002-4590-6733
FU Wines of Great Britain (WineGB); Climate REsilience in the UK Wine
   Sector (CREWS -UK) - UK Natural Environment Research Council, UK Climate
   Resilience Programme [NE/S016848/1]; Grantham Foundation for the
   Protection of the Environment; UK Economic and Social Research Council
   the through Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy
   [ES/R009708/1]; ESRC [ES/R009708/1] Funding Source: UKRI; UKRI
   [NE/S016848/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX The authors thank all the interview participants who generously shared
   their time and knowledge to produce this work, as well as Wines of Great
   Britain (WineGB) for their support of this project and for enabling
   sector engagement opportunities. We also thank Laura Canevari for very
   helpful comments on an earlier version of this paper. This paper was
   produced through the Climate REsilience in the UK Wine Sector (CREWS
   -UK) project (https:// www.lse.ac.uk/granthaminstitute/resilient-wine/)
   funded by the UK Natural Environment Research Council (Grant number
   NE/S016848/1) as part of the UK Climate Resilience Programme (https://
   www.ukclimateresilience.org) . K. Gannon and D. Conway are also
   supported by funding from the Grantham Foundation for the Protection of
   the Environment and the UK Economic and Social Research Council
   (ES/R009708/1) through the Centre for Climate Change Economics and
   Policy.
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NR 100
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 5
U2 13
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2023
VL 42
AR 100572
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2023.100572
EA NOV 2023
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA CM8L3
UT WOS:001125757400001
OA Green Accepted, gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kaushik, P
   Prohens, J
   Vilanova, S
   Gramazio, P
   Plazas, M
AF Kaushik, Prashant
   Prohens, Jaime
   Vilanova, Santiago
   Gramazio, Pietro
   Plazas, Mariola
TI Phenotyping of Eggplant Wild Relatives and Interspecific Hybrids with
   Conventional and Phenomics Descriptors Provides Insight for Their
   Potential Utilization in Breeding
SO FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE descriptors; genepools; intespecific hybrids; introgression breeding;
   phenomics; Solanum melongena; Tomato Analyzer
ID SOLANUM-MELONGENA; GENETIC DIVERSITY; CROP; HYBRIDIZATION; SOLANACEAE;
   DOMESTICATION; CONSERVATION; RESISTANCE; VARIETIES
AB Eggplant (Solanum melongena) is related to a large number of wild species that are a source of variation for breeding programmes, in particular for traits related to adaptation to climate change. However, wild species remain largely unexploited for eggplant breeding. Detailed phenotypic characterization of wild species and their hybrids with eggplant may allow identifying promising wild species and information on the genetic control and heterosis of relevant traits. We characterizated six eggplant accessions, 21 accessions of 12 wild species (the only primary genepool species S. insanurn and 11 secondary genepool species) and 45 interspecific hybrids of eggplant with wild species (18 with S. insanum and 27 with secondary genepool species) using 27 conventional morphological descriptors and 20 fruit morphometric descriptors obtained with the phenomics tool Tomato Analyzer. Significant differences were observed among cultivated, wild and interspecific hybrid groups for 18 conventional and 18 Tomato Analyzer descriptors, with hybrids generally having intermediate values. Wild species were generally more variable than cultivated accessions and interspecific hybrids displayed intermediate ranges of variation and coefficient of variation (CV) values, except for fruit shape traits in which the latter were the most variable. The multivariate principal components analysis (PCA) reveals a clear separation of wild species and cultivated accessions. Interspecific hybrids with S. insanum plotted closer to cultivated eggplant, while hybrids with secondary genepool species generally clustered together with wild species. Many differences were observed among wild species for traits of agronomic interest, which allowed identifying species of greatest potential interest for eggplant breeding. Heterosis values were positive for most vigor-related traits, while for fruit size values were close to zero for hybrids with S. incanum and highly negative for hybrids with secondary genepool species. Our results allowed the identification of potentially interesting wild species and interspecific hybrids for introgression breeding in eggplant. This is an important step for broadening the genetic base of eggplant and for breeding for adaptation to climate change in this crop.
C1 [Kaushik, Prashant; Prohens, Jaime; Vilanova, Santiago; Gramazio, Pietro; Plazas, Mariola] Univ Politecn Valencia, Inst Conservac & Mejora Agrodiversidad Valenciana, E-46022 Valencia, Spain.
C3 Universitat Politecnica de Valencia
RP Prohens, J (corresponding author), Univ Politecn Valencia, Inst Conservac & Mejora Agrodiversidad Valenciana, E-46022 Valencia, Spain.
EM jprohens@btc.upv.es
RI Prohens, Jaime/ABF-1229-2021; vilanova, santiago/H-6943-2015; De La O
   Plazas Ávila, Maria/AAA-8711-2019; Gramazio, Pietro/O-3143-2017;
   Kaushik, Prashant/LEM-1009-2024; Prohens, Jaime/H-2228-2015
OI vilanova, santiago/0000-0003-4939-9713; Prohens,
   Jaime/0000-0003-1181-9065; Kaushik, Prashant/0000-0002-3145-2849;
   Gramazio, Pietro/0000-0003-2226-7999; Plazas,
   Mariola/0000-0001-8090-7312
FU European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
   [677379]; Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad; FEDER
   [AGL2015-64755-R]
FX This work was undertaken as part of the initinative "Adapting
   Agriculture to Climate Change: Collecting, Protecting and Preparing Crop
   Wild Relatives" which is supported by the Government of Norway. The
   project is managed by the Global Crop Diversity Trust with the
   Millennium Seed Bank of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and implemented
   in partnership with national and international gene banks and plant
   breeding institutes around the world. For further information see the
   project website: http://www.cwrdiversity.org/. This work has also been
   funded in part by European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation
   programme under grant agreement No 677379 (G2P-SOL) and from Spanish
   Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad and FEDER (grant
   AGL2015-64755-R). Prashant Kaushik is grateful to ICAR for a
   pre-doctoral grant. Pietro Gramazio is grateful to Universitat
   Politecnica de Valencia for a pre-doctoral (Programa FPI de la
   UPV-Subprograma 1/2013 call) contract.
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NR 42
TC 63
Z9 65
U1 0
U2 61
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
SN 1664-462X
J9 FRONT PLANT SCI
JI Front. Plant Sci.
PD MAY 19
PY 2016
VL 7
AR 677
DI 10.3389/fpls.2016.00677
PG 16
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA DM2BQ
UT WOS:000376151500001
PM 27242876
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Glaas, E
   Hjerpe, M
   Wihlborg, E
   Storbjörk, S
AF Glaas, Erik
   Hjerpe, Mattias
   Wihlborg, Elin
   Storbjork, Sofie
TI Disentangling municipal capacities for citizen participation in
   transformative climate adaptation
SO ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE citizen participation; climate change adaptation; urban transformative
   capacity
ID COLLABORATIVE GOVERNANCE; VULNERABILITY; ENGAGEMENT; CITIES; HEAT; CITY
AB Transformative adaptation is described as decisive to mitigating risks and to seizing opportunities from a changing climate, requiring new ways of governing, planning and collaborating, alongside technical innovations. Building municipal capacities for citizen participation in adaptation is important to enabling such transformational changes but remains challenging. By applying capacities distilled from the literature on Urban Transformative Capacity and Participatory Climate Governance in a Swedish municipal case, this study aims to disentangle key limits for, and innovations to strengthen, local capacities for citizen participation in transformative climate adaptation. Interviews with municipal officials, focus groups with citizens, and document analyses were employed to analyse how climate adaptation and citizen participation are governed, and how these policy areas are interacting and could be bridged. The study points at conditions that foremost prevent bridging established policies and practices on adaptation and citizen participation, stemming from the different logics and distribution of responsibility within, and lacking collaboration between, these separated policy areas. The analysis concludes that potential ways to enable citizen participation in adaptation involve: broadening the geographical boundaries of deliberations; redefining the target groups for participation; co-designing participation targets, approaches and evaluation; and developing new ways to analyse and act on the patterns in the citizen inputs received.
C1 [Glaas, Erik; Hjerpe, Mattias; Storbjork, Sofie] Linkoping Univ, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Wihlborg, Elin] Linkoping Univ, Dept Management & Engn Polit Sci, Linkoping, Sweden.
C3 Linkoping University; Linkoping University
RP Glaas, E (corresponding author), Linkoping Univ, Linkoping, Sweden.
EM erik.glaas@liu.se
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NR 45
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 2
U2 27
PU WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA ONE MONTGOMERY ST, SUITE 1200, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104 USA
SN 1756-932X
EI 1756-9338
J9 ENVIRON POLICY GOV
JI Environ. Policy Gov.
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 32
IS 3
SI SI
BP 179
EP 191
DI 10.1002/eet.1982
EA MAR 2022
PG 13
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 2G3XW
UT WOS:000768547400001
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mehmood, HZ
   S-Alotibi, Y
   Ali, A
   Ali, A
   Ali, S
   Muzamil, MR
   Shah, SIA
AF Mehmood, Hafiz Zahid
   S-Alotibi, Yahya
   Ali, Ahsan
   Ali, Asghar
   Ali, Shoukat
   Muzamil, Muhammad Rafay
   Shah, Syed Imran Ahmed
TI Socio-economic advantages and climate adaptation in sustainable vs.
   conventional cotton: evidence from Pakistan
SO FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE better cotton; environment; yield; cost of production; benefit-cost
   ratio
ID USE EFFICIENCY; FARMERS; PUNJAB; AGRICULTURE; IRRIGATION; TRADE; WATER
AB Two groups of cotton growers participated in this study; the first, referred as "conventional cotton producers" (CCPs), continues to use traditional techniques. The second group, known as sustainable cotton producers (SCPs), adheres to practices that are socially acceptable, economically feasible, and environment friendly. This study was designed to undertake a thorough socio-economic analysis of CCP and SCP in terms of cost of production, yield, and adaptations for climate change. The data were collected from a total of 275 farming households (138 SCPs and 137 CCPs) from two districts, namely, Bahawalpur and Rajanpur, Punjab, Pakistan. The data were analyzed using the benefit-cost ratio (BCR), paired sampled t-test, and log-log regression model in SPSS. The results of the study revealed that the cost of production for SCP was significantly less than CCP and the value of BCR for SCP is higher than CCP. The results of the study also revealed that the land preparation costs, irrigation costs, and fertilizer and pesticide costs decrease the cotton yield of CCP, while land area owned and picking costs showed no significant influence on the yield of CCP. On the other hand, all cost items except fertilizer cost have a positive impact on CCP's cotton yield. The results also indicated that SCP farmers adopted more of adaptation practices for climate change than CCP. This study concluded that SCP has significant advantages over CCP. Therefore, it is recommended that the government should prioritize incentives for SCP adoption to enhance yield and environmental sustainability in cotton farming.
C1 [Mehmood, Hafiz Zahid] Muhammad Nawaz Sharif Univ Agr, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, Multan, Pakistan.
   [S-Alotibi, Yahya] King Saud Univ, Coll Food & Agr Sci, Dept Agr Extens & Rural Soc, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
   [Ali, Ahsan; Ali, Asghar; Ali, Shoukat; Muzamil, Muhammad Rafay] Univ Agr Faisalabad, Inst Agr Extens Educ & Rural Dev, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
   [Shah, Syed Imran Ahmed] Islamia Univ Bahawalpur, Dept Media Studies, Bahawalpur, Pakistan.
C3 King Saud University; University of Agriculture Faisalabad; Islamia
   University of Bahawalpur
RP Ali, A (corresponding author), Univ Agr Faisalabad, Inst Agr Extens Educ & Rural Dev, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
EM asgharali2878@gmail.com
RI Ali, Asghar/KFB-5838-2024
OI Ali, Asghar/0000-0002-7702-2983
FU Deanship of Scientific Research, King Saud University; Agricultural
   Research Center, College of Food and Agriculture Science, King Saud
   University
FX The authors were very thankful to the Deanship of Scientific Research,
   King Saud University, and the Agricultural Research Center, College of
   Food and Agriculture Science, King Saud University, for their valuable
   support and cooperation.
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NR 67
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2571-581X
J9 FRONT SUSTAIN FOOD S
JI Front. Sustain. Food Syst.
PD SEP 13
PY 2024
VL 8
AR 1435747
DI 10.3389/fsufs.2024.1435747
PG 13
WC Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Food Science & Technology
GA G9S2G
UT WOS:001319943400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dookie, DS
   Conway, D
   Dessai, S
   Oliner, E
AF Dookie, Denyse S.
   Conway, Declan
   Dessai, Suraje
   Oliner, Evan
TI Organisational perceptions of adapting to a changing climate
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Organisations; Perceptions; Adaptive
   capacity; Preparedness
ID PRIVATE-SECTOR; PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS; ADAPTATION; UK; WEATHER; RISK;
   EXPERIENCE; BARRIERS; IMPACTS; POLICY
AB Organisations, in the private, public and third sectors, are critical stakeholders and actors in the governance of climate change adaptation. Understanding organisational perceptions of preparedness, risk and response to climate change is important for effective climate adaptationfocused actions and policy design. Our study focuses on two research questions: what factors influence adaptation actions by organisations?, and what do organisations mean by the term 'adaptation'? To address these, we developed and analysed a national survey of UK-based organisations' perceptions of adapting to a changing climate, administered in spring 2021 (n = 2,429). Our findings confirm that awareness matters: respondents who reported that their organisation had high levels of concern about climate change risk or threat, and which had greater integration of adaptation within processes, are more likely to take adaptation action. In addition, we find a positive relationship between the occurrence and type of extreme event experienced and increased adaptation action by organisations. However, when asked about specific adaptation measures taken by organisations, examples of mitigation are more frequently mentioned compared to adaptation-type actions. Whether this may signal confusion or conflation of adaptation and mitigation by organisations requires further study. These findings offer critical insights into the perceptions of organisations as pivotal leaders of enacting responses to climate change. A renewed focus on organisational experiences, awareness, attitudes and capacity regarding adaptation can assist in better understanding how organisations can facilitate improved climate-resilient decision-making.
C1 [Dookie, Denyse S.; Conway, Declan] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England.
   [Dessai, Suraje] Univ Leeds, Sustainabil Res Inst, Sch Earth & Environm, Leeds, England.
   [Dessai, Suraje] Univ Leeds, Priestley Ctr Climate Futures, Leeds, England.
   [Oliner, Evan] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Dept Int Dev, London, England.
C3 University of London; London School Economics & Political Science;
   University of Leeds; University of Leeds
RP Dookie, DS (corresponding author), London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England.
EM d.dookie@lse.ac.uk
RI Dessai, Suraje/D-4219-2009; Conway, Declan/HCH-7778-2022
OI Conway, Declan/0000-0002-4590-6733; Dookie, Denyse/0000-0003-2702-1576
FU UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Centre for Climate Change
   Economics and Policy (CCCEP) [ES/R009708/1]; UK Economic and Social
   Research Council (ESRC) CCCEP Legacy Centre Status [ES/Y008278/1];
   Research England QR-SPF at the University of Leeds; Grantham Research
   Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, at the London School of
   Economics; Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment;
   SPF UK Climate Resilience Champion [NE/S017321/1]
FX Financial support was received and is gratefully acknowledged from the
   UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Centre for Climate Change
   Economics and Policy (CCCEP) (ref. ES/R009708/1) and the CCCEP Legacy
   Centre Status (ref. ES/Y008278/1) , well as Research England QR-SPF at
   the University of Leeds. Denyse S Dookie and Declan Conway also
   acknowledge funding from Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change
   and the Environment, at the London School of Economics, and the Grantham
   Foundation for the Protection of the Environment. Suraje Dessai
   acknowledges funding from the SPF UK Climate Resilience Champion
   (NE/S017321/1) .
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NR 77
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 33
U2 33
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2024
VL 45
AR 100637
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2024.100637
EA AUG 2024
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA D5U4Y
UT WOS:001296828700001
OA gold, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Lumbroso, D
   Ramsbottom, D
AF Lumbroso, Darren
   Ramsbottom, David
BE Zommers, Z
   Alverson, K
TI Flood Risk Management in the United Kingdom: Putting Climate Change
   Adaptation Into Practice in the Thames Estuary
SO RESILIENCE: THE SCIENCE OF ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID ENGLAND
C1 [Lumbroso, Darren; Ramsbottom, David] HR Wallingford, Wallingford, Oxon, England.
C3 HR Wallingford Limited
RP Lumbroso, D (corresponding author), HR Wallingford, Wallingford, Oxon, England.
RI Lumbroso, Darren/AAF-2561-2020
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NR 16
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 6
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
BN 978-0-12-811892-4; 978-0-12-811891-7
PY 2018
BP 79
EP 87
DI 10.1016/B978-0-12-811891-7.00006-2
D2 10.1016/C2016-0-02121-6
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BM4JN
UT WOS:000463395600008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cornwall, E
AF Cornwall, Emma
TI Art Therapy Approaches: What Regenerative Practices Can Teach Us About
   Our Self and Environmental Systems
SO ART THERAPY
LA English
DT Article
DE Nature-based art therapy; regenerative agriculture; systems thinking;
   the ETC
AB Contemporary US and European approaches to ecosystems and mental health have left many feeling disempowered in the face of the climate crisis. This article advocates for holistic approaches to supporting natural complex systems with contemplation and care. It explores how environmental metaphors and nature-based art therapy can foster human-nature connections, call for deep listening, reshape practitioner perceptions, and enhance understandings of internal and external worlds. Further, how existing frameworks such as the Expressive Therapies Continuum (ETC), can highlight the therapeutic qualities of nature-based art therapy and the potential for adaptation through the expressed paradigm shift. This article proposes that responsive mental health care can be adapted to better address the necessary changes required to support the global community and environment as we listen and adapt to climate change.
C1 [Cornwall, Emma] La Trobe Univ, Sch Psychol & Publ Hlth, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
C3 La Trobe University
RP Cornwall, E (corresponding author), La Trobe Univ, Sch Psychol & Publ Hlth, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
EM emmacornwall35@gmail.com
FX I would like to acknowledge the Gunaikurnai people and Wurundjeri people
   of the Kulin Nation as the traditional custodians of the lands that I
   have written this article on. I would like to pay my respects to their
   elders past, present, and emerging. It is with my respect that I
   acknowledge the First Nations connection to the land and the knowledge
   systems that exist and continue to evolve. First Peoples understandings
   significantly pre-date the concepts discussed in this article,
   particularly in relation to caring for land and role of the metaphoric
   expression and arts in storytelling and wellbeing practices.
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NR 20
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 5
U2 5
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0742-1656
EI 2159-9394
J9 ART THER
JI Art Ther.
PD JUL 2
PY 2024
VL 41
IS 3
SI SI
BP 155
EP 159
DI 10.1080/07421656.2024.2373577
EA AUG 2024
PG 5
WC Psychology, Clinical
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Psychology
GA H3K6N
UT WOS:001283044900001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Patowary, S
   Hazarika, J
   Sarma, AK
AF Patowary, S.
   Hazarika, J.
   Sarma, A. K.
BE Singh, UP
   Chahar, BR
   Yadav, HRP
   Vij, SK
TI Potential Impact of Climate Change on Rainfall Extremes for Urban
   Drainage Management
SO URBANIZATION CHALLENGES IN EMERGING ECONOMIES: ENERGY AND WATER
   INFRASTRUCTURE; TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE; AND PLANNING AND
   FINANCING
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT American-Society-of-Civil-Engineers (ASCE) India Conference on
   Urbanization Challenges in Emerging Economies - Resilience and
   Sustainability of Infrastructure
CY DEC 12-14, 2017
CL New Delhi, INDIA
SP Amer Soc Civil Engineers, India Sect, Indian Inst Technol Delhi, Inst Engineers
ID MODEL OUTPUT; CURVES; GIS
AB Rapid urbanization in developing cities like Guwahati imposes significant changes in hydrological characteristics, causing frequent flash floods, and water logging, which are further enhanced by impact of the changing climate. Hence, there is an urgent need of incorporating climate change impacts in design of urban drainage structures. In this study, future precipitation of Guwahati has been forecasted for the period 2006-2100 for GCM models ESM2G and ESM2M, considering RCP8.5 scenario. IDF curves were generated using these predicted rainfall series. Rainfall intensities for both models were found to be higher than that of observed data, ESM2G being the highest. The effect of this increase in intensity was analyzed on a mini-watershed in Fatasil Hill of Guwahati City. Under ESM2G and ESM2M, both peak discharge and sediment loss were found to be increasing from the watershed. This implies upgrading the drainage system, adapting climate change impacted discharge for hydraulic design.
C1 [Patowary, S.; Hazarika, J.; Sarma, A. K.] IIT Guwahati, Dept Civil Engn, Gauhati 781039, India.
C3 Indian Institute of Technology System (IIT System); Indian Institute of
   Technology (IIT) - Guwahati
RP Patowary, S (corresponding author), IIT Guwahati, Dept Civil Engn, Gauhati 781039, India.
EM sagarika.patowary@iitg.ernet.in; jayshree@iitg.ernet.in;
   aks@iitg.ernet.in
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NR 43
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
PI NEW YORK
PA UNITED ENGINEERING CENTER, 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017-2398 USA
BN 978-0-7844-8202-5
PY 2018
BP 256
EP 266
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Engineering, Civil; Urban Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Development Studies; Engineering; Urban Studies
GA BM3DC
UT WOS:000461896200027
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nana, M
   Coetzer, K
   Vogel, C
AF Nana, Manisha
   Coetzer, Kaera
   Vogel, Coleen
TI Facing the heat: initial probing of the City of Johannesburg's
   heat-health planning
SO SOUTH AFRICAN GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; City of Johannesburg; environmental health;
   heat waves; local government; South Africa
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; URBAN-ENVIRONMENT; BARRIERS; OPPORTUNITIES;
   VULNERABILITY; AFRICA; POLICY; RISK
AB The City of Johannesburg (CoJ) will likely experience more frequent heat waves by 2100, the health impacts of which are being prioritized for strategic focus. We identified challenges and opportunities for better operationalizing heat wave considerations within the Environmental Health Department of the City of Johannesburg. By obtaining a deeper appreciation of the 'issues of concern' and existing 'contradictions', that is the context in which these practitioners are located, the opportunities and barriers to engagement, helps to surface the issues that may confront the City when planning for extreme heat and climate change adaptation in the future. Currently, heat waves are absent from the local Department's mandate, with unclear legislative requirements blurring the responsibility for heat wave planning. Service delivery backlogs relegate heat wave considerations, as do the Department's constituencies for whom heat waves are not yet of concern. However, heat wave planning supports community health education; raising public awareness of associated health risks and should be considered in future 'climate proofing' the City.
C1 [Nana, Manisha; Vogel, Coleen] Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Anim Plant & Environm Sci, Johannesburg, South Africa.
   [Coetzer, Kaera] Rhodes Univ, Dept Environm Sci, Grahamstown, South Africa.
   [Vogel, Coleen] Univ Witwatersrand, Global Change Inst, Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of Witwatersrand; Rhodes University; University of
   Witwatersrand
RP Coetzer, K (corresponding author), Rhodes Univ, Dept Environm Sci, Grahamstown, South Africa.
EM klcoetzer@gmail.com
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NR 61
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 16
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0373-6245
EI 2151-2418
J9 S AFR GEOGR J
JI S. Afr. Geogr. J.
PD MAY 4
PY 2019
VL 101
IS 2
BP 253
EP 268
DI 10.1080/03736245.2019.1599412
EA APR 2019
PG 16
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA HY1OS
UT WOS:000463963200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ceccarelli, S
   Grando, S
AF Ceccarelli, Salvatore
   Grando, Stefania
TI Return to Agrobiodiversity: Participatory Plant Breeding
SO DIVERSITY-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE biodiversity; participation; decentralization; climate change; human
   health; genotype x environment interaction; breeding efficiency
ID SELECTION; BIODIVERSITY; STABILITY; CONSUMERS; FARMERS
AB Biodiversity in general, and agrobiodiversity in particular are crucial for adaptation to climate change, for resilience and for human health as related to dietary diversity. Participatory plant breeding (PPB) has been promoted for its advantages to increase selection efficiency, variety adoption and farmers' empowerment, and for being more socially equitable and gender responsive than conventional plant breeding. In this review paper we concentrate on one specific benefit of PPB, namely, increasing agrobiodiversity by describing how the combination of decentralized selection with the collaboration of farmers is able to address the diversity of agronomic environments, which is likely to increase because of the location specificity of climate change. Therefore, while PPB has been particularly suited to organic agriculture, in light of the increasing importance of climate change, it should also be considered as a breeding opportunity for conventional agriculture.
C1 [Ceccarelli, Salvatore; Grando, Stefania] Corso Mazzini 256, I-63100 Ascoli Piceno, Italy.
RP Ceccarelli, S (corresponding author), Corso Mazzini 256, I-63100 Ascoli Piceno, Italy.
EM ceccarelli.salvatore83@gmail.com; sgrando56@gmail.com
OI Grando, Stefania/0000-0002-0255-8433; Ceccarelli,
   Salvatore/0000-0003-3063-9836
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NR 57
TC 20
Z9 22
U1 3
U2 19
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1424-2818
J9 DIVERSITY-BASEL
JI Diversity-Basel
PD FEB
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 2
AR 126
DI 10.3390/d14020126
PG 9
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZK1AA
UT WOS:000762727200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Boyd, E
   Street, R
   Gawith, M
   Lonsdale, K
   Newton, L
   Johnstone, K
   Metcalf, G
AF Boyd, Emily
   Street, Roger
   Gawith, Megan
   Lonsdale, Kate
   Newton, Laurie
   Johnstone, Kay
   Metcalf, Gerry
BE Ford, JD
   BerrangFord, L
TI Leading the UK Adaptation Agenda: A Landscape of Stakeholders and
   Networked Organizations for Adaptation to Climate Change
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION IN DEVELOPED NATIONS: FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE
SE Advances in Global Change Research
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Adaptation; Mapping; UK stakeholders; Institutions; Science; Policy;
   United Kingdom; Stakeholders; UKCIP; Adaptation legislation
AB This chapter is a review of the landscape of adaptation science and policy stakeholders and networks in the United Kingdom. The aim is to broadly map the key stakeholders and the activities in the science and policy sectors, and across regions and the Devolved Administrations. This is done to gain a better understanding of the range and scope of adaptation actions in the United Kingdom to date. The chapter makes advances in understanding the evolution of the UK adaptation landscape and demonstrates how adaptation policy and science are building adaptive capacity across institutions and networks. We conclude that adaptation policy and actions represent a change to living with climate change futures. The chapter also highlights that there remain significant challenges ahead, in particular in the realm of science.
C1 [Boyd, Emily] Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Street, Roger; Gawith, Megan; Lonsdale, Kate; Newton, Laurie; Johnstone, Kay; Metcalf, Gerry] Environm Change Inst, UK Climate Impacts Programme, Oxford, England.
C3 University of Leeds; University of Oxford
RP Boyd, E (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
EM e.boyd@leeds.ac.uk; roger.street@ukcip.org.uk;
   megan.gawith@ukcip.org.uk; kate.lonsdale@ukcip.org.uk;
   laurie.newton@ukcip.org.uk; kay.johnstone@ukcip.org.uk;
   Gerry.metcalf@ukcip.org.uk
RI Boyd, Emily/KEE-8802-2024
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NR 37
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 11
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1574-0919
BN 978-94-007-0566-1
J9 ADV GLOB CHANGE RES
JI Adv. Glob. Change Res.
PY 2011
VL 42
BP 85
EP 102
DI 10.1007/978-94-007-0567-8_6
D2 10.1007/978-94-007-0567-8
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BWE55
UT WOS:000293761100006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Reid, H
   Dodman, D
   Janssen, R
   Huq, S
AF Reid, Hannah
   Dodman, David
   Janssen, Rod
   Huq, Saleemul
BE Dodson, J
TI Building Capacity to Cope with Climate Change in the Least Developed
   Countries
SO CHANGING CLIMATES, EARTH SYSTEMS AND SOCIETY
SE International Year of Planet Earth
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Capacity strengthening; Adaptation; Least developed countries; Outreach;
   Evaluation
ID ADAPTATION
AB The least developed countries (LDCs) are particularly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, due to a combination of physical vulnerability and limited coping capacity. The poor in these countries rely heavily on natural resources, are severely affected by climate variability such as floods and droughts and have limited savings and few alternative livelihood opportunities to respond to shocks and stresses resulting from climate change. This chapter outlines these challenges and describes the Capacity Strengthening in the LDCs for Adaptation to Climate Change (CLACC) programme, an initiative to build civil society capacity to address these. It evaluates the role of a range of activities including supporting civil society participation at key meetings, conducting relevant research and facilitating outreach activities that can help low-income nations and their most vulnerable citizens respond to the challenges of climate change.
C1 [Reid, Hannah; Dodman, David; Huq, Saleemul] Int Inst Environm & Dev, Climate Change Grp, London WC1H 0DD, England.
   [Dodman, David] Int Inst Environm & Dev, Human Settlements Grp, London WC1H 0DD, England.
   [Janssen, Rod] Energy & Environm Consultant, London W4 1DX, England.
RP Reid, H (corresponding author), Int Inst Environm & Dev, Climate Change Grp, London WC1H 0DD, England.
EM hannah.reid@iied.org; david.dodman@iied.org; rod.janssen@gmail.com;
   saleemul.huq@iied.org
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Z9 5
U1 0
U2 10
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
BN 978-90-481-8715-7
J9 INT YEAR PLANET EART
PY 2010
BP 217
EP 230
DI 10.1007/978-90-481-8716-4_11
D2 10.1007/978-90-481-8716-4
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA BRI57
UT WOS:000282775600011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hossen, MA
   Netherton, C
   Benson, D
   Rahman, MR
   Salehin, M
AF Hossen, M. Anwar
   Netherton, Corinna
   Benson, David
   Rahman, Mohammad Rezaur
   Salehin, Mashfiqus
TI A governance perspective for climate change adaptation: Conceptualizing
   the policy-community interface in Bangladesh
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; National policy; Bangladesh; Reactive
   Approach of Limited Action (RALA); Proactive Approach To Adaptation
   (PATA); Government decision -making processes
ID RESPONSES; STRATEGIES; MANAGEMENT; CONFLICT; BARRIERS; CANADA; HEALTH
AB Climate change adaptation is currently an important community concern in developing countries like Bangladesh. The conceptualization of adaptation within the government system matters for the promotion of activities such as employment generation for local communities. The lesser the gap between government policy and the local community's needs for adaptation the more effective outcomes are for ensuring policy success and promoting sustainable community livelihoods or vice versa. This interface between policy and community is important for climate change adaptation which is explored in this paper along with the findings of the research project, DEltas, vulnerability and climate change: Migration and Adaptation (DECCMA) conducted during 2014-2018 in Bangladesh, Ghana, India, and the United Kingdom. The data from Bangladesh was collected from 1384 survey respondents, 19 Focus Group Discussions (FGDs), 3 workshops, and 43 Key Informant Interviews (KIIs). The findings of the paper show that government adaptation activities mainly reflect the Reactive Approach of Limited Action (RALA) perspective rather than the Proactive Approach To Adaptation (PATA). The RALA perspective is characterized by piecemeal and top-down approaches to adaptation which fail to recognize a community conceptualization of climate change, policy perspectives for coping with local concerns, and governance approaches for effective adaptation. In response, the government needs to focus on the PATA in policy, programs, and projects with the governance approach implemented from the bottom-up or, in other words, from the local perspective. Community participation in decision-making processes is characteristic of this bottom-up governance model. Local community participation, consultation, and representation are essential parts of PATA in adaptation policy formulation and execution, providing important lessons for Bangladesh.
C1 [Netherton, Corinna] Univ British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
   [Hossen, M. Anwar] Univ Dhaka, Dept Sociol, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
   [Benson, David] Univ Exeter, Coll Social Sci & Int Studies, Exeter, England.
   [Rahman, Mohammad Rezaur; Salehin, Mashfiqus] Bangladesh Univ Engn & Technol BUET, Inst Water & Flood Management IWFM, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
C3 University of British Columbia; University of Dhaka; University of
   Exeter; Bangladesh University of Engineering & Technology (BUET)
RP Hossen, MA (corresponding author), Univ Dhaka, Dept Sociol, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
EM anwar_sociology@du.ac.bd; cnethert@hotmail.com; D.I.Benson@exeter.ac.uk;
   rezaur@iwfm.buet.ac.bd; mashfiqussalehin@iwfm.buet.ac.bd
RI Rahman, Mohammed Mofizur/AEY-5973-2022
OI Rahman, Mohammad Rezaur/0000-0001-5355-8305
FU DEltas, vulnerability and Climate Change: Migration and Adaptation
   (DECCMA) project; UK governments Department for International
   Development (DFID); International Development Research Centre (IDRC) ,
   Canada; IDRC [107642]
FX This work was carried out under the DEltas, vulnerability and Climate
   Change: Migration and Adaptation (DECCMA) project which is part of
   Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia (CARIAA)
   , with financial support from the UK governments Department for
   International Development (DFID) and the International Development
   Research Centre (IDRC) , Canada. The IDRC Project Number is 107642. The
   views expressed in this work are those of the creators and do not
   necessarily represent those of DFID and IDRC or its board of governors.
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TC 5
Z9 7
U1 4
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 137
BP 174
EP 184
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2022.08.028
EA SEP 2022
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 5A9TF
UT WOS:000863220700018
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McNamara, KE
   Westoby, R
   Smithers, SG
AF McNamara, Karen E.
   Westoby, Ross
   Smithers, Scott G.
TI Identification of limits and barriers to climate change adaptation: case
   study of two islands in Torres Strait, Australia
SO GEOGRAPHICAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; barriers and limits; indigenous communities; place;
   sustainable livelihoods; Torres Strait<<^>>
ID COMMUNITY-BASED ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; RESILIENCE; MANAGEMENT;
   KNOWLEDGE; PROJECTS; REEF; ERUB
AB Communities living on remote islands are often viewed as among the most exposed and vulnerable to climate change impacts. This study uses the Sustainable Livelihoods Framework to investigate how indigenous communities living on two physically different islands in Torres Strait, Australia, experience what they consider to be the impacts of climate change in relation to their daily lives. During this process, a series of natural, physical, and socio-cultural limits and barriers to climate change adaptation were identified on Boigu, a low-lying mud island inundated by the sea during high tides and storm surges. As a volcanic island, Erub's elevation is higher but significant community infrastructure, housing, and cultural sites are located on the low coastal fringe. No immediate limits to climate change adaptation were identified on Erub, but physical and socio-cultural barriers were revealed. Limits to climate change adaptation occur when adaptation actions fail to protect the things valued by those affected, or few adaptation options are available. Barriers to climate change adaptation may be overcome if recognised and addressed but can become entrenched limits if they are ignored. Within the participating communities, such limits and barriers included (a) restricted adaptation options due to limited access to particular livelihood assets; (b) difficulty engaging with government processes to secure external support; and (c) people's place-based values, which evoke a reluctance to relocate or retreat.
C1 [McNamara, Karen E.; Westoby, Ross] Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Smithers, Scott G.] James Cook Univ, Coll Sci & Engn, Townsville, Qld, Australia.
C3 University of Queensland; James Cook University
RP McNamara, KE (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
EM karen.mcnamara@uq.edu.au
RI Smithers, Scott/H-2012-2011; Westoby, Ross/G-8895-2019; McNamara,
   Karen/D-7322-2013
OI Westoby, Ross/0000-0001-9868-2246; McNamara, Karen/0000-0002-4511-8403;
   Smithers, Scott/0000-0002-4420-1897
FU National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility
FX We are grateful to the National Climate Change Adaptation Research
   Facility for supporting and funding this project. We sincerely thank the
   Boigu and Erub Island communities for their kind hospitality and
   involvement in this project - the knowledge and insights gathered were
   extremely important and valuable, thank you for sharing such with us. We
   are also grateful to staff in the Land and Sea Management Unit of the
   Torres Strait Regional Authority for their support and assistance in the
   field. Thanks also to the very helpful reviewers of the article, and to
   Hedda Ransan-Cooper for reading through a final draft.
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U1 2
U2 42
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
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SN 1745-5863
EI 1745-5871
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BP 438
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SC Geography
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   Kovacova, Jana
BE Bujnak, J
   Guagliano, M
TI Financing the disaster resilient city in the Slovak Republic
SO 12TH INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OF YOUNG SCIENTISTS ON
   SUSTAINABLE, MODERN AND SAFE TRANSPORT
SE Procedia Engineering
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 12th International Scientific Conference of Young Scientists on
   Sustainable, Modern and Safe Transport
CY MAY 31-JUN 02, 2017
CL High Tatras, SLOVAKIA
SP Univ Zilina
DE disaster resilient city; crisis management; financing resilient city
AB This paper presents a framework for scaling climate change adaptation in cities in the Slovak Republic. The framework specifically focuses on the requirements of financial resources mobilizing for climate change adaptation and other urban risk reduction. An article is elaborated through the resilient city concept, an ability of urban areas and their individual assets to perform a basics service for stakeholders under a wide range of condition. The purpose of the article is to identify and analyze funding resources for disaster resilient city in the European Union. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Havko, Jan; Mitasova, Veronika; Pavlenko, Tomas; Titko, Michal; Kovacova, Jana] Univ Zilina, Fac Secur Engn, Zilina 01026, Slovakia.
C3 University of Zilina
RP Havko, J (corresponding author), Univ Zilina, Fac Secur Engn, Zilina 01026, Slovakia.
EM jan.havko@fbi.uniza.sk
RI Mitašová, Veronika/IUQ-2479-2023; Titko, Michal/AAH-5452-2021
OI Titko, Michal/0000-0003-4025-8842
FU  [IGP201602]
FX This work support internal grant IGP201602 Application of resilient city
   concept in Zilina city
CR [Anonymous], MAK CIT MOR RES HDB
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NR 17
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 3
U2 34
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1877-7058
J9 PROCEDIA ENGINEER
PY 2017
VL 192
BP 301
EP 306
DI 10.1016/j.proeng.2017.06.052
PG 6
WC Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Transportation Science & Technology
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering; Transportation
GA BI0MB
UT WOS:000404958000052
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Viljoen, E
   Hugo, J
AF Viljoen, Ethan
   Hugo, Jan
TI THE EFFICACY OF ROOF- BASED ADAPTATIONS TO REDUCE HEAT STRESS EXPOSURE
   IN INFORMAL DWELLINGS
SO ACTA STRUCTILIA
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; thermal; comfort; heat stress; simulation
ID THERMAL COMFORT; CLIMATE-CHANGE
AB While climate change represents a universal threat to the sustainable growth efforts globally, its impacts are not experienced equally with marginalised population groups, especially informal settlement residents, being highly exposed to its negative effects. Despite being widely acknowledged that the built environment is a major driver of inhabitants' exposure to climate change-related hazards, limited research has been undertaken on developing heat stress adaptation measures for informal settlements in Southern Africa. Furthermore, Africa's projected rapid urbanisation and limited adequate housing provision point to a significant growth of informal settlements, particularly within the Southern African context. The dearth of available information on household level climate change adaptation in informal settlements prompted this study to investigate the efficacy of roof-based adaptation strategies to lower heat stress exposure in informal dwellings in Tshwane, South Africa. As an explorative study with a quantitative focus, the study uses a digital simulation research design to assess the efficacy of four climate change adaptation strategies to lower heat stress exposure in two typical informal dwellings as case studies. While informal settlements have diverse building typologies, informal dwellings - frame structures cladded with steel sheeting without any thermal insulation - are widely used and highly vulnerable. In contrast to typical adaptation measures proposed for informal dwellings, the main findings highlight the benefit of high thermal mass coupled with shading strategies to lower thermal amplitudes and lower excessive heat stress exposure. Consequently, the article contributes to the current climate change adaptation discourse, in particular its application in informal settlements.
C1 [Viljoen, Ethan] Univ Pretoria, Dept Architecture, Pretoria, South Africa.
   [Hugo, Jan] Univ Pretoria, Profess Masters Programme, Pretoria, South Africa.
   [Hugo, Jan] Univ Pretoria, Earth Sci Dept Architecture, Pretoria, South Africa.
C3 University of Pretoria; University of Pretoria; University of Pretoria
RP Hugo, J (corresponding author), Univ Pretoria, Profess Masters Programme, Pretoria, South Africa.
EM ethan.viljoenza@gmail.com; jan.hugo@up.ac.za
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NR 60
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU UNIV FREE STATE, DEPT QUANTITY SURVEYING & CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT
PI BLOEMFONTEIN
PA PO BOX 339, BLOEMFONTEIN, 9300, SOUTH AFRICA
SN 1023-0564
EI 2415-0487
J9 ACTA STRUCTILIA
JI Acta Structilia
PY 2024
VL 31
IS 2
BP 42
EP 80
DI 10.38140/as.v31i2.8154
PG 39
WC Management
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA P8K9C
UT WOS:001380340600002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pham, H
   Saner, M
AF Pham, Ha
   Saner, Marc
TI Framework and proposed indicators for the comprehensive evaluation of
   inclusiveness: the case of climate change adaptation
SO FACETS
LA English
DT Article
DE inclusiveness; indicators; evaluation; ethics; climate change;
   adaptation
ID SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; JUSTICE; GOVERNANCE; INNOVATION; INCLUSION;
   RIGHTS; RIVER; GOALS
AB Inclusion has been gaining increased attention in various domains, including education and the workplace, as well as development, governance, urbanization, and innovation. However, in the context of climate change adaptation (CCA), the concept of "inclusiveness" remains comparatively underexplored, with no overarching framework available. This gap is crucial, given the global scope and multifaceted nature of climate change, which demands a comprehensive and inclusive approach. In this article, we address this deficiency by developing a comprehensive conceptualization of inclusive climate change adaptation (ICCA). Grounded in ethical analysis, our framework is presented for discussion and practical testing. We identify nine specific priority areas and propose one to two qualitative indicators for each, resulting in a suite of 15 indicators for the evaluation of ICCA policies. This research not only highlights the urgency of incorporating inclusiveness into CCA, but it also provides a practical framework by which to guide policymakers, practitioners, and researchers in this critical endeavor. By acknowledging and accommodating diverse value systems and considering the entire policy process, from conception to evaluation, we aim to foster a more inclusive and sustainable approach to CCA.
C1 [Pham, Ha; Saner, Marc] Univ Ottawa, Dept Geog Environm & Geomat, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
   [Saner, Marc] Carleton Univ, Dept Philosophy, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
C3 University of Ottawa; Carleton University
RP Pham, H (corresponding author), Univ Ottawa, Dept Geog Environm & Geomat, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
EM hpham048@uottawa.ca
OI Saner, Marc/0000-0002-6669-5138; Pham, Ha/0000-0003-3266-1789
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NR 107
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
PI OTTAWA
PA 123 Slater Street, Suite 610, OTTAWA, ON K1P 5H2, CANADA
SN 2371-1671
J9 FACETS
JI Facets
PD APR 4
PY 2024
VL 9
BP 1
EP 15
DI 10.1139/facets-2023-0017
PG 15
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA TX4Y8
UT WOS:001244557900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Chen, BN
   Li, L
   Xiong, YC
   Wang, JJ
AF Chen, Beining
   Li, Li
   Xiong, Yichen
   Wang, Jianjun
GP IEEE
TI Who will adapt faster: insights from studying the underlying impact of
   climate change perception on people's willingness to adopt household
   PV-BES system
SO 2024 7TH ASIA CONFERENCE ON ENERGY AND ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING, ACEEE
   2024
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 7th Asia Conference on Energy and Electrical Engineering (ACEEE)
CY JUL 20-22, 2024
CL Univ Elect Sci & Technol Chin, Sch Mech & Elect Engn, Chengdu, PEOPLES R
   CHINA
SP IEEE, BIEET
HO Univ Elect Sci & Technol Chin, Sch Mech & Elect Engn
DE household PV-BES system; Theory of Planned Behavior; climate change
   adaptation; climate change perception (CCP); social connectedness
ID GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS; SOCIAL CONNECTEDNESS; WEATHER; MODELS; RISK
AB By regarding household photovoltaic and battery storage hybrid energy systems (PV-BES) as a typical climate change adaptive product, this study analyzes the impacts of people's climate change and adaptive capacity perception, including climate change perception (CCP), self-coping ability (ABT), social connectedness with friends (SCF) and government trust (GVT), on their willingness to adopt (WTA) PV-BES. The classical Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) model was extended to establish an explanatory framework. Our structural equation modeling results show that people who have higher SCF tend to take climate change adaptative action faster because they are usually more innovative or feel the action is more controllable. The prior experience of electricity shortages caused by climate change disasters (EESCCD) alters the way people think when they evaluate adaptive behaviors. Specifically, people with EESCCD are more likely to take adaptive actions because of higher CCPs, and invest more mental efforts to evaluate the behavior from practical perspectives, ultimately making decision more rationally.
C1 [Chen, Beining; Li, Li] Beijing Informat Sci & Technol Univ, Sch Econ & Management, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Xiong, Yichen] Beijing Informat Sci & Technol Univ, Sch Comp Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Jianjun] North China Elect Power Univ, Sch Econ & Management, Beijing, Peoples R China.
C3 Beijing Information Science & Technology University; Beijing Information
   Science & Technology University; North China Electric Power University
RP Chen, BN (corresponding author), Beijing Informat Sci & Technol Univ, Sch Econ & Management, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM bellinacc@126.com; lilinw2001@126.com; xyc_bistu@126.com;
   wangjianjunhd@126.com
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [72,071,077]
FX This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation
   of China [Grant number 72,071,077].
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NR 29
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 4
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
BN 979-8-3503-5025-8; 979-8-3503-5024-1
PY 2024
BP 368
EP 372
DI 10.1109/ACEEE62329.2024.10651932
PG 5
WC Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Electrical & Electronic
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA BX6KQ
UT WOS:001310543300065
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Oparinde, LO
AF Oparinde, Lawrence Olusola
TI Fish farmers' welfare and climate change adaptation strategies in
   southwest, Nigeria: Application of multinomial endogenous switching
   regression model
SO AQUACULTURE ECONOMICS & MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; climate change; fish; MESR; welfare
ID IMPACT
AB This study examined the impact of climate change adaptation strategies on the welfare status of aquaculture fish farmers in Southwest, Nigeria. Multistage sampling procedure was used in the selection of 288 respondents. To account for selection bias due to both observable and unobservable factors where more than two options arise, the multinomial endogenous switching regression model was used to analyze the collected data. The empirical findings revealed that level of education brought about increase in the probability of adopting bore-hole construction, stocking time adjustment and embankment creation as adaptation strategies to climate change. Also, adoption of stocking time adjustment and embankment creation by the adopters increased food security index by 106.1 and 16.9%, respectively. Furthermore, adoption of stocking time adjustment in the adopters' category reduced the poverty gap by 87.2%. It is, therefore, recommended that policies which promote adoption of climate change adaptation strategies (especially stocking time adjustment and bore-hole construction being the strategies with the highest impact) should be formulated since they are capable of increasing welfare of aquaculture fish farmers.
C1 [Oparinde, Lawrence Olusola] Fed Univ Technol Akure, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, PMB 704, Akure, Nigeria.
RP Oparinde, LO (corresponding author), Fed Univ Technol Akure, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, PMB 704, Akure, Nigeria.
EM looparinde@futa.edu.ng
RI Oparinde, Lawrence Olusola/AEK-7634-2022
OI Oparinde, Lawrence Olusola/0000-0001-7262-091X
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NR 48
TC 25
Z9 26
U1 1
U2 22
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 1365-7305
EI 1551-8663
J9 AQUACULT ECON MANAG
JI Aquac. Econ. Manag.
PD OCT 2
PY 2021
VL 25
IS 4
BP 450
EP 471
DI 10.1080/13657305.2021.1893863
EA FEB 2021
PG 22
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Fisheries
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Fisheries
GA XX7TL
UT WOS:000627265300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ouma, GO
   Dieye, AM
   Ogallo, LO
   Olang, LO
AF Ouma, Gilbert O.
   Dieye, Amadou M.
   Ogallo, Laban O.
   Olang, Luke O.
TI Institutional challenges in scaling-up climate change adaptation
   actions: experiences from rural communities in Senegal and Kenya
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE institutional challenges; climate change impacts; rural communities;
   adaptive capacities; Kenya; Senegal
ID POLICY
AB Regional institutions in Africa have the potential to reinforce the adaptive capacity of rural communities in handling climate change impacts. The institutional arrangements provide the rationale for scaling-up adaptation actions by setting the roles of individual players involved in the planning process at local, national and regional levels. The scaling-up then seeks to extend and disseminate the lessons learnt across the levels to support refinement and inclusive implementation of long-term climate change adaptation strategies. This article discusses these considerations through studies of two rural communities faced with the implementation of climate change adaptation strategies in Senegal and Kenya. The cases illustrate different approaches of institutional arrangements and scaling-up of adaptation actions from community to national levels. The lessons from the communities are typical of most vulnerable rural regions and were hence important for extended dissemination considering that the impacts of climate change in Africa are felt largely at community levels. A reduction of this vulnerability requires efficient and realistic adaptation strategies that seek to understand the rural communities while developing considerate policy-based alternatives at all levels of administration.
C1 [Ouma, Gilbert O.] Univ Nairobi, Inst Climate Change & Adaptat, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Ouma, Gilbert O.; Ogallo, Laban O.; Olang, Luke O.] IGAD Climate Predict & Applicat Ctr ICPAC, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Dieye, Amadou M.] CSE, Dakar, Senegal.
   [Olang, Luke O.] Tech Univ Kenya, Biosyst & Environm Engn, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 University of Nairobi; Technical University of Kenya
RP Ouma, GO (corresponding author), Univ Nairobi, Inst Climate Change & Adaptat, Nairobi, Kenya.; Ouma, GO (corresponding author), IGAD Climate Predict & Applicat Ctr ICPAC, Nairobi, Kenya.
EM gilbert.ouma@gmail.com
RI DIEYE, Amadou/AAJ-8221-2020
OI DIEYE, AMADOU MOCTAR/0000-0003-1660-6966
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NR 41
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 10
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 7
BP 590
EP 599
DI 10.1080/17565529.2017.1372261
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GS7AN
UT WOS:000443851700002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Han, MY
   Mun, JS
AF Han, M. Y.
   Mun, J. S.
TI Operational data of the Star City rainwater harvesting system and its
   role as a climate change adaptation and a social influence
SO WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; decentralized rainwater management; rainwater
   harvesting; star city
AB The Star City rainwater harvesting system (RWHS) was featured in the December, 2008, issue of Water 21. The article highlighted that the RWHS has a 3,000 m(3) rainwater tank used in water saving, flood mitigation, and emergency response. Since then, many news media, public officials, and people from both South Korea and abroad have visited the RWHS. In this paper, two years of the system's operational data are presented and its role in short-and long-term climate change adaptation is investigated. The downstream sewer system has become safe for a 50-year rainfall without upgrading the existing sewer system, which was designed for a 10-year period. The 26,000 m(3) of water saved has reduced the energy requirement of transferring water from a distant area. The success of the Star City RWHS has influenced 47 cities across South Korea, including Seoul, to enact regulations on rainwater management. It has shown that decentralized rainwater management can supplement the existing centralized system to ensure its safety.
C1 [Mun, J. S.] Seoul Natl Univ, Rainwater Res Ctr, Seoul 151742, South Korea.
   [Han, M. Y.] Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Seoul 151742, South Korea.
C3 Seoul National University (SNU); Seoul National University (SNU)
RP Mun, JS (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Rainwater Res Ctr, 599 Gwanangno, Seoul 151742, South Korea.
EM Jsmun21@gmail.com
FU Ministry of Construction & Transportation of Korean government
   [06Construction-CoreB02]
FX This research was supported by a grant (06Construction-CoreB02) from
   Construction Core Technology Program funded by Ministry of Construction
   & Transportation of Korean government.
CR Amin MT, 2009, WATER RES, V43, P5225, DOI 10.1016/j.watres.2009.08.041
   COOMBES PJ, 2002, URBAN WATER, V4, P307, DOI DOI 10.1016/S1462-0758(02)00028-6
   Han MY, 2007, WATER SCI TECHNOL, V56, P73, DOI 10.2166/wst.2007.778
   HAN MY, 2006, P 2 INT RAINW HARV W, P55
   HAN MY, 2004, KOREAN SOC WATER WAS, V18, P99
   *IWA, 2008, WATER, V21, P17
   Karim MR, 2010, WATER SCI TECHNOL, V61, P2129, DOI 10.2166/wst.2010.031
   KIM YJ, 2008, THESIS SEOUL NATL U
   Kim YoungJin Kim YoungJin, 2008, Water Science and Technology: Water Supply, V8, P31
   Meera V, 2006, J WATER SUPPLY RES T, V55, P257, DOI 10.2166/aqua.2006.0010
   *MIN ENV REP KOR, 2007, 2006 STAT WAT SERV
   Niemczynowicz J., 1999, Urban Water, V1, P1, DOI 10.1016/S1462-0758(99)00009-6
NR 12
TC 27
Z9 27
U1 2
U2 20
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 0273-1223
EI 1996-9732
J9 WATER SCI TECHNOL
JI Water Sci. Technol.
PY 2011
VL 63
IS 12
BP 2796
EP 2801
DI 10.2166/wst.2011.597
PG 6
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA 792FV
UT WOS:000292726900005
PM 22049701
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lanet, M
   Li, LR
   Ehret, A
   Turquety, S
   Le Treut, H
AF Lanet, Marine
   Li, Laurent
   Ehret, Antoine
   Turquety, Solene
   Le Treut, Herve
TI Attribution of summer 2022 extreme wildfire season in Southwest France
   to anthropogenic climate change
SO NPJ CLIMATE AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
ID EVENT ATTRIBUTION; FOREST-FIRES; BURNED AREA; VARIABILITY; WEATHER;
   IMPACT; VERSION; RISK
AB Summer 2022 was exceptionally hot and dry in Europe and especially in Southwest France, where the most important wildfires since 1949 had serious environmental and socio-economic impacts. Here we conduct an impact-oriented climate change attribution study by first investigating which climate indices are the most correlated with the burnt area between 2003 and 2022. We find that an index combining soil moisture integrated over 6 months and temperature and vapour pressure deficit integrated over 3 months is correlated with large burnt areas. Using the index developed, we estimate that anthropogenic climate change made climate conditions propitious for wildfire development, such as the ones of July 2022, two times more likely, with a return period of 13 years in the current climate. Our study raises the question of the sustainability of the Landes Forest and stresses the urgent need to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change.
C1 [Lanet, Marine; Li, Laurent] Univ PSL, Sorbonne Univ, Ecole Polytech, Inst Polytech Paris,CNRS,LMD,IPSL,ENS, Paris, France.
   [Ehret, Antoine; Turquety, Solene] Sorbonne Univ, LATMOS, IPSL, UVSQ,CNRS, F-75005 Paris, France.
   [Le Treut, Herve] Sorbonne Univ, Inst Pierre Simon Laplace, Paris, France.
C3 Institut Polytechnique de Paris; Ecole Polytechnique; Ecole des Ponts
   ParisTech; Universite PSL; Ecole Normale Superieure (ENS); Centre
   National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Sorbonne Universite;
   Institut Polytechnique de Paris; Ecole Polytechnique; Centre National de
   la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Sorbonne Universite; Universite Paris
   Saclay; Universite Paris Saclay; Centre National de la Recherche
   Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - National Institute for Earth Sciences &
   Astronomy (INSU); Sorbonne Universite
RP Lanet, M (corresponding author), Univ PSL, Sorbonne Univ, Ecole Polytech, Inst Polytech Paris,CNRS,LMD,IPSL,ENS, Paris, France.
EM marine.lanet@lmd.ipsl.fr
RI ; Li, Laurent/X-3278-2019
OI Lanet, Marine/0009-0004-1994-1553; Li, Laurent/0000-0002-3855-3976
FU European Commission (EC); IPSL mesocentre ESPRI facility; CNRS; UPMC,
   Labex L-IPSL, CNES; Ecole Polytechnique [101112836]; European NBRACER
   project
FX The authors are grateful to the World Climate Research Programme's
   Working Group on Coupled Modelling, which is responsible for CMIP6, and
   to the modelling communities for producing and making available their
   model outputs. All the simulations are publicly available on a website
   (https://esgf-node.llnl.gov/projects/cmip6/). To process the data, this
   study benefited from GENCI computing resources and from the IPSL
   mesocentre ESPRI facility, which is supported by CNRS, UPMC, Labex
   L-IPSL, CNES and Ecole Polytechnique. The authors acknowledge support
   from the European NBRACER project (Horizon Programme under grant
   agreement 101112836).
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NR 90
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 4
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2397-3722
J9 NPJ CLIM ATMOS SCI
JI npj Clim. Atmos. Sci.
PD NOV 1
PY 2024
VL 7
IS 1
AR 267
DI 10.1038/s41612-024-00821-z
PG 10
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA K8T1U
UT WOS:001346557800002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kitagawa, K
AF Kitagawa, Kaori
TI Researcher Positionality in Participatory Action Research for Climate
   Justice in Indigenous Communities
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE METHODS
LA English
DT Article
DE researcher positionality; participatory action research; climate
   justice; indigenous communities
ID OUTSIDER; INSIDER
AB This paper discusses researcher positionality in the studies of indigenous communities in the context of the Transforming Universities for a Changing Climate project. The paper is specifically associated with the project's participatory action research strand, which aims to design and implement interventions relating to mitigation and adaptation to climate change, involving local communities and universities in the countries. Despite an increase in the number of social scientists engaging in climate-change-related research, discussion on researcher positionality is still limited. The paper intends to fill this gap by analysing the empirical data collected from partner researchers who were asked about their own positionalities. Utilising the 'four hyphen-spaces' framework proposed by Cunliffe and Karunanayake, the paper identifies commonalities and variations in terms of the researchers' reflections on their positionalities. The paper concludes by addressing the complex aspects of 'insiderness' that have implications for participatory action research.
C1 [Kitagawa, Kaori] UCL, Inst Educ, Dept Educ Practice & Soc, 20 Bedford Way, London WC1H 0AL, England.
C3 University of London; University College London; UCL Institute of
   Education
RP Kitagawa, K (corresponding author), UCL, Inst Educ, Dept Educ Practice & Soc, 20 Bedford Way, London WC1H 0AL, England.
EM k.kitagawa@ucl.ac.uk
RI Kitagawa, Kaori/AAX-7218-2020
OI Kitagawa, Kaori/0000-0003-0574-6920
FU I would like to thank the three researchers who made this study possible
   by giving their time to participate. I also gratefully acknowledge the
   crucial support of our funder UK Research and Innovation.; UK Research
   and Innovation
FX I would like to thank the three researchers who made this study possible
   by giving their time to participate. I also gratefully acknowledge the
   crucial support of our funder UK Research and Innovation.
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NR 53
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 3
U2 9
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 1609-4069
J9 INT J QUAL METH
JI Int. J. Qual. Meth.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 22
AR 16094069231205178
DI 10.1177/16094069231205178
PG 15
WC Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA T0FX2
UT WOS:001074842900001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Plucinski, P
AF Plucinski, Przemyslaw
TI THE COGNITIVE APPROACH IN THE STUDY OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS: THE CASE OF THE
   CLIMATE JUSTICE MOVEMENTS
SO RUCH PRAWNICZY EKONOMICZNY I SOCJOLOGICZNY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate justice; social movements; environmental movements; climate
   change; cogni- tive approach
ID KNOWLEDGE
AB Mitigating and adapting to climate change are two critical civilizational challenges nowadays, and many social actors are facing them. The paper's objective is to analyse the phenomenon of Polish climate justice social movements through the use of the 'cognitive approach', introduced and developed by Ron Eyerman and Andrew Jamison. The article addresses two main issues. First, it attempts to reconstruct a conceptual -methodological framework for research on environmental activism. Second, it presents a preliminary presentation of the cognitive universes and practices of Polish climate justice movements based on the findings from desk research and an empirical investigation based on 30 in-depth interviews conducted in three Polish cities (Pozna & nacute;, Wroc & lstrok;aw, Warszawa). The article also addresses research gaps while pointing out the need for greater involvement of the social sciences in climate change mitigation measures, including opening up academia to bottom -up perspectives.
C1 [Plucinski, Przemyslaw] Adam Mickiewicz Univ, Poznan, Poland.
C3 Adam Mickiewicz University
RP Plucinski, P (corresponding author), Adam Mickiewicz Univ, Poznan, Poland.
EM plucin@amu.edu.pl
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NR 50
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU ADAM MICKIEWICZ UNIV POZNAN
PI POZNAN
PA AL NIEPODLEGLOSCI 53, 61-714, POZNAN, 00000, POLAND
SN 0035-9629
EI 2543-9170
J9 RUCH PRAW EKON SOCJ
JI Ruch Praw. Ekon. Socjol.
PY 2022
VL 84
IS 4
DI 10.14746/rpeis.2022.84.4.10
PG 265
WC Economics; Law; Sociology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Business & Economics; Government & Law; Sociology
GA UD3T4
UT WOS:001246091600010
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU da Cunha, C
   Rocha, APF
   Cardon, M
   Breton, F
   Labeyrie, L
   Vanderlinden, JP
AF da Cunha, Charlotte
   Farias Rocha, Ana Paula
   Cardon, Marianne
   Breton, Florentin
   Labeyrie, Laurent
   Vanderlinden, Jean-Paul
TI Adaptation planning in France: Inputs from narratives of change in
   support of a community-led foresight process
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Narratives of changes; Chronotopes; Gulf of Morbihan; Co-community-led
   foresight process; Art and science experimentation
ID CLIMATE
AB In France, integrating adaptation to climate change into planning policies is a prerogative that has recently been delegated to municipalities. There are also various injunctions to engage the local population in this decision-making process. How can municipalities co-construct an adaptive future with their citizens? This article critically describes a community-led foresight process, based on the mapping, analysis and interpretation of narratives of change. Based on empirical results, we explore and discuss the role past, present and future narratives may play in the process of outlining incremental scenarios and how these might enable the identification of pathways and hinge points. The role of design in supporting the process by proposing an innovative foresight workshop is also discussed. We then highlight how these narratives stimulated reflections through an art, design and science foresight experiment.
C1 [da Cunha, Charlotte; Farias Rocha, Ana Paula; Vanderlinden, Jean-Paul] Univ Versailles St Quentin en Yvelines, CEARC, 11 Blvd dAlembert, F-78280 Guyancourt, France.
   [Cardon, Marianne] Designer Freelance, 9 Rue St Maur, F-75011 Paris, France.
   [Breton, Florentin] Univ Versailles St Quentin en Yvelines, LSCE, Chemin St Aubin, F-91191 Gif Sur Yvette, France.
   [Labeyrie, Laurent] Climact Bretagne Sud, Rue Guillaume le Bartz, F-56000 Vannes, France.
C3 Universite Paris Saclay; Universite Paris Saclay
RP da Cunha, C (corresponding author), Univ Versailles St Quentin en Yvelines, CEARC, 11 Blvd dAlembert, F-78280 Guyancourt, France.
EM charlotte.da-cunha@uvsq.fr; aana.paula.fr@gmail.com;
   marianne.cardon@ensci.com; florentin.breton@lsce.ipsl.fr;
   ldlabeyrie@me.com; jean-paul.vanderlinden@uvsq.fr1
RI Labeyrie, Laurent/AAV-8405-2021; Vanderlinden, Jean-Paul/Y-8421-2019
OI Breton, Florentin/0000-0002-5982-8182; da Cunha,
   Charlotte/0000-0002-5640-2389
FU CoCliServ project "Co-development of place-based climate services for
   action" through ERA4CS [H2020-EU.3.5.1.]
FX This work was supported by the CoCliServ project "Co-development of
   place-based climate services for action" funded through ERA4CS
   [H2020-EU.3.5.1.].
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NR 72
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 5
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2020
VL 30
AR 100243
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2020.100243
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA PI9EL
UT WOS:000601384900009
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Anacona, PI
   Kinney, J
   Schaefer, M
   Harrison, S
   Wilson, R
   Segovia, A
   Mazzorana, B
   Guerra, F
   Farías, D
   Reynolds, JM
   Glasser, NF
AF Anacona, Pablo Iribarren
   Kinney, Josie
   Schaefer, Marius
   Harrison, Stephan
   Wilson, Ryan
   Segovia, Alexis
   Mazzorana, Bruno
   Guerra, Felipe
   Farias, David
   Reynolds, John M.
   Glasser, Neil F.
TI Glacier protection laws: Potential conflicts in managing glacial hazards
   and adapting to climate change
SO AMBIO
LA English
DT Article
DE Andes; Glacial hazards; Glacier protection laws; GLOF; Mining
ID NORTHERN PATAGONIA; RETREAT; TOURISM; IMPACT; LAKES; AGE
AB The environmental, socioeconomic and cultural significance of glaciers has motivated several countries to regulate activities on glaciers and glacierized surroundings. However, laws written to specifically protect mountain glaciers have only recently been considered within national political agendas. Glacier Protection Laws (GPLs) originate in countries where mining has damaged glaciers and have been adopted with the aim of protecting the cryosphere from harmful activities. Here, we analyze GPLs in Argentina (approved) and Chile (under discussion) to identify potential environmental conflicts arising from law restrictions and omissions. We conclude that GPLs overlook the dynamics of glaciers and could prevent or delay actions needed to mitigate glacial hazards (e.g. artificial drainage of glacial lakes) thus placing populations at risk. Furthermore, GPL restrictions could hinder strategies (e.g. use of glacial lakes as reservoirs) to mitigate adverse impacts of climate change. Arguably, more flexible GPLs are needed to protect us from the changing cryosphere.
C1 [Anacona, Pablo Iribarren] Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Inst Geog, Valparaiso, Chile.
   [Anacona, Pablo Iribarren; Mazzorana, Bruno] Univ Austral Chile, Inst Ciencias Tierra, Edificio Pugin,Campus Isla Teja, Valdivia, Chile.
   [Kinney, Josie] Univ Oregon, Robert D Clark Honors Coll, Eugene, OR 97403 USA.
   [Kinney, Josie] 2618 NW Marken StreetBend, Bend, OR 97703 USA.
   [Schaefer, Marius] Univ Austral Chile, Inst Ciencias Fis & Matemat, Edificio Pugin 4 Piso,Campus Isla Teja, Valdivia, Chile.
   [Harrison, Stephan] Univ Exeter, Dept Geog, Cornwall Campus, Penryn TR10 9EZ, Cornwall, England.
   [Harrison, Stephan] Univ Exeter, Coll Life & Environm Sci, Exeter EX4 4RJ, Devon, England.
   [Wilson, Ryan; Glasser, Neil F.] Aberystwyth Univ, Inst Geog Hist Polit & Psychol, Dept Geog & Earth Sci, Aberystwyth SY23 3DB, Ceredigion, Wales.
   [Segovia, Alexis] Univ Chile, Fac Ciencias Forestales & Conservac Nat, Fray Camilo Henriquez 364, Santiago 8330207, Chile.
   [Guerra, Felipe] Observ Ciudadano, Antonio Varas 428, Temuco, Chile.
   [Farias, David] Univ Erlangen Nurnberg, Inst Geog & Geosci, Wetterkreuz 15, D-91058 Erlangen, Germany.
   [Reynolds, John M.] Reynolds Int Ltd, Suite 2,Broncoed House,Broncoed Business Pk, Mold CH7 1HP, Flint, Wales.
C3 Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso; Universidad Austral de
   Chile; University of Oregon; Universidad Austral de Chile; University of
   Exeter; University of Exeter; Aberystwyth University; Universidad de
   Chile; University of Erlangen Nuremberg
RP Anacona, PI (corresponding author), Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Inst Geog, Valparaiso, Chile.; Anacona, PI (corresponding author), Univ Austral Chile, Inst Ciencias Tierra, Edificio Pugin,Campus Isla Teja, Valdivia, Chile.
EM pablo.iribarren@uach.cl; Josie11k@gmail.com; mschaefer@uach.cl;
   stephan.harrison@exeter.ac.uk; ryw3@aber.ac.uk; alexisegov@ug.uchile.cl;
   bruno.mazzorana@uach.cl; felipe.guerra.schleef@gmail.com;
   david.farias@fau.de; jmr@reynolds-initernational.co.uk; nfg@aber.ac.uk
RI Farias, David/AAA-2955-2021; Glasser, Neil/C-1971-2012; Guerra,
   Felipe/W-7167-2019; Schaefer, Marius/HNR-3586-2023
OI Segovia Rocha, Alexis Andres/0009-0004-1731-1777; Schaefer,
   Marius/0000-0002-7508-8786; Farias-Barahona, David/0009-0002-2385-7923;
   Wilson, Ryan/0000-0001-9063-8021
FU RCUK-CONICYT project [MR-N026462-1]; VRIEA-PUCV project; Becas Chile,
   CONICYT; TanDEM-X [DLR AO XTI_GLAC0264]; NERC [NE/N020693/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX This research was supported by the RCUK-CONICYT project MR-N026462-1
   "Glacial Hazards in Chile: Processes, Assessment, Mitigation, and Risk
   Management Strategies'' and a VRIEA-PUCV project. This study was kindly
   supported with TanDEM-X data under DLR AO XTI_GLAC0264. David Farias
   acknowledge the support of Becas Chile, CONICYT. We thank Mark Carey and
   Alejandra Mancilla for commenting on an early draft of this work. We
   also thank two reviewers whose comments helped to strengthen our text.
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NR 49
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 2
U2 38
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0044-7447
EI 1654-7209
J9 AMBIO
JI Ambio
PD DEC
PY 2018
VL 47
IS 8
BP 835
EP 845
DI 10.1007/s13280-018-1043-x
PG 11
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HA0VL
UT WOS:000449928600001
PM 29536432
OA Green Published, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Göçken, M
   Boru, A
AF Gocken, Mustafa
   Boru, Asli
TI Integrating metaheuristics and ANFIS for daily mean temperature
   forecasting
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GLOBAL WARMING
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system; ANFIS; genetic algorithm; GA;
   harmony search; HS; daily mean temperature forecasting
ID FUZZY INFERENCE SYSTEM; PREDICTION; MODELS; INPUTS
AB Weather forecasting is considered as a key to successful planning for various applications such as agricultural industries. Having accurate weather forecasting allows people to make better decision on managing day to day activities. Also, it has to be underlined that forecasting is important to cope with impacts of extreme events and to adapt to climatic changes. To improve weather forecasting, we used hybrid adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system (ANFIS), which consist in exploiting capabilities of harmony search (HS) and genetic algorithm (GA), for selecting the most relevant weather variables and simultaneously searching the most appropriate structure of ANFIS. Proposed methods are applied for six different cities of Turkey which are determined according to Aydeniz's climate classification. The results of the study showed that GA-ANFIS and HS-ANFIS yield remarkable results in daily mean temperature forecasting due to the ability of capturing the advantages of both types of methods simultaneously.
C1 [Gocken, Mustafa; Boru, Asli] Adana Sci & Technol Univ, Dept Ind Engn, Engn & Nat Sci Fac, TR-01180 Adana, Turkey.
C3 Adana Alparslan Turkes Science & Technology University
RP Göçken, M (corresponding author), Adana Sci & Technol Univ, Dept Ind Engn, Engn & Nat Sci Fac, TR-01180 Adana, Turkey.
EM mgocken@adanabtu.edu.tr; aboru@adanabtu.edu.tr
OI GOCKEN, Mustafa/0000-0002-1256-2305
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NR 39
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 4
PU INDERSCIENCE ENTERPRISES LTD
PI GENEVA
PA WORLD TRADE CENTER BLDG, 29 ROUTE DE PRE-BOIS, CASE POSTALE 856, CH-1215
   GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
SN 1758-2083
EI 1758-2091
J9 INT J GLOBAL WARM
JI Int. J. Glob. Warm.
PY 2016
VL 9
IS 1
BP 110
EP 128
DI 10.1504/IJGW.2016.074326
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EE6KB
UT WOS:000389718000007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Haigh, N
   Griffiths, A
AF Haigh, Nardia
   Griffiths, Andrew
TI Surprise as a Catalyst for Including Climatic Change in the Strategic
   Environment
SO BUSINESS & SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE climatic surprise; climate change; adaptation; strategy; strategic
   environment
ID BUSINESS; UNCERTAINTY; ADAPTATION; RESPONSES; VIEW
AB This article examines what prompted electricity supply organizations to include changing climatic conditions as key elements of the strategic environment. Utilizing themes emerging from inductive analysis, the authors explain how and why surprising climatic events drove the organizations to begin including climate trends in their strategy development and planning processes. Results indicate that organizations were surprised climate was becoming more unpredictable, was directly affecting their operations, and was challenging long-held assumptions about climatic patterns. Our findings suggest that adaptation to climate change occurs predominantly as a reaction to climatic surprise, rather than a preemptive response to increasing awareness, and perceived uncertainty and risks as suggested by previous studies. Results also show that organizations are beginning to conceptually link changes in local climatic conditions to the global issue of climate change; though such linkages are not necessarily important to the inclusion of climate in the strategic environment.
C1 [Haigh, Nardia] Univ Massachusetts, Coll Management, Boston, MA 02125 USA.
   [Griffiths, Andrew] Univ Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Haigh, Nardia] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Management & Mkt, Boston, MA 02125 USA.
C3 University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Boston;
   University of Queensland; University of Massachusetts System; University
   of Massachusetts Boston
RP Haigh, N (corresponding author), Univ Massachusetts, Coll Management, 100 Morrissey Blvd, Boston, MA 02125 USA.
EM Nardia.Haigh@umb.edu
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NR 39
TC 38
Z9 40
U1 2
U2 14
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0007-6503
EI 1552-4205
J9 BUS SOC
JI Bus. Soc.
PD MAR
PY 2012
VL 51
IS 1
BP 89
EP 120
DI 10.1177/0007650311427425
PG 32
WC Business
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA 898AR
UT WOS:000300707700006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lv, ZF
   Li, FF
   Lu, GQ
AF Lv, Zunfu
   Li, Feifei
   Lu, Guoquan
TI Adjusting sowing date and cultivar shift improve maize adaption to
   climate change in China
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Maize; Yield; Climate change; Adaption
ID WHEAT PRODUCTION REGIONS; SPRING MAIZE; CHANGE IMPACTS; YIELD GAPS;
   MODEL; ADAPTATION; GROWTH; PERIOD; PLAIN
AB This study investigates the impact of climate change on spring and summer maize (Zea mays) yield and evaluates several adaptation measures to overcome the negative impact of climate change on maize production in China. The results showed that the grain-filling duration of maize would be shortened 6-15 days in the future as a result of climate change. Thus, potential maize yield would decrease by 2-32%, and rainfed maize yield would decrease by 0-24% during 2010-2099 relative to 1976-2005. In response to climate change, adaptive measures should be taken to overcome its projected impact. The adoption of new cultivars while maintaining the same pre-flowering and post-flowering duration in the future as in the present would help to improve potential maize yield by 50-61% in three time slices (2030s, 2050s, and 2070s) and would be a better choice for high yields in the future. The cultivars that would maintain the same post-flowering duration in the future as in the present would be a better choice than the cultivars that would maintain the pre-flowing periods for summer maize in China. Adjusting sowing dates would be another important way to extend post-flowering periods and further improve maize yield. If the maize cultivar currently used was adopted, delaying the sowing date would improve the potential maize yield by 2-25%. If future maize cultivars that maintained the growing period even as warmer temperatures accelerate phenological development were adopted, delaying the sowing date would improve the potential maize yield by 0-8.9%. The interactive effect of sowing and cultivars was quantified. Based on the findings of this study, future maize cultivars maintaining the growing period were adopted, and delaying the sowing date could still improve potential maize yield worldwide. Two regional adaptation strategies to climate change could offset the potential reduction of maize production worldwide, which would provide farmers and policy-makers with explicit guidance.
C1 [Lv, Zunfu; Li, Feifei; Lu, Guoquan] Zhejiang A&F Univ, Coll Agr & Food Sci, Dept Agron, Key Lab Qual Improvement Agr Prod Zhejiang Prov, Hangzhou 311300, Peoples R China.
   [Lv, Zunfu] Zhejiang A&F Univ, Coll Agr & Food Sci, Hangzhou 311300, Peoples R China.
C3 Zhejiang A&F University; Zhejiang A&F University
RP Lv, ZF (corresponding author), Zhejiang A&F Univ, Coll Agr & Food Sci, Dept Agron, Key Lab Qual Improvement Agr Prod Zhejiang Prov, Hangzhou 311300, Peoples R China.; Lv, ZF (corresponding author), Zhejiang A&F Univ, Coll Agr & Food Sci, Hangzhou 311300, Peoples R China.
EM lvzunfu@163.com
RI Li, Feifei/JTT-8011-2023; Lu, Guo-Quan/N-3661-2013
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [31701322]
FX This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation
   of China (31701322).
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NR 39
TC 41
Z9 46
U1 7
U2 84
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD JAN
PY 2020
VL 25
IS 1
BP 87
EP 106
DI 10.1007/s11027-019-09861-w
PG 20
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LN7UW
UT WOS:000533138500005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Teixeira, CP
   Fernandes, CO
   Ahern, J
   Farinha-Marques, P
AF Teixeira, Catarina Patoilo
   Oliveira Fernandes, Claudia
   Ahern, Jack
   Farinha-Marques, Paulo
TI Plant traits database for climate change adaptation and mitigation in
   Northwest Portugal
SO DATA IN BRIEF
LA English
DT Article; Data Paper
DE Climate change adaptation; Climate change mitigation; Green
   infrastructure; Plant traits; Planting design; Urban ecological novelty;
   Urban green spaces; Porto
ID DESIGN
AB The database presented in this data article is related to the article "Adaptive planting design and management framework for urban climate change adaptation and mitigation " [1] . It includes a list of 287 plant species presently occurring in Porto, Portugal, more precisely in urban green spaces with high urban ecological novelty levels. The plant species in this list were classified and organized according to several traits with a particular focus on plant species' adaptation, mitigation, and ornamental characteristics. Data collection resorted to articles, books, and various open access and online datasets. Data were organized in an Excel file that organizes information on more than 50 plant species traits/ variables. (C) 2022 Published by Elsevier Inc.
C1 [Teixeira, Catarina Patoilo; Oliveira Fernandes, Claudia; Farinha-Marques, Paulo] Univ Porto, CIBIO, InBIO Rede Invest Biodiversidade & Biol Evolut, Campus Agr Vairao, P-4485661 Vairao, Portugal.
   [Teixeira, Catarina Patoilo; Oliveira Fernandes, Claudia; Farinha-Marques, Paulo] Univ Porto, Fac Ciencias, Dept Geociencias Ambiente & Ordenamento Terr, Rua Campo Alegre 687, P-4169007 Porto, Portugal.
   [Teixeira, Catarina Patoilo; Oliveira Fernandes, Claudia; Farinha-Marques, Paulo] CIBIO, BIOPOLIS Program Genom Biodivers & Land Planning, Campus Vairao, P-4485661 Vairao, Portugal.
   [Ahern, Jack] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Landscape Architecture & Reg Planning, Amherst, MA 01003 USA.
C3 Universidade do Porto; Universidade do Porto; Universidade do Porto;
   University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Amherst
RP Teixeira, CP (corresponding author), Univ Porto, CIBIO, InBIO Rede Invest Biodiversidade & Biol Evolut, Campus Agr Vairao, P-4485661 Vairao, Portugal.
EM apteixeira@fc.up.pt
RI Teixeira, Catarina/KFS-4474-2024; Ahern, Jack/JUV-2655-2023; Fernandes,
   Cláudia/I-5127-2019
OI Fernandes, Claudia/0000-0001-6012-2729
FU Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT); European funds
   [FSE/NORTE2020, SFRH/BD/130382/2017]
FX C. P. Teixeira was funded by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and
   Technology (FCT) and European funds (FSE/NORTE2020) through the Doctoral
   Grant SFRH/BD/130382/2017.
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NR 14
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 4
U2 12
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2352-3409
J9 DATA BRIEF
JI Data Brief
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 42
AR 108193
DI 10.1016/j.dib.2022.108193
EA APR 2022
PG 6
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 1K8TH
UT WOS:000798867900020
PM 35515990
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Buggy, L
   McNamara, KE
AF Buggy, Lisa
   McNamara, Karen Elizabeth
TI The need to reinterpret "community" for climate change adaptation: a
   case study of Pele Island, Vanuatu
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; community; development; Pacific
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY
AB "Community" has long been used as the preferred scale for implementing development projects, but it is being increasingly pitched as the panacea for climate change adaptation. The Pacific region is no exception and given the speed at which projects are being implemented it is important to extract lessons from past community-based projects more generally to inform adaptation activities now and in the future. This article draws from in-depth focus-group discussions (n = 10) in four village communities in Pele Island (Vanuatu) to understand the key factors influencing the success and failure of community-based projects (n = 34) since the late 1970s until the end of 2013. The overwhelming sense from participants is that projects have largely failed in these communities, due in part to a number of standard challenges associated with sustaining projects, including issues of finance, maintenance, management expertise and so on. But it has been the social dynamics, power relations and changing traditional norms at the community level that have been at the epicentre of project failure. This points to an urgent need for "community" to be re-framed as more than just the place where projects are rolled out. Instead, it needs to be a site where the socio-political context is understood and transformed to: avoid problems being built into projects; guarantee that project goals and outcomes do not exacerbate existing inequalities; and ensure that projects do not fail, weaken adaptive capacity or result in maladaptation. This article concludes with a preliminary set of four guidelines that may contribute to the climate change adaptation literature and assist practitioners and donors working with "community" on climate change adaptation efforts now and in the future.
C1 [Buggy, Lisa; McNamara, Karen Elizabeth] Univ Queensland, Sch Geog Planning & Environm Management, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
C3 University of Queensland
RP McNamara, KE (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Geog Planning & Environm Management, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
EM karen.mcnamara@uq.edu.au
RI McNamara, Karen/D-7322-2013
OI McNamara, Karen/0000-0002-4511-8403
FU University of Queensland
FX We are grateful to The University of Queensland for providing some
   funding support to undertake this work.
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NR 40
TC 70
Z9 76
U1 2
U2 28
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 3
BP 270
EP 280
DI 10.1080/17565529.2015.1041445
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DK5ZU
UT WOS:000375000700008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Li, RR
   Guo, JQ
   Wang, Q
AF Li, Rongrong
   Guo, Jiaqi
   Wang, Qiang
TI Evaluating the impact of official development assistance on ecological
   environments in agricultural and renewable energy sectors
SO HUMANITIES & SOCIAL SCIENCES COMMUNICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
ID INSTRUMENTAL VARIABLE ESTIMATION; CARBON EMISSIONS; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
   COUNTRIES
AB This study examines the complex interactions between official development assistance (ODA) and the ecological environment of recipient countries, mainly focusing on agricultural economic development and renewable energy. Using dynamic threshold models and robust statistical methods, the analysis uncovers the nuanced effects of ODA across various dimensions. Findings suggest that ODA has different impacts on the ecology of African countries depending on their agricultural dependence and renewable energy development levels. The study highlights the importance of targeted aid and advocates for the integration of ODA with environmentally sustainable development goals. Furthermore, the research underscores the potential for environmental improvement in countries with significant agricultural reliance. It emphasizes the critical role of renewable energy in mitigating ecological pressures and adapting to climate change. This study contributes to the assessment of sustainable development performance after the expiration of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals in 2030.
C1 [Li, Rongrong; Guo, Jiaqi; Wang, Qiang] China Univ Petr East China, Sch Econ & Management, Qingdao 266580, Peoples R China.
   [Guo, Jiaqi] Univ Jinan, Business Sch, Jinan 250022, Peoples R China.
C3 China University of Petroleum; University of Jinan
RP Guo, JQ; Wang, Q (corresponding author), China Univ Petr East China, Sch Econ & Management, Qingdao 266580, Peoples R China.; Guo, JQ (corresponding author), Univ Jinan, Business Sch, Jinan 250022, Peoples R China.
EM guojiaqi19940810@126.com; wangqiang7@upc.edu.cn
RI Li, Rongrong/B-8365-2019; , qiang/F-4618-2011
OI , qiang/0000-0002-8751-8093
FU The "Youth Innovation Team Project" of the Higher Education Institutions
   under the Shandong Provincial Department of Education [2023RW015];
   National Natural Science Foundation of China [71874203]
FX This work is supported by the "Youth Innovation Team Project" of the
   Higher Education Institutions under the Shandong Provincial Department
   of Education (No. 2023RW015) and the National Natural Science Foundation
   of China (Grant No. 71874203).
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NR 63
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 7
U2 7
PU SPRINGERNATURE
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2662-9992
J9 HUM SOC SCI COMMUN
JI Hum. Soc. Sci. Commun.
PD NOV 25
PY 2024
VL 11
IS 1
AR 1607
DI 10.1057/s41599-024-03979-2
PG 11
WC Humanities, Multidisciplinary; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Arts & Humanities - Other Topics; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA N3N2U
UT WOS:001363440600003
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Harmini
   Fanindi, A
AF Harmini
   Fanindi, A.
TI Adaptation Strategy of Forage Crops to Climate Change
SO WARTAZOA-BULETIN ILMU PETERNAKAN DAN KESEHATAN HEWAN INDONESIA
LA Indonesian
DT Article
DE Adaptation; climate change; forage
ID ELEVATED CO2; DROUGHT; GROWTH; IMPACT; YIELD; PRODUCTIVITY; TEMPERATURE;
   GRASSLAND; NITRATE
AB Climate change is characterized by an increasing in temperature, drought, and an increase in CO2. This paper aims to describe the strategy to deal with climate change in forage crops. Plant adaptation mechanisms include increasing water content, cell membrane stability, and photosynthetic capacity by suppressing stomata conductance and C consumption through respiration. The impacts of climate change on feed crops include: decreased productivity and nutrient content, and reduced planting area which affects the supply of animal feed so that food availability is disrupted. Adaptation strategies are carried out by managing the cultivation of forage plants, including time selection of planting and harvesting, as well as irrigation. Besides, it is necessary to select adaptive fodder plants through breeding. Breeding methods are conducted through the exploration of genetic resources until obtaining a new superior forage crop, adaptive to climate change.
C1 [Harmini; Fanindi, A.] Balai Penelitian Ternak, POB 221, Bogor 16720, Indonesia.
C3 CGIAR; International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
RP Harmini (corresponding author), Balai Penelitian Ternak, POB 221, Bogor 16720, Indonesia.
EM hmini2011@gmail.com
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NR 63
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 22
PU CENTER ANIMAL SCIENCE RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT
PI BOGOR
PA JL RAYA PAJAJARAN KAV E-59, BOGOR, 16151, INDONESIA
SN 0216-6461
EI 2354-6832
J9 WARTAZOA
JI Wartazoa
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 30
IS 4
BP 201
EP 210
DI 10.14334/wartazoa.v30i4.2544
PG 10
WC Veterinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Veterinary Sciences
GA PR3XB
UT WOS:000607170800003
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Xie, LY
   Lewis, SM
   Auffhammer, M
   Berck, P
AF Xie, Lunyu
   Lewis, Sarah M.
   Auffhammer, Maximilian
   Berck, Peter
TI Heat in the Heartland: Crop Yield and Coverage Response to Climate
   Change Along the Mississippi River
SO ENVIRONMENTAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Crop choice; Yield; Production
ID SUPPLY RESPONSE; NERLOVE MODEL; RISK; IMPACT
AB Farmers may adapt to climate change by substituting away from the crops most severely affected. In this paper we estimate the substitution caused by a moderate change in climate in the US Midwest. We pair a 10-year panel of satellite-based crop coverage with spatially explicit soil data and a fine-scale weather data set. Combining a proportion type model with local regressions, we simultaneously address the econometric issues of proportion dependent variables and spatial correlation of unobserved factors. We find the change in expected crop coverage and then we link those changes to the expected changes from an estimated climate dependent yield equation. Ceteris paribus, we find that climate induced changes in yield are offset by land coverage changes for rice and cotton but they are strongly amplified for corn and soy.
C1 [Xie, Lunyu] Renmin Univ China, Sch Econ, Dept Energy Econ, 617B Mingde Main Bldg,59 Zhongguancun Ave, Beijing 100872, Peoples R China.
   [Lewis, Sarah M.] Envision Geo LLC, POB 91, Oakville, CA 94562 USA.
   [Auffhammer, Maximilian; Berck, Peter] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, 207 Giannini Hall 3310, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
C3 Renmin University of China; University of California System; University
   of California Berkeley
RP Xie, LY (corresponding author), Renmin Univ China, Sch Econ, Dept Energy Econ, 617B Mingde Main Bldg,59 Zhongguancun Ave, Beijing 100872, Peoples R China.
EM lunyuxie@ruc.edu.cn; sarah@envisiongeo.com; auffhammer@berkeley.edu;
   pberck@berkeley.edu
OI , Lunyu/0000-0002-7519-5143; Auffhammer, Maximilian/0000-0002-1941-6132
FU Environmental Biosciences Institute at Berkeley
FX This project was funded by the Environmental Biosciences Institute at
   Berkeley and Illinois.
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NR 21
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 4
U2 29
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0924-6460
EI 1573-1502
J9 ENVIRON RESOUR ECON
JI Environ. Resour. Econ.
PD JUN
PY 2019
VL 73
IS 2
BP 485
EP 513
DI 10.1007/s10640-018-0271-7
PG 29
WC Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HY4JV
UT WOS:000468095100005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mohtat, N
   Khirfan, L
AF Mohtat, Niloofar
   Khirfan, Luna
TI Distributive Justice and Urban Form Adaptation to Flooding Risks:
   Spatial Analysis to Identify Toronto's Priority Neighborhoods
SO FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE climate justice; urban form adaptation; distributive justice; Toronto;
   spatial analysis; flood risks
ID GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE; CLIMATE ADAPTATION; RESILIENCE; VULNERABILITY;
   INEQUALITY; DYNAMICS; EQUITY; CITY
AB Empirical evidence points out that urban form adaptation to climate-induced flooding events-through interventions in land uses and town plans (i. e., street networks, building footprints, and urban blocks)-might exacerbate vulnerabilities and exposures, engendering risk inequalities and climate injustice. We develop a multicriteria model that draws on distributive justice's interconnections with the risk drivers of social vulnerabilities, flood hazard exposures, and the adaptive capacity of urban form (through land uses and town plans). The model assesses "who" is unequally at-risk to flooding events, hence, should be prioritized in adaptation responses; "where" are the high-risk priority areas located; and "how" can urban form adaptive interventions advance climate justice in the priority areas. We test the model in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, where there are indications of increased rainfall events and disparities in social vulnerabilities. Our methodology started with surveying Toronto-based flooding experts who assigned weights to the risk drivers based on their importance. Using ArcGIS, we then mapped and overlayed the risk drivers' values in all the neighborhoods across the city based on the experts' assigned weights. Accordingly, we identified four high-risk tower communities with old infrastructure and vulnerable populations as the priority neighborhoods for adaptation interventions within the urban form. These four neighborhoods are typical of inner-city tower blocks built in the 20(th) century across North America, Europe, and Asia based on modern architectural ideas. Considering the lifespan of these blocks, this study calls for future studies to investigate how these types of neighborhoods can be adapted to climate change to advance climate justice.
C1 [Mohtat, Niloofar; Khirfan, Luna] Univ Waterloo, Fac Environm, Sch Planning, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
C3 University of Waterloo
RP Mohtat, N (corresponding author), Univ Waterloo, Fac Environm, Sch Planning, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
EM nmohtat@uwaterloo.ca
RI Khirfan, Luna/AAU-3891-2020
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NR 113
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 12
U2 34
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-9634
J9 FRONT SUSTAIN CITIES
JI Front. Sustain. Cities
PD JUN 29
PY 2022
VL 4
AR 919724
DI 10.3389/frsc.2022.919724
PG 20
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Urban Studies
GA 7U1LQ
UT WOS:000911898100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU McNeely, JA
AF McNeely, Jeffrey A.
BE Renaud, FG
   SudmeierRieux, K
   Estrella, M
   Nehren, U
TI Protected Areas, Biodiversity, and the Risks of Climate Change
SO ECOSYSTEM-BASED DISASTER RISK REDUCTION AND ADAPTATION IN PRACTICE
SE Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Protected areas; Biodiversity; REDD
ID OLD-GROWTH FORESTS; HURRICANE-KATRINA; CONSERVATION; CARBON; WETLANDS;
   ANTHROPOCENE; RESTORATION; CORRIDORS; LESSONS; SCIENCE
AB Protected areas are becoming a major land use, approaching 15% of the Earth's terrestrial surface and a growing percentage of coastal waters. These sites are popular for visitors, but face many management challenges, including how to adapt to climate change. Often established for biodiversity conservation, scenic beauty, or tourism objectives, protected areas should become a major part of national strategies to address climate change and the disasters that may come in the form of extreme climatic events. Protected areas often contain the ecosystems that are the most effective in storing carbon and make major contributions to adapting to climate change. But these sites need to be managed more effectively, and linking them to the growing public concern about climate change could be one means of doing so. Management approaches that should be supported include establishing protected area complexes that expand their influence to a landscape scale, incorporating climate change issues into protected management at both site and system scales, identify the multiple ecosystem services that protected areas provide as a means of building broader support for them, and many others. Protected areas can also contribute to recovery from extreme hazard events, for example by working with local communities to restore natural vegetation. To date, protected areas have been largely ignored by the Clean Development Mechanism established by the Climate Change Convention. This should change, and protected areas should be recognized for the many contributions they make to climate change mitigation and adaptation, thereby contributing to reducing disaster risks. A relatively simple step would be to incorporate protected area agencies more actively in the preparation of the national reports called for by the Framework Convention on Climate Change. Protected areas should also become eligible for support under the REDD+ programme.
C1 [McNeely, Jeffrey A.] Dept Natl Pk Wildlife & Plant Conservat Hua Hin T, 1445-29 Petchkasem Rd, Cha Am 76021, Petchburi, Thailand.
RP McNeely, JA (corresponding author), Dept Natl Pk Wildlife & Plant Conservat Hua Hin T, 1445-29 Petchkasem Rd, Cha Am 76021, Petchburi, Thailand.
EM jeffmcneely2@gmail.com
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NR 81
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 15
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1878-9897
EI 2213-6959
BN 978-3-319-43633-3; 978-3-319-43631-9
J9 ADV NAT TECH HAZ RES
PY 2016
VL 42
BP 379
EP 397
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-43633-3_17
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-43633-3
PG 19
WC Engineering, Environmental; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Engineering; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA BH2YR
UT WOS:000399487500018
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fernandez, ME
   Gyenge, JE
   de Urquiza, MM
   Varela, S
AF Fernandez, M. E.
   Gyenge, J. E.
   de Urquiza, M. M.
   Varela, S.
TI Adaptability to climate change in forestry species: drought effects on
   growth and wood anatomy of ponderosa pines growing at different
   competition levels
SO FOREST SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE functional wood anatomy; Pinus ponderosa; Patagonia; drought resistance;
   stand density effects
ID STAND DENSITY; TREE MORTALITY; PATAGONIA; VULNERABILITY; VARIABILITY;
   NOTHOFAGUS; ARGENTINA; QUALITY; TRENDS; SIZE
AB More stressful conditions are expected due to climatic change in several regions, including Patagonia, South-America. In this region, there are no studies about the impact of severe drought events on growth and wood characteristics of the most planted forestry species, Pinus ponderosa (Doug. ex-Laws). The objective of this study was to quantify the effect of a severe drought event on annual stem growth and functional wood anatomy of pines growing at different plantation densities aiming to understand how management practices can help to increase their adaptability to climate change. Growth magnitude and period, specific hydraulic conductivity, and anatomical traits (early- and latewood proportion, lumen diameter, cell-wall thickness, tracheid length and bordered pit dimensions) were measured in the ring 2008-2009, which was formed during drought conditions. This drought event decreased annual stem growth by 30-38% and 58-65% respect to previous mean growth, in open vs. closed stand trees, respectively, indicating a higher sensitivity of the latter, which is opposite to reports from the same species growing in managed native forests in USA. Some wood anatomical variables did differ in more water stressed trees (lower cell wall thickness of earlywood cells and higher proportion of small-lumen cells in latewood), which in turn did not affect wood function (hydraulic conductivity and resistance to implosion). Other anatomical variables (tracheid length, pit dimensions, early- and latewood proportion, lumen diameter of earlywood cells) did not differ between tree sizes and plantation density. The results suggest that severe drought affects differentially the amount but not the function and quality of formed wood in ponderosa pine growing at different competition levels.
C1 [Fernandez, M. E.; Gyenge, J. E.] Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, RA-1033 Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
   [Fernandez, M. E.; Gyenge, J. E.; de Urquiza, M. M.; Varela, S.] INTA Estn Expt Agr Bariloche, RA-8400 San Carlos De Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina.
C3 Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET);
   Instituto Nacional de Tecnologia Agropecuaria (INTA)
RP Fernandez, ME (corresponding author), Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, RA-1033 Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
EM mefernandez@bariloche.inta.gov.ar
RI Fernandez, Maria/AAE-7451-2020; Varela, Santiago/IUQ-7586-2023; Gyenge,
   Javier/I-7676-2019
OI Gyenge, Javier/0000-0003-3895-5112; Fernandez, Maria
   Elena/0000-0002-9547-2216
FU National Institute for Agricultural Technology (INTA) of Argentina
   [PNFOR 2213]
FX We gratefully acknowledge Martins family, owners of "La Veranada" Ranch,
   at which we carried out all field measurements, and Guillermina Dalla
   Salda and three anonymous reviewers for her valuable comments on the
   manuscript. We also thank Laura Borrelli (INTA EEA-Bariloche) for
   borrowing laboratory equipment and providing her advice for tracheid
   length determinations. This work was supported by the National Institute
   for Agricultural Technology (INTA) of Argentina [grant PNFOR 2213].
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NR 41
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 2
U2 88
PU CONSEJO SUPERIOR INVESTIGACIONES CIENTIFICAS-CSIC
PI MADRID
PA Editorial CSIC, C/VITRUVIO 8, 28006 MADRID, SPAIN
SN 2171-5068
EI 2171-9845
J9 FOREST SYST
JI For. Syst.
PD APR
PY 2012
VL 21
IS 1
BP 162
EP 173
DI 10.5424/fs/2112211-12586
PG 12
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 922ZW
UT WOS:000302588700016
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zheng, SY
   Wang, K
   Fu, XW
   Zhang, AM
   Ge, YE
AF Zheng, Shiyuan
   Wang, Kun
   Fu, Xiaowen
   Zhang, Anming
   Ge, Ying-En
TI The effects of information publicity and government subsidy on port
   climate change adaptation: Strategy and social welfare analysis
SO TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART B-METHODOLOGICAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change -related disaster; Port adaptation investment; Asymmetric
   information; Information publicity; Government subsidy
ID COMPETITION; INVESTMENTS; COASTAL; POLICY; COST; INTEGRATION;
   GOVERNANCE; DISASTERS; COMPLEX; DESIGN
AB This paper develops an integrated economic model to examine two competing ports' investment in adaptation to climate-change disasters. The ports have asymmetric information on the actual disaster damage. In deciding on adaptation investment, the "leader" port is a better-informed first mover and the "follower" port is a less-informed follower. The government is able to acquire and verify port adaptation information and chooses whether to publicize it (publicity policy) or keep it confidential (confidentiality policy). If the information is publicized, the leader port initiates a signaling game in which it makes a decision first, and the follower acts after observing the leader's decision. Under the confidentiality policy, both ports make their decisions simultaneously. Our analysis shows the following. 1) Under the publicity policy, the leader port does not adopt a pooling strategy; rather, it determines its adaptation and output based on true information on disaster damage (i.e., it implements a separating equilibrium). 2) The publicity policy has two effects: it increases the leader's throughput while decreasing the follower's throughput (i. e., the throughput effect), and it helps rationalize the follower's adaptation investment by making more up-to-date disaster information available (i.e., the adaptation investment effect). 3) When the degree of inter-port competition is high, the publicity policy improves social welfare by increasing the total throughput of the two ports (i.e., an overall positive throughput effect) and rationalizes the follower's adaptation investment (i.e., a positive adaptation investment effect). Otherwise, it reduces the total throughput of the ports (i.e., an overall negative throughput effect). This negative throughput effect may outweigh the positive adaptation investment effect, thereby reducing social welfare. These analytical results suggest that the government needs to promote inter-port competition if it decides to publicize port adaptation information. Finally, we find that the joint implementation of publicity and subsidy policies could result in excessive adaptation investment, leading to social welfare loss. Our study illustrates the important effects of information asymmetry on adaptation investment and has policy implications in the presence of port competition and government subsidy.
C1 [Zheng, Shiyuan] Shanghai Maritime Univ, Coll Transport & Commun, Shanghai, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Kun; Fu, Xiaowen] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Ind & Syst Engn, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Anming] Univ British Columbia, Sauder Sch Business, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
   [Ge, Ying-En] Changan Univ, Coll Transportat Engn, Xian, Shaanxi, Peoples R China.
C3 Shanghai Maritime University; Hong Kong Polytechnic University;
   University of British Columbia; Chang'an University
RP Fu, XW (corresponding author), Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Ind & Syst Engn, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
EM xiaowen.fu@polyu.edu.hk; yege@chd.edu.cn
RI Zheng, Shiyuan/AAG-8363-2019; Ge, Ying-En/KGL-9581-2024; Wang,
   Kun/HDN-4021-2022; Ge, Ying-En/C-1123-2016
OI Wang, Kun/0000-0002-2137-9457; Fu, Xiaowen/0000-0002-1925-046X; Ge,
   Ying-En/0000-0002-8435-0483
FU Hong Kong Polytechnic University DGRF; National Natural Science
   Foundation of China;  [P0035755/UAKR];  [71901065];  [72031005]; 
   [72072113]
FX Acknowledgements We are very grateful to three anonymous referees and
   editor (Robin Lindsey) for their constructive and detailed comments and
   suggestions that have led to a significant improvement of the paper.
   Financial supports from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University DGRF
   (P0035755/UAKR) , the National Natural Science Foundation of China
   (71901065, 72031005, 72072113) are gratefully acknowledged.
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NR 63
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 9
U2 67
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0191-2615
EI 1879-2367
J9 TRANSPORT RES B-METH
JI Transp. Res. Pt. B-Methodol.
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 166
BP 284
EP 312
DI 10.1016/j.trb.2022.11.001
EA NOV 2022
PG 29
WC Economics; Engineering, Civil; Operations Research & Management Science;
   Transportation; Transportation Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Engineering; Operations Research & Management
   Science; Transportation
GA 6I8GV
UT WOS:000886370500003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Metz, JE
   Huang, Y
   Schneider, A
   Holthausen, N
   Willi, C
   Zahner, P
   Wang, LY
   Hess, J
AF Metz, Elsener Juerg
   Huang Yan
   Schneider, Annemarie
   Holthausen, Niels
   Willi, Christian
   Zahner, Philippe
   Wang Liyan
   Hess, Josef
BE Zhaoyin, W
   Lee, JHW
   Jizhang, G
   Shuyou, C
TI Adapting Flood Risk and Water Resources Management to Climate Change in
   Changjiang Basin, China
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 35TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, VOLS III AND IV
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 35th World Congress of the
   International-Association-for-Hydro-Environment-Engineering-and-Research
   (IAHR)
CY SEP 08-13, 2013
CL Int Assoc Hydro Environm Engn & Res, Chengdu, PEOPLES R CHINA
SP Minist Water Resources, China Inst Water Resources & Hydropower Res, Sichuan Univ, Tsinghua Univ, Univ Hong Kong, Chengdu Municipal Peoples Govt
HO Int Assoc Hydro Environm Engn & Res
DE Flood risk management; Integrated risk management; Climate change
   adaptation; Socio-economic and demographic development; Water resources
   management; Changjiang; Hanjiang; Jinsha river basin; Hydrological
   model; GCM based projections; RiskPlan; Sino-Swiss Cooperation
AB China and its growing population and emerging economy are severely affected by changing climate patterns. The water management sector is traditionally of highest importance for the Chinese society and economy - and at the same time heavily struck by droughts and flooding. Infrastructure including flood protection measures usually have a long lifespan (e.g. 50 years and more) and consequently will be subject to changing risks in future. Integrated Flood Management as a process is promoting an integrated approach to water resources management, and RiskPlan is a planning tool, which allows the integrative risk management approach to be implemented easier. Furthermore, it is able to ascertain the effectiveness of protection measures and evaluate the cost-effectiveness of such measures in a systematical, visual and scientific way. RiskPlan was applied in Dujiatai detention basin, lower area of the Hanjiang basin together with CWRC flood management experts. Due to the emerging importance of including climate change considerations in water resources management, CWRC analyzed the climate change projections for 2001-2100 by developing and using a statistical hydrological model as well as projections based on different emission scenarios of the Global Climate Models (GCMs). The hydrological model showed that there is an increasing tendency of temperature and precipitation intensity at basin scale. The GCM projections indicated that the temperature in Changjiang basin is predicted to keep on increasing over the future 100 years. Precipitation in Changjiang basin will decrease before the year 2020, then intends to increase during the period of 2020-2040 and continues to increase more significantly till 2100. More attention is needed on water resources management measures especially water supply in the dry season and drought management in general for 2-3 decades in Changjiang basin. Based on a Chinese-Swiss cooperation agreement in the field of water resources management, the Swiss approach on adapting to climate change shall be introduced in the upper Changjiang basin - Jinsha river catchment. This Swiss approach will consider climate change as well as socio-economic and demographic development scenarios. Those possible developments will be included in a next application of the IT tool RiskPlan. The application of the Swiss approach will consider different sectors and hazards.
C1 [Metz, Elsener Juerg; Schneider, Annemarie; Holthausen, Niels; Willi, Christian] Ernst Basler Partners Ltd EBP, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Huang Yan] CWRC Wuhan, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
   [Huang Yan] CISPDR, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
   [Zahner, Philippe; Wang Liyan] Swiss Agcy Cooperat & Dev SDC, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Hess, Josef] Swiss Fed Off Environm FOEN, Bern, Switzerland.
RP Metz, JE (corresponding author), Ernst Basler Partners Ltd EBP, Zurich, Switzerland.
CR [Anonymous], 2008, CLIMATE CHANGE WATER
   CWRC FOEN, 2013, SIN PIL RES FLOOD RI
   HUANG Yan, 2008, CLIMATE CHANGE IMPAC
   Nakicenovic Nebojsa, 2001, SPEC REP EMM SECN
   PCMDI, 2007, CMIP3 CLIM MOD DOC R
   Prtner H.O, 2022, Contribution of Working Group II to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, P3056, DOI [10.1017/9781009325844, DOI 10.1017/9781009325844]
NR 6
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 9
PU TSINGHUA UNIV
PI BEIJING
PA DEPT BUILDING SCI, SCH ARCHITECTURE, SECRETARIAT ISHVAC07, BEIJING,
   100084, PEOPLES R CHINA
BN 978-7-302-33544-3
PY 2013
PG 9
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA BE3AJ
UT WOS:000370410302089
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Ganpat, WG
   Isaac, WAP
AF Ganpat, Wayne G.
   Isaac, Wendy-Ann P.
BA Ganpat, W
   Isaac, WA
BF Ganpat, W
   Isaac, WA
TI Environmental Sustainability and Climate Change Adaptation Strategies
   Preface
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY AND CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION STRATEGIES
SE Advances in Environmental Engineering and Green Technologies
LA English
DT Editorial Material; Book Chapter
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; TRITICUM-AESTIVUM L.; INDO-GANGETIC PLAINS; RICE-WHEAT
   SYSTEM; FRANKLINIELLA-BISPINOSA THYSANOPTERA; COMMONLY INTERCEPTED
   THRIPS; TROPICAL CYCLONE FREQUENCY; SOIL PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES; CROP
   RESIDUE MANAGEMENT; LONG-TERM TILLAGE
C1 [Ganpat, Wayne G.] Univ West Indies, Agr Extens & Commun, St Augustine, Trinidad Tobago.
   [Isaac, Wendy-Ann P.] Univ West Indies, Fac Food & Agr, Dept Food Prod, Crop Prod, St Augustine Campus, St Augustine, Trinidad Tobago.
C3 University West Indies Mona Jamaica; University West Indies Saint
   Augustine; University West Indies Mona Jamaica; University West Indies
   Saint Augustine
RP Ganpat, WG (corresponding author), Univ West Indies, Agr Extens & Commun, St Augustine, Trinidad Tobago.
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NR 871
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU IGI GLOBAL
PI HERSEY
PA 701 E CHOCOLATE AVE, STE 200, HERSEY, PA 17033-1240 USA
SN 2326-9162
EI 2326-9170
BN 978-1-5225-1608-8; 978-1-5225-1607-1
J9 ADV ENV ENG GREEN TE
PY 2017
BP XIV
EP +
D2 10.4018/978-1-5225-1607-1
PG 58
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BM7ZZ
UT WOS:000468632100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Giupponi, C
AF Giupponi, Carlo
TI Decision Support for Mainstreaming Climate Change Adaptation in Water
   Resources Management
SO WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Water management; Policy-decision-making;
   Decision support
ID UNCERTAINTY; SYSTEMS; STRATEGIES; FRAMEWORK
AB Climate change adaptation (CCA) has recently emerged as a new fundamental dimension to be considered in the planning and management of water resources. Because of the need to consider the already perceived changes in climate trends, variability and extremes, and their interactions with evolving social and ecological systems, water management is now facing new challenges. The research community is expected to contribute with innovative methods and tools to support to decision- and policy-makers. Decision Support Systems (DSSs), have a relatively long history in the water management sector. They are usually developed upon pre-existing hydrologic simulation models, providing interfaces for facilitated use beyond the limited group of model developers, and specific routines for decision making (e.g. optimization methods). In recent years, the traditional focus of DSS research has shifted away from the software component, towards the process of structuring problems and aiding decisions, thus including in particular robust methods for stakeholders' participation. The paper analyses the scientific literature, identifies the main open issues, and proposes an innovative operational approach for the implementation of participatory planning and decision-making processes for CCA in the water domain.
C1 [Giupponi, Carlo] Univ Ca Foscari, Dipartimento Econ, Venice Ctr Climate Studies, I-30121 Venice, Italy.
   [Giupponi, Carlo] Ctr Euromediterraneo Cambiamenti Climat CMCC, I-30121 Venice, Italy.
C3 Universita Ca Foscari Venezia; Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti
   Climatici (CMCC)
RP Giupponi, C (corresponding author), Univ Ca Foscari, Dipartimento Econ, Venice Ctr Climate Studies, Canneregio 873, I-30121 Venice, Italy.
EM cgiupponi@unive.it
RI Giupponi, Carlo/E-5895-2012
CR [Anonymous], 2013, COM/2013/0216 Final
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NR 37
TC 13
Z9 15
U1 1
U2 46
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0920-4741
EI 1573-1650
J9 WATER RESOUR MANAG
JI Water Resour. Manag.
PD OCT
PY 2014
VL 28
IS 13
BP 4795
EP 4808
DI 10.1007/s11269-014-0776-y
PG 14
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA AQ0CC
UT WOS:000342448400024
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU McCormack, PC
AF McCormack, Phillipa C.
BE AkhtarKhavari, A
   Richardson, BJ
TI Reforming restoration law to support climate change adaptation
SO ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION LAW: CONCEPTS AND CASE STUDIES
SE Law Justice and Ecology
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION; CONSERVATION; FUTURE; ECOSYSTEMS;
   REHABILITATION; OPPORTUNITIES; EXTINCTION; THREATS; AREAS; LAND
C1 [McCormack, Phillipa C.] Univ Tasmania, Adm Law & Legal Res Methods, Hobart, Tas, Australia.
   [McCormack, Phillipa C.] Supreme Court Victoria, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
C3 University of Tasmania
RP McCormack, PC (corresponding author), Univ Tasmania, Adm Law & Legal Res Methods, Hobart, Tas, Australia.; McCormack, PC (corresponding author), Supreme Court Victoria, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
RI McCormack, Phillipa/GYA-3008-2022; McCormack, Phillipa C/N-3668-2017
OI McCormack, Phillipa C/0000-0001-6751-8291
FU Institute for the Study of Social Change
FX This research was generously supported by a grant from the Institute for
   the Study of Social Change, for which I am very grateful.
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NR 82
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 1
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-0-429-46831-5; 978-1-138-60501-5
J9 LAW JUST ECOL
PY 2019
BP 265
EP 287
D2 10.4324/9780429468315
PG 23
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies; Law
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Government & Law
GA BO2ZB
UT WOS:000509564300012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Starzyk, A
   Donderewicz, M
   Rybak-Niedziólka, K
   Marchwinski, J
   Grochulska-Salak, M
   Lacek, P
   Mazur, L
   Voronkova, I
   Vietrova, P
AF Starzyk, Agnieszka
   Donderewicz, Mikolaj
   Rybak-Niedziolka, Kinga
   Marchwinski, Janusz
   Grochulska-Salak, Magdalena
   Lacek, Przemyslaw
   Mazur, Lukasz
   Voronkova, Ivanna
   Vietrova, Polina
TI The Evolution of Multi-Family Housing Development Standards in the
   Climate Crisis: A Comparative Analysis of Selected Issues
SO BUILDINGS
LA English
DT Article
DE housing standards; climate crisis; humanitarian crisis
ID BUILDINGS; MARKET; MODEL
AB Contemporary problems related to the consequences of climate change and exposure to changing investment and implementation conditions are prompting the development of programmes adapting to climate change. Issues of adaptation and actions in relation to climate change are being discussed in the architectural, urban planning, and governmental communities. Models are being developed for shaping the functional and spatial structure, buildings and infrastructure in the city in relation to the projected climate change. Multi-criteria and interdisciplinary research is being carried out and solutions are being implemented for retaining water, minimising the heat island effect, reducing emissions and environmental impact by analysing the carbon footprint and introducing circular economy principles. The research is focused on the analysis of design and implementation conditions for multi-family housing projects in Poland, and the development of design guidelines enabling adaptation and mitigation of the negative effects of climate change, including heat island effects, smog, overheating, drought, and flooding in housing. Conclusions from the overview of the indicated documents and legal provisions for the implementation of sustainable development principles and adaptation to climate change in the investments under preparation (urban and architectural projects) enable the forecasting of development directions and ideological assumptions for shaping urbanised areas, providing the basis for shaping the resilience of the functional and spatial structure and the natural system in urban areas subject to transformation. Issues of implementing pro-environmental technologies and developing new urban planning standards disseminate the solutions of compact cities in which the development of multifunctional building complexes with public spaces equipped with greenery linked to the buildings are realised.
C1 [Starzyk, Agnieszka; Donderewicz, Mikolaj; Rybak-Niedziolka, Kinga; Lacek, Przemyslaw; Voronkova, Ivanna; Vietrova, Polina] Warsaw Univ Life Sci SGGW, Inst Civil Engn, Nowoursynowska 159, PL-02776 Warsaw, Poland.
   [Marchwinski, Janusz] Univ Ecol & Management Warsaw, Fac Architecture, Olszewska 12, PL-00792 Warsaw, Poland.
   [Grochulska-Salak, Magdalena] Warsaw Univ Technol, Fac Architecture, Koszykowa 55, PL-00659 Warsaw, Poland.
   [Mazur, Lukasz] Helena Chodkowska Univ Technol & Econ, Fac Engn, Jagiellonska 82f, PL-03301 Warsaw, Poland.
C3 Warsaw University of Life Sciences; Warsaw University of Technology
RP Marchwinski, J (corresponding author), Univ Ecol & Management Warsaw, Fac Architecture, Olszewska 12, PL-00792 Warsaw, Poland.
EM agnieszka_starzyk@sggw.edu.pl; m.donderewicz@gmail.com;
   kinga_rybak@sggw.edu.pl; j.marchwinski@wseiz.pl;
   magdalena.salak@pw.edu.pl; przemyslaw_lacek@sggw.edu.pl;
   arch.lukaszmazur@gmail.com; ivanna_voronkova@sggw.edu.pl;
   polina_vietrova@sggw.edu.pl
RI Marchwiński, Janusz/Q-6681-2017; Starzyk, Agnieszka/KVZ-3407-2024;
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   Kinga/KHY-0661-2024; Mazur, Lukasz Kamil/ABF-1210-2021; Rybak,
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OI Mazur, Lukasz Kamil/0000-0002-3799-4446; Lacek,
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   Janusz/0000-0003-3897-3580; Starzyk, Agnieszka/0000-0002-8704-5003;
   Donderewicz, Mikolaj/0009-0005-2425-9089; Vietrova,
   Polina/0000-0003-0383-816X
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NR 109
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 3
U2 8
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2075-5309
J9 BUILDINGS-BASEL
JI BUILDINGS-BASEL
PD AUG
PY 2023
VL 13
IS 8
AR 1985
DI 10.3390/buildings13081985
PG 26
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA Q3VI6
UT WOS:001056825500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alvi, S
   Khayyam, U
   Hossen, A
AF Alvi, Shahzad
   Khayyam, Umer
   Hossen, Altap
TI Mitigating and adapting to climate change: attitudinal and behavioural
   challenges in South Asia
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Attitudes; Climate change; Behavior; Mitigation; Adaptation; South Asia
ID RURAL HOUSEHOLDS; ADAPTATION; IMPACTS; VARIABILITY; DISEASES; DROUGHT;
   ECOLOGY
AB Purpose This study aims to examine peoples' perception of climate change. It assessed their attitude, behavioural motivation for mitigating and adapting to climate change in the two capital cities of South Asia: Islamabad in Pakistan and Dhaka in Bangladesh. Design/methodology/approach This study used the quantitative research technique based on responses of 800 close-ended questions embedded in a close-ended questionnaire, which were filled-out from randomly selected sample of respondents. The primary data was analysed and presented through tabulation. For binary dependent variables, the standardised logistic coefficients were projected for more reliable estimates. Findings The findings reveal that the population of both capital cities have a low personal perception of climate change. Also, the dwellers of both cities have a low level of motivation to take mitigative and adaptive measures against climatic hazards. The results of the logistic regression model further indicate that the people who believe that climate change is a threat to their lives are more likely to adopt mitigative and adaptive strategies. This mostly applies to the people with a relatively higher income and education level. Research limitations/implications This study implies to create awareness and sensitise the local community in both the capitals and beyond through information dissemination. Further, the availability of toolkits to handle emergencies remains imperative in registering attitudinal and behavioural changes to reduce the impacts of climate variability in poor localities. Originality/value This research study analysed the link between climate change mitigation and energy conservation from the societal attributes of perception, motivation, attitude and behaviour, which remains essential for community-based mitigation against climatic hazards.
C1 [Alvi, Shahzad] Natl Univ Sci & Technol NUST, Sch Social Sci & Humanities S3H, Dept Econ, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Khayyam, Umer] Natl Univ Sci & Technol NUST, Sch Social Sci & Humanities S3H, Dept Dev Studies, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Hossen, Altap] Federat Bangladesh Chambers Commerce & Ind FBCCI, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
C3 National University of Sciences & Technology - Pakistan; National
   University of Sciences & Technology - Pakistan
RP Khayyam, U (corresponding author), Natl Univ Sci & Technol NUST, Sch Social Sci & Humanities S3H, Dept Dev Studies, Islamabad, Pakistan.
EM dr.umer@s3h.nust.edu.pk
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PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-8692
EI 1756-8706
J9 INT J CLIM CHANG STR
JI Int. J. Clim. Chang. Strateg. Manag.
PD SEP 19
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 4
SI SI
BP 477
EP 493
DI 10.1108/IJCCSM-08-2019-0054
EA JUN 2020
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA NV8AE
UT WOS:000544267200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Seo, SN
AF Seo, S. N.
TI A geographically scaled analysis of adaptation to climate change with
   spatial models using agricultural systems in Africa
SO JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
ID CO2 FERTILIZATION; CROP YIELDS; IMPACT; RESPONSES
AB The present paper provides a geographically scaled analysis of adaptation to climate change using adoption of agricultural systems observed across Africa. Using c. 9000 farm surveys, spatial logit models were applied to explain observed agricultural system choices by climate variables after accounting for soils, geography and other household characteristics. The results reveal that strong neighbourhood effects exist and a spatial re-sampling and bootstrapping approach can remove them. The crops-only system is adopted most frequently in the lowland humid forest, lowland sub-humid, mid-elevation sub-humid Agro-Ecological Zones (AEZs) and in the highlands in the east and in southern Africa. Integrated farming is favoured in the lowland dry savannah, moist savannah and semi-arid zones in West Africa and eastern coastal zones. A livestock-only system is favoured most in the mid/high-elevation moist savannahs located in southern Africa. Under a hot and dry Canadian Climate Centre (CCC) scenario, the crops-only system should move out from the currently favoured regions of humid zones in the lowlands towards the mid-/high elevations. It declines by more than 5% in the lowland savannahs. Integrated farming should increase across all the AEZs by as much as 5%, but less so in the deserts or in the humid forest zones in the mid-/high elevations. A livestock-only system should increase by 2-5% in the lowland semi-arid, dry savannah and moist savannah zones in the lowlands. Adaptation measures should be carefully scaled, up or down, considering geographic and ecological differentials as well as household characteristics, as proposed in the present study.
C1 Univ Sydney, Fac Agr Food & Nat Resources, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
C3 University of Sydney
RP Seo, SN (corresponding author), Univ Sydney, Fac Agr Food & Nat Resources, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
EM niggol.seo@sydney.edu.au
OI Seo, S. Niggol/0000-0002-2719-8315
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NR 54
TC 27
Z9 31
U1 0
U2 25
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI NEW YORK
PA 32 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, NY 10013-2473 USA
SN 0021-8596
EI 1469-5146
J9 J AGR SCI-CAMBRIDGE
JI J. Agric. Sci.
PD AUG
PY 2011
VL 149
BP 437
EP 449
DI 10.1017/S0021859611000293
PN 4
PG 13
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 783JO
UT WOS:000292078700005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McLaughlin, B
   Fogg, A
   Ennis, KK
   Halstrom, G
   Herrera, A
   Quadri, P
AF McLaughlin, Blair
   Fogg, Alissa
   Ennis, Katherine K.
   Halstrom, Grant
   Herrera, Alicia
   Quadri, Paulo
TI Climate change-adaptive participatory field gene banking for a
   California endemic oak
SO RESTORATION ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; climate-adaptive restoration; gene bank; genetic
   diversity; trailing edge
ID RANGE-EDGE; DROUGHT; RECRUITMENT; POPULATIONS; EVOLUTION; PHENOLOGY;
   RESPONSES; TRAITS; PLANTS; RISKS
AB Anthropogenic climate change is causing demographic shifts at species' range edges. Trailing edge populations, which may be genetically distinct and adapted to relative climate extremes, already are showing declines in some species. The associated loss of trailing edge genetic diversity may limit possibilities for future climate-adaptive restoration. For plants with recalcitrant seed, such as oaks, that cannot tolerate conventional seed banking, we propose a novel approach to the conservation of climate-threatened genetic diversity: dispersed, participatory field gene banking. In this collaborative model, trailing edge transplants are stewarded at dispersed sites across a species' projected regional refugia. In 2018, we initiated a pilot participatory field gene bank for the foundational, endemic California blue oak (Quercus douglasii), a species experiencing increasing climate-related declines at its trailing edge. To evaluate seedling performance, the gene bank was designed as a set of 23 small, dispersed common gardens with paired local and trailing edge seeds. Trailing edge seedlings showed lower survival and growth relative to locals, yet they also showed lower levels of leaf disease and herbivory, traits that could confer an adaptive advantage in a more xeric future. The substantial early survival of translocated seeds suggests that participatory field gene banking may offer an effective means of preserving trailing edge genetic diversity for oaks, thereby maintaining genetic resources that could be critical for future climate change-adaptive restoration. However, further observations are needed to confirm the strategy's longer-term viability and evaluate evidence of local adaptation.
C1 [McLaughlin, Blair] Hampshire Coll, 893 West St, Amherst, MA 01002 USA.
   [Fogg, Alissa; Halstrom, Grant; Herrera, Alicia] Point Blue Conservat Sci, 3820 Cypress Dr 11, Petaluma, CA 94954 USA.
   [Ennis, Katherine K.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Integrat Biol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
   [Quadri, Paulo] Sky Isl Alliance, 3127 N Cherry Ave, Tucson, AZ 85719 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley
RP McLaughlin, B (corresponding author), Hampshire Coll, 893 West St, Amherst, MA 01002 USA.
EM bmclaughlin@hampshire.edu
FU Wildlife Conservation Society; National Geographic Foundation
FX For funding, we thank the Wildlife Conservation Society, Climate
   Adaptation Fund and the National Geographic Foundation. We are grateful
   to the American River Conservancy, the McConnell Foundation, Zachary
   Principe and The Nature Conservancy, Ryan O'Dell and the CA Bureau of
   Land Management, San Joaquin Experimental Range Pepperwood Preserve,
   Hopland REC, Solano Land Trust, and the many individual landowners
   involved in this work. We also thank the Zavaleta Lab, the Ackerly Lab
   and Point Blue staff and volunteers, in particular T. Gardali, E.
   Porzig, C. Shake, L. Petersen, K. Marsh, K. Garbach, L. J. Roberts and
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NR 74
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 10
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1061-2971
EI 1526-100X
J9 RESTOR ECOL
JI Restor. Ecol.
PD JUL
PY 2022
VL 30
IS 5
AR e13573
DI 10.1111/rec.13573
EA NOV 2021
PG 9
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 2Y9EI
UT WOS:000721430500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Khlebnikova, EI
   Rudakova, YL
   Shkolnik, IM
AF Khlebnikova, E., I
   Rudakova, Yu L.
   Shkolnik, I. M.
TI Changes in Precipitation Regime over the Territory of Russia: Data of
   Regional Climate Modeling and Observations
SO RUSSIAN METEOROLOGY AND HYDROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; regional models; extremes; precipitation intensity
ID DURATION
AB The study considers the problem of detailing climate projections with respect to changes in the precipitation regime over the territory of Russia by the middle of the 21st century. Numerous ensemble calculations with the high-resolution regional climate model are used to obtain the projections of climatic changes concerning the duration of dry and wet spells as well as in the related extremes of the amount and daily intensity of precipitation. The estimates of the trend in the analyzed precipitation characteristics derived from standard meteorological observations are presented for 1966-2015. Important seasonal and regional features of changes in the analyzed parameters of extremity are revealed. It is reasonable to consider these features when adapting to climate change at the regional level.
C1 [Khlebnikova, E., I; Rudakova, Yu L.; Shkolnik, I. M.] Voeikov Main Geophys Observ, Ul Karbysheva 7, St Petersburg 194021, Russia.
RP Khlebnikova, EI (corresponding author), Voeikov Main Geophys Observ, Ul Karbysheva 7, St Petersburg 194021, Russia.
EM khlebnikova_e@mail.ru
RI Shkolnik, Igor/ABD-2715-2020; Khlebnikova, Elena/ABD-2710-2020
FU Russian Science Foundation [16-17-00063]; Russian Science Foundation
   [16-17-00063] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation
FX The research was supported by the Russian Science Foundation (grant
   16-17-00063).
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NR 35
TC 16
Z9 20
U1 0
U2 10
PU PLEIADES PUBLISHING INC
PI MOSCOW
PA PLEIADES PUBLISHING INC, MOSCOW, 00000, RUSSIA
SN 1068-3739
EI 1934-8096
J9 RUSS METEOROL HYDRO+
JI Russ. Meteorol. Hydrol.
PD JUL
PY 2019
VL 44
IS 7
BP 431
EP 439
DI 10.3103/S106837391907001X
PG 9
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA IN7RD
UT WOS:000478878600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Funder, M
   Mweemba, CE
AF Funder, Mikkel
   Mweemba, Carol Emma
TI Interface bureaucrats and the everyday remaking of climate
   interventions: Evidence from climate change adaptation in Zambia
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Governance; Policy implementation; Everyday
   practices; Pragmatism; Interface bureaucrats; Street level bureaucracy;
   Zambia
ID STREET-LEVEL BUREAUCRATS; POLITICS; POLICY; STATE; AUTHORITY; ARENA
AB When climate change policies are implemented in practice, they travel through the hands of a range of practitioners who not only mediate but also potentially transform climate interventions. This article highlights the role of a group of actors whose practices have so far received little attention in the study of climate change governance, namely the public servants who are responsible for the everyday implementation of national climate change policies and associated programmes on the ground. Situated at the frontline of the state and often engaging directly with citizens, these "interface bureaucrats" occupy a complex position in which they must balance their role as representatives of the state with the need to accommodate the pressures, interests and practical challenges associated with everyday policy implementation. In this article we examine how interface bureaucrats in Zambia seek to navigate this role as they go about implementing national climate change adaptation policies in practice, and what this means for the nature and outcome of these interventions. We identify key dilemmas of the interface bureaucrats in our study areas, namely (i) intervening with limited reach, (ii) implementing generic policies, and (iii) managing conflicting interests. We show how they address these dilemmas through highly pragmatic practices involving informal agreements with community members, discretionary adjustments of official policies, and negotiation of contested interventions. As a result, the nature and outcomes of climate change adaptation interventions end up differently from the official policies and the underlying governance interests of the central state. Our findings suggest a need for greater attention to the role of interface bureaucrats as everyday climate policy makers and point to the significance of pragmatism and compromise in the interaction between state actors and citizens in environmental interventions.
C1 [Funder, Mikkel] Danish Inst Int Studies, Oestbanegade 117, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Mweemba, Carol Emma] Univ Zambia, Integrated Water Resources Management Ctr, Great East Rd, Lusaka, Zambia.
C3 Aarhus University; Danish Institute for International Studies;
   University of Zambia
RP Funder, M (corresponding author), Danish Inst Int Studies, Oestbanegade 117, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.
EM mfu@diis.dk; carol.mweemba@unza.zm
RI Funder, Mikkel/HTN-6507-2023
OI Funder, Mikkel/0000-0002-3808-919X
FU Danish Consultative Research Committee for Development Research
FX This work was supported by the Danish Consultative Research Committee
   for Development Research. The authors would like to thank the
   interviewees in Zambia for their time, patience and candor. We would
   also like to thank Professor Imasiku Nyambe and our other colleagues in
   the Climate Change and Rural Institutions research programme for
   discussions and comments.
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NR 65
TC 30
Z9 34
U1 0
U2 15
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD MAR
PY 2019
VL 55
BP 130
EP 138
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2019.02.007
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA HS6KY
UT WOS:000463982000012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barrios, JE
   Rodriguez-Pineda, JA
   Benignos, MD
AF Eugenio Barrios, J.
   Alfredo Rodriguez-Pineda, J.
   de la Maza Benignos, Mauricio
TI Integrated river basin management in the Conchos River basin, Mexico: A
   case study of freshwater climate change adaptation
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; basin; climate change; integrated river basin management;
   river; water
ID RESOURCES MANAGEMENT; VULNERABILITY; CHIHUAHUA; DROUGHT
AB In Mexico, due to reduced and unevenly distributed hydrological resources and incipient water management capabilities, climate change adaptation in the water sector is recognized as an urgent issue. To derive lessons for climate change adaptation, this paper evaluates the results gained after five years of an integrated river basin management (IRBM) programme in the Conchos River in northern Mexico. Autonomous adaptation measures assessed include: modernization of irrigation practices; pilot sustainable watershed management projects in the upper basin; development of an environmental flow assessment and a proposal to improve water allocation; and the creation of the Inter-institutional Working Group as a basin organization. These measures have improved river basin management, yet adverse outcomes were also observed, such as impacts of surface water efficiency measures that were not managed in conjunction with groundwater. Key adaptation lessons derived include: the importance of multi-stakeholder participation in designing and implementing adaptive management measures; the need for significant investment in transfer of expertise and capacity building; and the positive effect of linking local, national and international institutions. These results highlight the need for more investment in 'soft' adaptive management in place of infrastructure. In the Rio Conchos, if these no regrets' adaptation measures are consolidated in the following years, they will serve as a foundation to develop planned and more effective climate change adaptation programmes, and enhance institutional, environmental and societal resilience.
C1 [Eugenio Barrios, J.] WWF Mexico, River Basin Management Program, Mexico City 06100, DF, Mexico.
   [Alfredo Rodriguez-Pineda, J.] WWF Mexico, River Basin Management Program, Col Ctr, Chihuahua 31000, Chih, Mexico.
   [de la Maza Benignos, Mauricio] WWF Chihuahuan Desert Program, Chihuahua 31000, Chih, Mexico.
RP Barrios, JE (corresponding author), WWF Mexico, River Basin Management Program, Ave Mexico 51, Mexico City 06100, DF, Mexico.
EM ebarrios@wwfmex.org
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NR 36
TC 12
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 33
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2009
VL 1
IS 3
SI SI
BP 249
EP 260
DI 10.3763/cdev.2009.0024
PG 12
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA V17CO
UT WOS:000207915500007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wamsler, C
   Raggers, S
AF Wamsler, Christine
   Raggers, Sanne
TI Principles for supporting city-citizen commoning for climate adaptation:
   From adaptation governance to sustainable transformation
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Disaster risk reduction; Cooperative
   governance; Collaborative governance; Commoning; Sustainability;
   Nature-based solutions; Contemplative approaches; Inner dimensions;
   Clumsy solutions
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; VULNERABILITY; RISK; COPRODUCTION; STRATEGIES;
   MANAGEMENT; FRAMEWORK; POLITICS; PRIVATE; CONTEXT
AB This paper examines whether or not specific forms of adaptation governance that involve city administrations and citizens can help (or hinder) creating a foundation for more sustainable climate adaptation and transformation. Based on the analysis of recurring patterns of social adaptation dilemmas (caused by the inter-dependencies between adaptation providers and beneficiaries), associated actor constellations, policy approaches, and gaps, this paper presents principles for supporting city citizen commoning for climate adaptation (Le. joint actions needed to create systems to manage 'shared' adaptation resources). The presented principles can assist in facilitating the management of public goods for adaptation, including privately-provided adaptation goods, and relate to four strategic aims: i) the effective management of collective and individual resources; ii) comprehensive risk reduction; iii) sustained local institutional linkages (mainstreaming); and iv) matching different actors' views, efforts and capacities. The principles synthesise and extend the literature by considering, and providing space for, a comprehensive understanding of risk and its root causes, and for alternative rationalities or Cnonrationall behaviours intended to address them. The latter takes account of the subjectivities (e.g. emotional attachments to resources and seascapes), which are as important as power structures with respect to how climate adaptation is managed. In fact, subjectivities are central to the operation of city administrations as they are an integral part of how people understand their relationship to others. In an adaptation context, this means focusing on practices and interactions that are required for taking adaptation actions, and how they can both promote and frustrate attempts to collaborate. We conclude that the developed principles can support more sustainable climate adaptation and transformation by holistically addressing existing adaptation dilemmas, actor constellations, and the associated policy gaps that make current approaches ineffective.
C1 [Wamsler, Christine; Raggers, Sanne] Lund Univ, Ctr Sustainabil Studies LUCSUS, Lund, Sweden.
C3 Lund University
RP Wamsler, C (corresponding author), Lund Univ, Ctr Sustainabil Studies LUCSUS, Lund, Sweden.
EM christine.wamsler@lucsus.lu.se
FU Swedish Research Council FORMAS [2011-901]
FX This research was carried out in the context of the Sustainable Urban
   Transformation for Climate Change Adaptation project financed by the
   Swedish Research Council FORMAS (no. 2011-901). Our deep gratitude goes
   to those who were involved in conducting the case studies this paper
   draws upon, with special thanks to Ebba Brink.
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NR 76
TC 46
Z9 47
U1 2
U2 51
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD JUL
PY 2018
VL 85
SI SI
BP 81
EP 89
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.03.021
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GJ1SY
UT WOS:000435049300010
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hagerman, SM
AF Hagerman, Shannon M.
TI Governing adaptation across scales: Hotspots and hesitancy in Pacific
   Northwest forests
SO LAND USE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Forest management; Governance; Nonmaterial
   barriers; Information barrier; Production of knowledge
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; OVERCOMING BARRIERS;
   BIODIVERSITY; INFORMATION
AB The observed and anticipated impacts of climate change interacting with the responses of actors and institutions to these changes are together poised to transform and reconfigure resource management systems across scales. Within many if not most resource management agencies, the number of programs and initiatives designed to adapt to the expected impacts of climate change has risen sharply over the past decade. This article examines the implementation of such climate adaptation initiatives in the context of the United States Forest Service (USFS). Based on semi-structured interviews (N = 25), this paper provides an empirical account of how USFS aquatic resources managers and specialists working at regional and sub-regional levels within the Pacific Northwest region (PNW) are responding to adaptation planning directives established at the federal level, as well as how managers are advancing their own unit-level initiatives. Results illustrate a spectrum of engagement with adaptation across the region. In addition to the expected influence of limited human and financial capacity and institutional constraints, key factors perceived by managers as shaping engagement across the region include the attitudes of key actors, and legacies of (mis-) trust (with respect to the stability of the climate mandate). In contrast, managers did not perceive technical information as a major barrier to adaptation. These observations highlight the asymmetry between the widespread emphasis on the role of technical information in shaping adaptation relative to the often overlooked, but influential role of nonmaterial factors (like attitudes and trust). Findings are discussed in the context of deepening understanding about the interrelated roles of material and nonmaterial barriers in shaping currently unfolding adaptation efforts. Crown Copyright (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Hagerman, Shannon M.] Univ British Columbia, Dept Forest Resources Management, 2031-2424 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
C3 University of British Columbia
RP Hagerman, SM (corresponding author), Univ British Columbia, Dept Forest Resources Management, 2031-2424 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
EM Shannon.Hagerman@ubc.ca
OI Hagerman, Shannon/0000-0002-1830-6126
FU USDA-USFS Pacific Northwest Research Station; Climate Impacts Group,
   University of Washington
FX The author gratefully acknowledges the participation of the 25 managers
   and specialists and across Region 6 for giving their time in interviews
   and follow-up conversations, and for providing their perspectives. This
   research would not have been possible without their participation and I
   sincerely hope that I have done justice to their views in this paper.
   The interviews presented here were conducted as part of a related
   applied research project (separate results forthcoming) funded by the
   USDA-USFS Pacific Northwest Research Station and in collaboration with
   the Climate Impacts Group, University of Washington. The author also
   wishes to thank Dr. Amy Snover for valuable comments at the development
   stage of this work as well as the suggestions of two anonymous
   reviewers.
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NR 52
TC 10
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 24
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-8377
EI 1873-5754
J9 LAND USE POLICY
JI Land Use Pol.
PD MAR
PY 2016
VL 52
BP 306
EP 315
DI 10.1016/j.landusepol.2015.12.034
PG 10
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DG9FJ
UT WOS:000372387900028
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sun, Y
   Yu, RH
   Cheng, TCE
AF Sun, Yong
   Yu, Ruihui
   Cheng, Tai Chiu Edwin
TI Incentives for promoting climate change adaptation technologies in
   agriculture: an evolutionary game approach
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Agriculture; Climate change adaptation; Technology promotion;
   Incentives; Evolutionary games
ID FARMERS ADAPTATION; ADAPTING AGRICULTURE; RICE YIELD; STRATEGIES;
   DYNAMICS; PRIVATE; IMPACTS; DROUGHT; RISK; PERSPECTIVES
AB Climate change adaptation technologies (CCATs) have become increasingly important for farmers as they face the challenges of climate change and natural disasters. Despite this, many rural areas still rely on traditional agricultural techniques. To promote the adoption of CCATs in agriculture, it is necessary to explore the incentives and conditions for the effectiveness of the policy. We develop an evolutionary game model to analyze the behavior of local governments and farmers in promoting CCATs. Our findings indicate that, under certain conditions, the promotion of CCATs can achieve equilibrium. The incentive for farmers to adopt CCATs increases within a certain range when local governments provide risk subsidies and cost sharing. When subsidies are too high, however, local governments may choose not to promote CCATs, which reduces the incentives for farmers to adopt them. Publicity is also an important factor in promoting CCATs. Our study provides insight into the development of policies aimed at promoting CCATs in agriculture.
C1 [Sun, Yong] Guangzhou Univ, Sch Publ Adm, Guangzhou 510006, Peoples R China.
   [Yu, Ruihui] Anhui Univ Finance & Econ, Sch Int Trade, Bengbu 233030, Peoples R China.
   [Cheng, Tai Chiu Edwin] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Fac Business, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
C3 Guangzhou University; Anhui University of Finance & Economics; Hong Kong
   Polytechnic University
RP Yu, RH (corresponding author), Anhui Univ Finance & Econ, Sch Int Trade, Bengbu 233030, Peoples R China.
EM yuruihui1@outlook.com
RI Sun, Yong/LPQ-2004-2024
FU National Social Science Funds of China [22ZD192]
FX This work was supported by the National Social Science Funds of China
   (Project No. 22&ZD192).
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NR 49
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 10
U2 70
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 0944-1344
EI 1614-7499
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLLUT R
JI Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 30
IS 43
BP 97025
EP 97039
DI 10.1007/s11356-023-28896-w
EA AUG 2023
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA R7ZT1
UT WOS:001049824000006
PM 37587396
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zong, L
   Yang, F
   Pei, XS
AF Zong, Li
   Yang, Fan
   Pei, Xinsheng
TI Implementing Climate Change Adaptation in Territory Spatial Planning
   Systems: Challenges and Approaches Based on Practices in Guiyang
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation; territory spatial planning; planning policy;
   Guiyang; China
ID URBAN CLIMATE; CHINA
AB Integrating climate change adaptation into spatial planning has become a global goal in the field of spatial planning. Despite the various relevant policies proposed by governments, there is still a lack of common practice in the field of climate change research and territory spatial planning preparation and research in China. In this study, climate change adaptation planning in the territory spatial planning system (TSPS), based upon risk assessment, is explored using downscaled climate change prediction data (derived from CMIP5) and prefectural master territory spatial planning (MTSP) data from Guiyang. The study found that such practices, despite their feasibility, still face systemic challenges given the current planning system in China, e.g., the deficiency of climate change impact data and analyses, the absence of essential planning tools, and the unsuitability of the current planning system for the integration of adaptation actions. We propose corresponding approaches based on our empirical planning experience and discuss prospects for relevant research and planning.
C1 [Zong, Li; Pei, Xinsheng] Shanghai Tongji Urban Planning & Design Inst Co Lt, Guokang Rd 38, Shanghai 200092, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Fan] Tongji Univ, Coll Architecture & Urban Planning, Dept Urban Planning, Shanghai 200092, Peoples R China.
C3 Tongji University
RP Yang, F (corresponding author), Tongji Univ, Coll Architecture & Urban Planning, Dept Urban Planning, Shanghai 200092, Peoples R China.
EM fanyangsh@tongji.edu.cn
RI Zong, Li/ITR-9043-2023
OI Zong, Li/0000-0002-3964-6517; Yang, Fan/0000-0003-3706-6831
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China;  [51778436]
FX This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China, grant number 51778436.
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NR 48
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 2
U2 25
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD JAN
PY 2023
VL 20
IS 1
AR 490
DI 10.3390/ijerph20010490
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA 7R0JB
UT WOS:000909765100001
PM 36612812
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nix, P
   Goldstein, A
   Oppenheimer, M
AF Nix, Paul
   Goldstein, Adam
   Oppenheimer, Michael
TI Models of sub-national US quasi-governmental organizations: implications
   for climate adaptation governance
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; Quasi-governmental organization; Governance;
   Hybridity
ID POLITICS
AB The politicization of climate change and the difficulty of achieving multi-level or sectoral stakeholder coordination are common institutional barriers to effective climate change adaptation governance outcomes. In the U.S., quasi-government organizations (QGOs) were designed to overcome such barriers, albeit traditionally for non-climatic purposes. This study's objective is to illustrate how the design characteristics of QGOs may be useful for overcoming the above climate adaptation barriers. Methodologically, this paper analyzes six case studies, selected to illustrate the major characteristics of QGOs, of climate-focused and non climate-focused QGOs at the sub-national level in the U.S. Non climate-focused examples are included for comparison with, and to supplement, the limited number of QGOs currently working on climate efforts. For each case, this study focuses on eight design characteristics: seven that represent measures of political and financial independence, and one focused on board composition, to illustrate the extent to which QGOs enable multi-level and multi-sectoral stakeholder coordination. This study finds that among the assortment of existing QGO designs some are particularly well suited to overcoming either the politicization of climate adaptation policy or obstacles to enhancing policy coordination, while some reduce both, albeit to a lesser extent. Broadly, this paper concludes that QGOs can strengthen effective action by depoliticizing informational sources and fostering cross scale coordination of planning and implementation.
C1 [Nix, Paul] Princeton Univ, Sch Publ & Int Affairs, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA.
   [Goldstein, Adam] Princeton Univ, Sch Publ & Int Affairs, Princeton, NJ USA.
   [Goldstein, Adam] Princeton Univ, Dept Sociol, Princeton, NJ USA.
   [Oppenheimer, Michael] Princeton Univ, Sch Publ & Int Affairs, Dept Geosci, Princeton, NJ USA.
   [Oppenheimer, Michael] Princeton Univ, High Meadows Environm Inst, Princeton, NJ USA.
C3 Princeton University; Princeton University; Princeton University;
   Princeton University; Princeton University
RP Nix, P (corresponding author), Princeton Univ, Sch Publ & Int Affairs, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA.
EM pnix@princeton.edu
RI Oppenheimer, Michael/ACV-2153-2022; Nix, Paul/AFN-7265-2022
OI Oppenheimer, Michael/0000-0002-9708-5914
FU Center for Policy Research on Energy; Science, Technology and
   Environmental Policy program at the Princeton School of Public and
   International Affairs; High Meadows Foundation
FX P.N. and M.O. acknowledge financial and organizational support from the
   Center for Policy Research on Energy and the Environment and the
   Science, Technology and Environmental Policy program at the Princeton
   School of Public and International Affairs. P.N. also acknowledges
   financial support from the High Meadows Foundation.
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NR 63
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 177
IS 6
AR 95
DI 10.1007/s10584-024-03728-z
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA TU5G9
UT WOS:001243781200001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vlami, V
   Kokkoris, IP
   Charalampopoulos, I
   Doxiadis, T
   Giannakopoulos, C
   Lazoglou, M
AF Vlami, Vassiliki
   Kokkoris, Ioannis P.
   Charalampopoulos, Ioannis
   Doxiadis, Thomas
   Giannakopoulos, Christos
   Lazoglou, Miltiades
TI A Transect Method for Promoting Landscape Conservation in the Climate
   Change Context: A Case-Study in Greece
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Mediterranean; cultural landscapes; landscape areas; landscape views;
   landscape assessment protocol; climate change adaptation; bioclimate
ID LAND-USE; ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT; SYSTEMS; RIVER; RISK
AB Within an EU Life project aiming to boost climate change adaptation in Greece, this study develops a transect method for rapid landscape-scale assessment. The procedure applies a holistic assessment of terrestrial landscapes at three spatial scales: a broad cross-section transect zone through the Peloponnese peninsula (240 km long, 1.416.6 km2) and successively the delineation of 35 selected landscape areas and the associated landscape views. Climate change scenarios and relevant indices were incorporated to screen for climate and anthropogenic impacts, including phytoclimatic, erosion and wildfire analyses. The climatic and bioclimatic conditions were examined in three time periods (reference period: 1970-2000 and in the future periods 2031-2060 and 2071-2100). Based on the above framework, the climate change adaptation planning process is reviewed including the Regional Adaptation Action Plan (RAAP) of the Peloponnese Region. The results of this method application effectively assess both the "territorial" and "perceptual" aspects of the selected landscapes; mapping the potential threats, interpreting problems, identifying knowledge gaps and prioritizing vulnerable areas. Analyses show that combined land-use pressures and climatic shifts will cause landscape change, particularly evident in an increase of wildfires, in the near future. Currently, poor conservation measures do not adequately protect landscapes in most areas of the study from expanding anthropogenic pressures (urban sprawl, wetland draining, etc.); these conditions may further aggravate environmental safety concerns during future climate change conditions. The review also documents poor attention to landscape conservation within the current RAAP report. The proposed transect method may assist in promoting landscape appreciation by setting an "enabling framework" for landscape-scale conservation planning during the climate change adaptation process.
C1 [Vlami, Vassiliki; Lazoglou, Miltiades] ELLINIKI ETAIRIA Soc Environm & Cultural Heritage, Athens 10558, Greece.
   [Kokkoris, Ioannis P.] Univ Patras, Dept Biol, Lab Bot, Patras 26504, Greece.
   [Charalampopoulos, Ioannis] Agr Univ Athens, Dept Crop Sci, Lab Gen & Agr Meteorol, GR-11855 Athens, Greece.
   [Doxiadis, Thomas] Doxiadis Architects Landscape Architects, Athens 10557, Greece.
   [Giannakopoulos, Christos] Natl Observ Athens, Inst Environm Res & Sustainable Dev, Athens 15236, Greece.
C3 University of Patras; Agricultural University of Athens; National
   Observatory of Athens
RP Kokkoris, IP (corresponding author), Univ Patras, Dept Biol, Lab Bot, Patras 26504, Greece.
EM vas.vlami@gmail.com; ipkokkoris@upatras.gr; icharalamp@aua.gr;
   thomas@doxiadisplus.com; cgiannak@noa.gr; entopia@ellinikietairia.gr
RI Giannakopoulos, Christos/H-6827-2014; Kokkoris, Ioannis/AAC-9779-2021;
   Charalampopoulos, Ioannis/X-2658-2018
OI Vlami, Vassiliki/0000-0002-8919-626X; Charalampopoulos,
   Ioannis/0000-0002-3357-2780; Kokkoris, Ioannis/0000-0002-0647-3445;
   Giannakopoulos, Christos/0000-0003-1822-7716
FU European Union; Green Fund-Hellenic Ministry of Environment and Energy
FX This study was conducted by the ELLINIKI ETAIRIA Society for the
   Environment and Cultural Heritage under the project "LIFE-IP
   AdaptInGR-Boosting the implementation of adaptation policy across Greece
   LIFE17 IPC/GR/000006", deliverable "Sub-Action C.4.D.1: Development of
   pilot assessments and adaptation guidelines for landscapes and
   land-uses. Case Study: Landscape and Land Uses, The Transect method from
   Pylos toMonemvasia with the contribution of the LIFE Programme of the
   European Union and of the Green Fund-Hellenic Ministry of Environment
   and Energy.
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NR 111
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 6
U2 14
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 17
AR 13266
DI 10.3390/su151713266
PG 29
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA Q9JU3
UT WOS:001060615100001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Rahayu, H
   Haigh, R
   Amaratunga, D
AF Rahayu, H.
   Haigh, R.
   Amaratunga, D.
BE Amaratunga, D
   Haigh, R
TI Strategic challenges in development planning for Denpasar City and the
   coastal urban agglomeration of Sarbagita
SO 7TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BUILDING RESILIENCE: USING SCIENTIFIC
   KNOWLEDGE TO INFORM POLICY AND PRACTICE IN DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
SE Procedia Engineering
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 7th International Conference on Building Resilience (ICBR) - Using
   Scientific Knowledge to Inform Policy and Practice in Disaster Risk
   Reduction
CY NOV 27-29, 2017
CL Bangkok, THAILAND
SP Univ Huddersfield, Global Disaster Resilience Ctr, Naresuan Univ, Chiang Mai Univ, Asian Disaster Preparedness Ctr
DE agglomeration; covergence; stakeholders; Indonesia
AB Urban agglomerations are becoming a vital geographic unit for nations to sustain economic growth and development. However, agglomerations also pose significant challenges for development planning. They are complex, dynamic and huge systems. Their interconnectivity blurs the boundaries between cities and peripheral regions, and makes traditional city boundaries, often imposed by administrative needs, essentially obsolete. Despite this, the importance of an integrated approach to development planning is particularly acute for coastal urban agglomerations that are threatened by a range of geological hazards, hydro-meteorological hazards and climate change impacts. This paper is an account of the first phase of a longer-term study into agglomeration development planning of Sarbagita Metropolitan in Bali Province, Indonesia, with a focus on the integration of disaster risk reduction and climate change adaption into the planning process. This phase of the study presents an initial analysis of the strategic issues for the development planning of Sarbagita Metropolitan, and a mapping of stakeholders involved in climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction within the region. Data was collected through interviews with key stakeholders and a policy analysis. The results address how urban agglomeration is addressed within national development planning, the nature of urban agglomeration in Bali Province, the management of development planning in the region, the stakeholders involved in disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation in Bali Province, and the strategic challenges for development planning within the region. Key issues identified through this initial analysis include the important role the agglomeration plays in the national strategic development plan as a centre for regional economic development based on the tourism industry, the importance of infrastructure sharing, interconnectivity, and water/food security among the cities and regencies, and the lack of integration or consideration of disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation in the agglomeration plan. (C) 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Rahayu, H.] Bandung Inst Technol, Bandung, Indonesia.
   [Haigh, R.; Amaratunga, D.] Univ Huddersfield, Global Disaster Resilience Ctr, Huddersfield, W Yorkshire, England.
C3 Institute Technology of Bandung; University of Huddersfield
RP Rahayu, H (corresponding author), Bandung Inst Technol, Bandung, Indonesia.
EM harkunti@gmail.com
RI ; Haigh, Richard/H-7455-2016
OI Pouri, Rahim/0000-0002-4016-6828; Haigh, Richard/0000-0001-7347-7043;
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FU British Council Institutional Links Newton Fund grant; Indonesian
   Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education of the Republic of
   Indonesia (Ristekdikti)
FX The research is jointly funded by a British Council Institutional Links
   Newton Fund grant to the University of Huddersfield, and an Indonesian
   Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education of the Republic of
   Indonesia (Ristekdikti) grant to the Institute of Technology Bandung.
   This 18 month research project is entitled Mainstreaming integrated DRR
   and CCA strategies into coastal urban agglomeration policy.
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U2 9
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA Radarweg 29, PO Box 211, AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1877-7058
J9 PROCEDIA ENGINEER
PY 2018
VL 212
BP 1347
EP 1354
DI 10.1016/j.proeng.2018.01.174
PG 8
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Engineering, Civil; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies;
   Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Management
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Business &
   Economics
GA BP4GZ
UT WOS:000552392300173
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cotera, RV
   Egerer, S
   Nam, C
   Lierhammer, L
   Moors, L
   Costa, MM
AF Cotera, Rodrigo Valencia
   Egerer, Sabine
   Nam, Christine
   Lierhammer, Ludwig
   Moors, Lukas
   Costa, Maria Manez
TI Resilient agriculture: water management for climate change adaptation in
   Lower Saxony
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE agriculture; climate change adaptation; impact modeling; Lower Saxony;
   water management
ID BIAS CORRECTION METHODS; GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS; HYDROLOGIC IMPACT;
   ENERGY; PRECIPITATION; PROJECTIONS; CARBON; SIMULATIONS; IRRIGATION;
   EFFICIENCY
AB Climate change has increased the intensity, frequency and duration of heatwaves and droughts in Europe turning water management into an even more complicated issue. Because water is a fundamental resource for agriculture, water management has to be addressed with climate change adaptation. While stakeholders in Lower Saxony are aware of adaptation measures they could implement to dampen the effects of climate change, evidence of the effectiveness of adaptation measures at a local scale is still missing. An analysis of adaptation measures using a new hydrological model was performed to test four adaptation measures suggested by stakeholders. Changing crops has the strongest effect followed by improving irrigation efficiency, humification and, finally, artificial aquifer recharge. If crops are changed, irrigation water demand and energy consumption could be reduced by up to 20.7%, costs could be reduced in 19.1%, the aquifer level could rise up to 284.85 mm and emissions could be reduced by 26.6% by the end of the century. Artificial recharge proved to be an inadequate method for the region as it does not impact the irrigation water demand, and an insufficient amount of water is available to have a substantial effect on the aquifer.
C1 [Cotera, Rodrigo Valencia; Egerer, Sabine; Nam, Christine; Lierhammer, Ludwig; Costa, Maria Manez] Helmholtz Zentrum Hereon, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, Fischertwiete 1, D-20095 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Egerer, Sabine] Ludwig Maximilians Univ Munchen, Luisenstr 37, D-80333 Munich, Germany.
C3 Helmholtz Association; Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon; University of Munich
RP Cotera, RV (corresponding author), Helmholtz Zentrum Hereon, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, Fischertwiete 1, D-20095 Hamburg, Germany.
EM rodrigo.valencia@hereon.de
RI Egerer, Sabine/ABE-5712-2021; Nam, Christine/KYH-9574-2024; Manez Costa,
   Maria/P-1225-2017
OI Valencia Cotera, Rodrigo/0000-0002-8271-4087; Moors,
   Lukas/0009-0002-6429-985X; Nam, Christine/0000-0001-9404-3412; Manez
   Costa, Maria/0000-0001-5415-0811; Lierhammer, Ludwig/0000-0002-7207-0003
FU Helmholtz Institute for Climate Service Science (HICSS)
FX This work was conducted and financed within the framework of the
   Helmholtz Institute for Climate Service Science (HICSS), a cooperation
   between Climate Service Center Germany (GERICS) and the Universitat
   Hamburg, Germany.
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NR 117
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 6
U2 17
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
EI 2408-9354
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PD MAR
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 3
BP 1034
EP 1053
DI 10.2166/wcc.2024.455
EA FEB 2024
PG 20
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA MM2L8
UT WOS:001172170700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU de Bruijn, E
   Dieperink, C
AF de Bruijn, Esme
   Dieperink, Carel
TI A Framework for Assessing Climate Adaptation Governance on the Caribbean
   Island of Curacao
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE good governance; climate change adaptation; Curacao; small island
   developing states
ID DEVELOPING STATES; LEVEL
AB It is becoming increasingly clear that Caribbean islands are very vulnerable to the effects of climate change, such as sea level rise, longer periods of droughts, loss of biodiversity, more extreme weather events (flooding and hurricanes), and increased freshwater demands. Addressing these issues encourages good climate change adaptation governance. So far, however, the literature has not discussed what good governance could mean in this context. The aim of this paper is, therefore, to address this knowledge gap by developing an assessment framework and showing its usefulness. The framework is based on a review of the literature and is applied in an assessment of adaptation practices in Curacao. The assessment is based on a review of Curacao policy documents and in-depth interviews with key stakeholders. We found that the developed framework was useful for obtaining a better insight into the quality of adaptation governance on Caribbean islands, and that in the Curacao practices, the good governance principles of transparency and inclusiveness are better elaborated in comparison to connectivity, accountability and government effectiveness. We conclude the paper with some reflections on the potential of the framework and some suggestions for further research.
C1 [de Bruijn, Esme; Dieperink, Carel] Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, POB 80115, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Dieperink, Carel] Netherlands Inst Ecol, Droevendaalsesteeg 110, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Utrecht University; Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts & Sciences;
   Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW)
RP Dieperink, C (corresponding author), Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, POB 80115, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.; Dieperink, C (corresponding author), Netherlands Inst Ecol, Droevendaalsesteeg 110, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM c.dieperink@uu.nl
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NR 42
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 8
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 22
AR 15092
DI 10.3390/su142215092
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6K7VD
UT WOS:000887703800001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kristl, Z
   Senior, C
   Salaj, AT
AF Kristl, Ziva
   Senior, Coline
   Salaj, Alenka Temeljotov
TI Key challenges of climate change adaptation in the building sector
SO URBANI IZZIV-URBAN CHALLENGE
LA English
DT Article
DE buildings; climate change; climate resilience; economy; climate change
   adaptation
ID COOLING ENERGY DEMAND; WEATHER DATA; RESILIENCE; MITIGATION; IMPACT;
   STOCK; STRATEGIES; EMISSIONS; GREEN
AB This paper addresses the main challenges in climate resilience of the building sector, including climate adaptation schemes, energy efficiency, and mitigation approaches. These challenges are evaluated with regard to the state of the art, research interest, and regulatory issues, providing an assessment of the advances and defining research gaps in the literature review. The review shows that climate resilience mainly deals with larger systems, whereas the field is still developing at the building level. One of the main challenges identified is the institutional response. Many publications state that it is necessary to revise policies and develop legislation; however, this is sometimes hindered by uncertain climate change predictions. the EU legislation currently provides partial coverage of resource efficiency and climate mitigation in the building sector, while the national legislation is delayed. The current situation can impair the competitiveness of the national building sector, causing it to lag behind the goals set for achieving sustainability. From the cost perspective, immediate short-term actions are seen as more expensive, because delays can result in increased risks for major investments. The authorities are currently choosing between rapid and delayed actions, balancing the costs of early actions and the reciprocal costs of delay.
C1 [Kristl, Ziva] New Univ, European Fac Law, Nova Gorica, Slovenia.
   [Senior, Coline; Salaj, Alenka Temeljotov] Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol, Trondheim, Norway.
C3 Norwegian University of Science & Technology (NTNU)
RP Kristl, Z (corresponding author), New Univ, European Fac Law, Nova Gorica, Slovenia.
EM ziva.kristl@epf.nova-uni.si; coline.senior@ntnu.no;
   alenka.temeljotov-salaj@ntnu.no
RI Kristl, Živa/AAV-1273-2021; Salaj, Alenka/AAI-9208-2020
OI Senior, Coline/0000-0001-9091-3089; Temeljotov Salaj,
   Alenka/0000-0002-4139-5278; KRISTL, ZIVA/0000-0002-9706-2907
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NR 77
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 6
U2 17
PU URBAN PLANNING INST REPUBLIC SLOVENIA
PI LJUBLJANA
PA TRNOVSKI PRISTAN 2, P P 4717, LJUBLJANA, 1127, SLOVENIA
SN 0353-6483
EI 1855-8399
J9 URBANI IZZIV
JI Urbani Izziv
PD JUN
PY 2020
VL 31
IS 1
BP 101
EP 111
DI 10.5379/urbani-izziv-en-2020-31-01-004
PG 11
WC Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA NJ2JM
UT WOS:000565871600005
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ryan, PC
   Stewart, MG
AF Ryan, Paraic C.
   Stewart, Mark G.
TI Cost-benefit analysis of climate change adaptation for power pole
   networks
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID RISK; STRATEGIES; IMPACTS
AB Power distribution pole networks are vulnerable to a changing climate. Climate change can increase wind speeds, and changes in rainfall and temperature can accelerate timber decay, affecting residual capacity of timber power poles. The present paper utilises advanced stochastic simulation methods to examine climate change impacts, and possible climate change adaptation strategies, for Australian power distribution networks. The assessment framework developed, which is applicable to a wide variety of infrastructure types and research areas, utilises probabilistic methods to investigate the appropriateness of climate adaptation strategies aimed at ameliorating the impact of climate change on critical infrastructure. Measures investigated include alterations to design or maintenance practices through, for example, installation of larger poles, more frequent inspections, or changes to pole replacement criteria. A cost-benefit decision analysis is developed herein using the latest AR5 climate projections, network vulnerability, adaptation measures, and cost and loss data for both direct and indirect costs. The net present value and benefit-to-cost ratio is calculated for different adaptation strategies over the life cycle of the assets up to the year 2090. An adaptation measure that allows for the installation of larger poles but less stringent pole replacement criteria has the highest net benefit-with a mean potential saving of hundreds of millions of dollars.
C1 [Ryan, Paraic C.] Univ Coll Cork, Sch Engn, Discipline Civil Struct & Environm Engn, Cork, Ireland.
   [Stewart, Mark G.] Univ Newcastle, Ctr Infrastruct Performance & Reliabil, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia.
C3 University College Cork; University of Newcastle
RP Ryan, PC (corresponding author), Univ Coll Cork, Sch Engn, Discipline Civil Struct & Environm Engn, Cork, Ireland.
EM Ryanp7@tcd.ie; mark.stewart@newcastle.edu.au
RI Stewart, Mark/G-7415-2013
OI Ryan, Paraic/0000-0003-3767-8096; Stewart, Mark/0000-0001-6887-6533
FU Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
   Flagship Cluster Fund through the project Climate Adaption Engineering
   for Extreme Events; Sustainable Cities and Coasts Theme of the CSIRO
   Climate Adaption Flagship
FX The authors appreciate the financial support of the Commonwealth
   Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Flagship Cluster
   Fund through the project Climate Adaption Engineering for Extreme
   Events, in collaboration with the Sustainable Cities and Coasts Theme of
   the CSIRO Climate Adaption Flagship. Costing data provided by Nathan
   Spencer from URI Engineering is gratefully acknowledged.
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Z9 11
U1 0
U2 24
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD AUG
PY 2017
VL 143
IS 3-4
BP 519
EP 533
DI 10.1007/s10584-017-2000-6
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA FC9OI
UT WOS:000407170600017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hobday, AJ
   Doerr, VAJ
   Marshall, NA
   Cvitanovic, C
   Lim-Camacho, L
AF Hobday, Alistair J.
   Doerr, Veronica A. J.
   Marshall, Nadine A.
   Cvitanovic, Christopher
   Lim-Camacho, Lilly
TI Adapting to climate change: the role of organisational personalities in
   natural resource management
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive capacity; Capacity-building; Decision-making processes; Climate
   adaptation; Knowledge exchange; Knowledge transfer
ID KNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE; ADAPTATION; SCIENCE; POLICY; PERSPECTIVES;
   AUSTRALIA; CAPACITY; BARRIERS; CULTURE; SYSTEMS
AB Preparing for climate change represents a significant challenge to environmental managers and is influenced by their ability to access and use the latest information. However, communicating and delivering adaption science across diverse stakeholder groups remain a significant challenge. We explore the utility of concepts from personality research to improve understanding of stakeholder capacity. Specifically, we defined eight potential climate-related personality 'axes' for natural resource management (NRM) organisations. We surveyed 80% of Australia's 56 regional NRM organisations to characterise their traits in relation to these axes. Through cluster analysis and trait mapping, we defined six NRM 'personality types'. These types were unrelated to external factors such as geographic location or land use activities. Rather, five organisational personality axes were important in defining personality type: where information is sourced, strategic skill sets for learning and reorganising, perceptions of risk and the ability to manage for uncertainty, perceptions of the role of NRM groups, and strategies for engagement. Identifying NRM personality type allows organisations to identify and capitalise on their strengths to target their adaptation efforts to maximise success. Organisations can also recognise what they might find most challenging and deliberately collaborate with other personalities with strengths in those areas. Finally, information providers can better understand how to tailor information delivery for improved knowledge exchange between research providers and organisations responsible for sustainability of natural resources, which enables stronger relationships and facilitates evidence-based decision-making.
C1 [Hobday, Alistair J.] CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere, Hobart, Tas 7000, Australia.
   [Hobday, Alistair J.; Cvitanovic, Christopher] Univ Tasmania, Ctr Marine Socioecol, Hobart, Tas, Australia.
   [Doerr, Veronica A. J.] CSIRO Land & Water, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
   [Marshall, Nadine A.] James Cook Univ, CSIRO Land & Water, ATSIP Bldg 145, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Lim-Camacho, Lilly] CSIRO Land & Water, Pullenvale, Qld 4069, Australia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere; University of Tasmania; Commonwealth
   Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO); CSIRO Land &
   Water; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation
   (CSIRO); James Cook University; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial
   Research Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Hobday, AJ (corresponding author), CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere, Hobart, Tas 7000, Australia.; Hobday, AJ (corresponding author), Univ Tasmania, Ctr Marine Socioecol, Hobart, Tas, Australia.
EM alistair.hobday@csiro.au
RI Hobday, Alistair/A-1460-2012; Marshall, Nadine/D-9339-2011; Lim-Camacho,
   Lilly/A-7502-2015; Doerr, Veronica/A-2150-2011
OI Lim-Camacho, Lilly/0000-0002-4897-1186; Doerr,
   Veronica/0000-0003-4330-4576; Cvitanovic,
   Christopher/0000-0002-2565-3396
FU Australia Government Initiative through the National NRM Impacts and
   Adaptation project
FX Data collection was undertaken in accordance with Human Research Ethics
   procedures CSSHREC: No. 049/13. This activity was funded by an Australia
   Government Initiative through the National NRM Impacts and Adaptation
   project (www.AdaptNRM.org). The views expressed herein are not
   necessarily the views of the Commonwealth of Australia, and the
   Commonwealth does not accept responsibility for any information or
   advice contained herein. We appreciate the involvement of all the survey
   respondents, and logistical support from Paul Ryan, Talia Jeanneret,
   Barton Loechel, and Petina Pert. We also thank two anonymous reviewers
   and the journal editor for constructive comments that improved this
   manuscript.
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NR 66
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 21
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD FEB
PY 2018
VL 18
IS 2
SI SI
BP 561
EP 571
DI 10.1007/s10113-017-1227-0
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FV5SS
UT WOS:000424643300022
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sun, YP
   Zou, Y
   Jiang, JN
   Yang, Y
AF Sun, Yongping
   Zou, Ya
   Jiang, Jingning
   Yang, Ying
TI Climate change risks and financial performance of the electric power
   sector: Evidence from listed companies in China
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change risks; Electric power companies; Financial performance;
   Climate risks index; Operating cost; Clean energy supply
ID GREEN CREDIT; IMPACTS; HYDROPOWER; DEMAND; POLICY
AB The frequency, intensity and duration of extreme weather events have seriously affected human life and production. The electric power sector is the foundation of economic activity as well as a core participant in the adaptation and mitigation of climate change. Therefore, in the context of climate change, it is crucial for the stable operation of the national economy for power sector to cope with different climate change risks and improve their adaptability to climate change. In this paper, listed power companies in China are selected as samples to analyse the impact of climate change risk on the financial performance of the power system's supply and transmission -distribution sides. The empirical results show a significant positive correlation between climate change risks and the financial performance of listed electric power companies. The rainfall index and drought index positively impact the financial performance of listed electric power companies. The cryogenic freezing index has a negative impact on the financial performance of listed electric power companies., which is further analysed and proved that a cryogenic freezing disaster will cause the regional breakdown of the power system. The operating cost ratio and the proportion of clean energy supply play a mediating effect on the correlation between the comprehensive climate risk index and the return on equity of companies. To increase electric power companies' ability to adapt to climate change, climate change risks should be integrated into the risk man-agement framework, and the company's financial performance can be improved by optimizing the energy mix and constructing safe lines. The government can promote the transformation of electric power companies by launching green financial tools.
C1 [Sun, Yongping] Huazhong Univ Sci & Technol, Inst State Governance, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
   [Sun, Yongping; Zou, Ya] Hubei Univ Econ, Ctr Hubei Cooperat Innovat Emiss Trading Syst, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
   [Sun, Yongping; Jiang, Jingning] Huazhong Univ Sci & Technol, Sch Econ, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
   [Zou, Ya] Hubei Univ Econ, Accounting Sch, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Ying] State Grid Shiyan Elect Power Supply Co, Shiyan, Peoples R China.
C3 Huazhong University of Science & Technology; Hubei University of
   Economics; Huazhong University of Science & Technology; Hubei University
   of Economics
RP Yang, Y (corresponding author), State Grid Shiyan Elect Power Supply Co, Shiyan, Peoples R China.
EM yangying95129@163.com
RI Sun, Yongping/HLX-8943-2023; Jiang, Jingning/N-5575-2019
OI Sun, Yongping/0000-0002-9425-425X
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [72074069]
FX Acknowledgment This work was supported by the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China (Grant No. 72074069) . All remaining errors are on
   our own.
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NR 65
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 37
U2 114
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2023
VL 39
AR 100474
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2022.100474
EA JAN 2023
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 8B1YE
UT WOS:000916725600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Robledo, C
   Clot, N
   Hammill, A
   Riché, B
AF Robledo, Carmenza
   Clot, Nicole
   Hammill, Anne
   Riche, Beatrice
TI The role of forest ecosystems in community-based coping strategies to
   climate hazards: Three examples from rural areas in Africa
SO FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate hazards; Community resilience; Coping strategy; Livelihood;
   Adaptation to climate change; Local adaptive capacity
ID ADAPTATION
AB In developing countries, forests play an important role in supplying goods and services. These ecosystems are under many stresses due to unsustainable management practices, lack of clarity on tenure and access rights, and persistent pressure for land-use change. Climate change is exacerbating the impact of these stresses on both forest ecosystems and forest dependent people. What are the current forest coping strategies of different livelihoods? What is the role of forest ecosystems in increasing the resilience of rural communities?
   Over a two-year period, an interdisciplinary team of civil society researchers and development practitioners made an attempt to address these questions in a systematic manner through the use of the CRiSTAL tool Community-based Risk Screening Tool for Adaptation and Livelihoods - in different countries. For this publication, case studies conducted in three African countries - Zambia. Mali and Tanzania - are presented. Particular focus is given to the coping strategies used forest, livestock and agriculture based livelihoods.
   In all cases, forest ecosystems provided key goods and services during extreme events (droughts and floods) and become key assets for reducing vulnerability in the context of climate change However, issues related to unclear land tenure, as well as legislation forbidding forest use, strengthen underlying conflicts over natural resources and therefore increase the high pressure on forest ecosystems and thus the overall vulnerability of poor rural communities.
   This paper analyzes the corresponding challenges and offers a number of recommendations for decision- and policy-makers, on how to support local adaptation to climate change. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Robledo, Carmenza; Clot, Nicole] Intercooperation, Environm & Climate Change Grp, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Hammill, Anne; Riche, Beatrice] Int Inst Sustainable Dev, Geneva, Switzerland.
RP Robledo, C (corresponding author), Intercooperation, Environm & Climate Change Grp, Zurich, Switzerland.
EM carmenza.robledo@intercooperation.ch
FU Government of Navarra, Spain
FX The project is financed by the Government of Navarra, Spain
   ((sic)236.000). The project has been selected as it contains ongoing
   activities that directly involve many farmers and key organizations.
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NR 19
TC 36
Z9 45
U1 1
U2 91
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1389-9341
EI 1872-7050
J9 FOREST POLICY ECON
JI Forest Policy Econ.
PD NOV
PY 2012
VL 24
SI SI
BP 20
EP 28
DI 10.1016/j.forpol.2011.04.006
PG 9
WC Economics; Environmental Studies; Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Forestry
GA 036ZC
UT WOS:000311069800004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Brondizio, ES
   Moran, EF
AF Brondizio, Eduardo S.
   Moran, Emilio F.
TI Human dimensions of climate change: the vulnerability of small farmers
   in the Amazon
SO PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE human adaptation; Amazon; human-climate interaction; small farmers;
   fire-drought; ENSO
ID EL-NINO; SCALE
AB This paper argues for a twofold perspective on human adaptation to climate change in the Amazon. First, we need to understand the processes that mediate perceptions of environmental change and the behavioural responses at the levels of the individual and the local population. Second, we should take into account the process of production and dissemination of global and national climate information and models to regional and local populations, especially small farmers. We discuss the sociocultural and environmental diversity of small farmers in the Amazon and their susceptibility to climate change associated with drought, flooding and accidental fire. Using survey, ethnographic and archival data from study areas in the state of Para, we discuss farmers' sources of knowledge and long-term memory of climatic events, drought and accidental fire; their sources of climate information; their responses to drought and fire events and the impact of changing rainfall patterns on land use. We highlight the challenges of adaptation to climate change created by the influence of migration and family turnover on collective action and memory, the mismatch of scales used to monitor and disseminate climate data and the lack of extension services to translate large-scale forecasts to local needs. We found that for most farmers, memories of extended drought tend to decrease significantly after 3 years. Over 50% of the farmers interviewed in 2002 did not remember as significant the El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) drought of 1997/1998. This helps explain why approximately 40% of the farmers have not changed their land-use behaviours in the face of the strongest ENSO event of the twentieth century.
C1 [Brondizio, Eduardo S.; Moran, Emilio F.] Indiana Univ, Dept Anthropol, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
   [Brondizio, Eduardo S.; Moran, Emilio F.] Indiana Univ, Anthropol Ctr Training & REs Global Environm Chan, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
   [Brondizio, Eduardo S.; Moran, Emilio F.] Indiana Univ, Ctr Study Inst Populat & Environm Change, Bloomington, IN 47406 USA.
C3 Indiana University System; Indiana University Bloomington; Indiana
   University System; Indiana University Bloomington; Indiana University
   System; Indiana University Bloomington
RP Brondizio, ES (corresponding author), Indiana Univ, Dept Anthropol, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
EM ebrondiz@indiana.edu
RI Moran, Emilio/T-7456-2019; Brondizio, Eduardo/R-7643-2019
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NR 31
TC 100
Z9 130
U1 0
U2 66
PU ROYAL SOC
PI LONDON
PA 6-9 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE, LONDON SW1Y 5AG, ENGLAND
SN 0962-8436
EI 1471-2970
J9 PHILOS T R SOC B
JI Philos. Trans. R. Soc. B-Biol. Sci.
PD MAY 27
PY 2008
VL 363
IS 1498
BP 1803
EP 1809
DI 10.1098/rstb.2007.0025
PG 7
WC Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
GA 282OQ
UT WOS:000254577500012
PM 18267908
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nordgren, J
   Stults, M
   Meerow, S
AF Nordgren, John
   Stults, Missy
   Meerow, Sara
TI Supporting local climate change adaptation: Where we are and where we
   need to go
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; Climate services; Local government; Local community;
   Adaptation resources
ID OVERCOMING BARRIERS; CITIES; MITIGATION; GOVERNMENT; GOVERNANCE;
   IMPACTS; PLANS; RISK
AB Local governments are on the front line of efforts to address climate-related impacts. Recognizing this, there is a growing movement to develop and deliver tools, resources, and services to support local communities' climate adaptation initiatives. There is, however, limited understanding of what specific types of resources exist and how well these resources match the needs of local practitioners. To bring clarity to these questions, we: 1) assessed the current landscape of climate-adaptation resources and services; 2) surveyed community practitioners to learn how well these resources align with their needs; and 3) convened leading service providers and local practitioners to identify strategic opportunities for moving the adaptation field forward. Findings demonstrate that existing services and resources are meeting the early phases of local adaptation efforts such as conducting vulnerability assessments and creating adaptation plans, but are failing to meet the needs associated with implementing, monitoring, and evaluating adaptation activities. Additionally, a lack of funding and staff time to support adaptation, as well as inaccessible resource formats are barriers impeding local climate adaptation efforts. The mismatch between the types and formats of services being provided and the needs of local governments means that more work is needed to ensure that climate adaptation resources are responsive to the existing and future needs of local governments. Moreover, our research finds that there is a strong and growing need to organize and streamline the climate adaptation resource and service landscape so that practitioners can easily, effectively, and efficiently access the resources they need to build more resilient local communities. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Nordgren, John; Stults, Missy] Climate Resilience Fund, POB 11216, Bainbridge Isl, WA 98110 USA.
   [Stults, Missy; Meerow, Sara] Univ Michigan, 440 Church St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan
RP Stults, M (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, 440 Church St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
EM john@climateresiliencefund.org; missy.stults@gmail.com;
   sameerow@umich.edu
RI Meerow, Sara/J-8037-2019
OI Meerow, Sara/0000-0002-6935-1832
FU Kresge Foundation
FX Support for this research was provided by The Kresge Foundation. Staff
   at The Kresge Foundation assisted in scoping and designing the
   initiative, organizing and facilitating the convening at the Garrison
   Institute, analyzing, and reporting the overall project results. Special
   thanks also goes to Rachel Jacobson, Melisa Ongun, Cory Hamilton, and
   Kristiane Huber for their research to support this project; the Garrison
   Institute for hosting Phase III of the project; and Peter Szabo for
   helping organize and facilitate Phase III of this project.
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NR 48
TC 74
Z9 86
U1 2
U2 56
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD DEC
PY 2016
VL 66
BP 344
EP 352
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2016.05.006
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ED7YT
UT WOS:000389089300037
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Zoppi, C
AF Zoppi, Corrado
BE Marucci, A
   Zullo, F
   Fiorini, L
   Saganeiti, L
TI Nature-Based Solutions and City Planning: A Study Related to the
   Preliminary Masterplan of Cagliari, Italy
SO INNOVATION IN URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING, VOL 2, INPUT 2023
SE Lecture Notes in Civil Engineering
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 12th International Conference on Innovation in Urban and Regional
   Planning (INPUT)
CY SEP 06-08, 2023
CL Univ LAquila, ITALY
HO Univ LAquila
DE Nature-based solutions; Urban planning; City Masterplans
AB The nature-based solutions are spatial planning measures implemented to restore and protect ecosystems and their capacity of supplying services, and to support the local communities, by leveraging on natural resources and enhancing the quality of natural contexts. The conceptual and technical methodological approach of this study considers nature-based solutions as urban planning tools aimed at mitigating heat waves, especially in densely urbanized areas, and at boosting several environmental, economic and social beneficial impacts thereof. A set of planning policies based on nature-based solutions are discussed as regards the definition of the preliminary Masterplan of Cagliari, the capital city of Sardinia, an Italian insular region. The nature-based solutions are identified with reference to the framework proposed by the European Environment Agency concerning adaptation to climate change and environmental risk reduction, which builds on a set of spatial profiles focused on water resources, forests and woodlands, agricultural production, urban areas and coastal zones.
C1 [Zoppi, Corrado] Univ Cagliari, I-09123 Cagliari, Italy.
C3 University of Cagliari
RP Zoppi, C (corresponding author), Univ Cagliari, I-09123 Cagliari, Italy.
EM zoppi@unica.it
OI Zoppi, Corrado/0000-0003-4114-5380
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NR 14
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 7
U2 7
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2366-2557
EI 2366-2565
BN 978-3-031-54098-1; 978-3-031-54096-7; 978-3-031-54095-0
J9 LECT NOTES CIVIL ENG
PY 2024
VL 463
BP 61
EP 73
DI 10.1007/978-3-031-54096-7_6
PG 13
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA BX2LD
UT WOS:001264250100006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Flint, HB
   Champ, PA
   Meldrum, JR
   Brenkert-Smith, H
AF Flint, Hilary Byerly
   Champ, Patricia A.
   Meldrum, James R.
   Brenkert-Smith, Hannah
TI Wildfire imagery reduces risk information-seeking among homeowners as
   property wildfire risk increases
SO COMMUNICATIONS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; FEAR APPEALS; PERCEPTIONS; METAANALYSIS; MITIGATION;
   EMOTIONS; MODEL
AB Negative imagery of destruction may induce or inhibit action to reduce risks from climate-exacerbated hazards, such as wildfires. This has generated conflicting assumptions among experts who communicate with homeowners: half of surveyed wildfire practitioners perceive a lack of expert agreement about the effect of negative imagery (a burning house) on homeowner behavior, yet most believe negative imagery is more engaging. We tested whether this expectation matched homeowner response in the United States. In an online experiment, homeowners who viewed negative imagery reported more negative emotions but the same behavioral intentions compared to those who viewed status-quo landscape photos. In a pre-registered field experiment, homeowners who received a postcard showing negative imagery were equally likely, overall, to visit a wildfire risk webpage as those whose postcard showed a status quo photo. However, the negative imagery decreased webpage visits as homeowners' wildfire risk increased. These results illustrate the importance of testing assumptions to encourage behavioral adaptation to climate change.
C1 [Flint, Hilary Byerly; Brenkert-Smith, Hannah] Univ Colorado, Inst Behav Sci, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Flint, Hilary Byerly] Univ Wyoming, Haub Sch Environm & Nat Resources, Laramie, WY 82072 USA.
   [Champ, Patricia A.] US Forest Serv, Rocky Mt Res Stn, USDA, Ft Collins, CO 80526 USA.
   [Meldrum, James R.] US Geol Survey, Ft Collins Sci Ctr, Ft Collins, CO 80526 USA.
C3 University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder;
   University of Wyoming; United States Department of Agriculture (USDA);
   United States Forest Service; United States Department of the Interior;
   United States Geological Survey
RP Flint, HB (corresponding author), Univ Colorado, Inst Behav Sci, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.; Flint, HB (corresponding author), Univ Wyoming, Haub Sch Environm & Nat Resources, Laramie, WY 82072 USA.
EM hflint1@uwyo.edu
RI Meldrum, James/W-4994-2019
OI Meldrum, James/0000-0001-5250-3759; Flint, Hilary/0000-0002-7445-2099
FU National Science Foundation (NSF) [SES1823509]; United States Department
   of Agriculture Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station; NSF;
   Federal Emergency Management Agency
FX We are tremendously grateful to Katie Gibble and Chris Chambers at
   Ashland Fire and Rescue for making the field experiment possible. We
   thank Chris Barth and Jamie Gomez for their expert input, and Colleen
   Donovan and Carolyn Wagner for data and logistical support. This
   research was supported by National Science Foundation (NSF) Grant
   SES1823509, United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Rocky
   Mountain Research Station, the NSF-and Federal Emergency Management
   Agency-funded Mitigation Matters Research Program through the Natural
   Hazards Center, Institute of Behavioral Science Small Grants Program,
   and Ashland Fire and Rescue. The survey described in this report was
   organized and implemented by the University of Colorado Boulder and was
   not conducted on behalf of the U.S. Geological Survey. The findings and
   conclusions in this paper are those of the authors and should not be
   construed to represent any official USDA or U.S. Government
   determination or
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NR 60
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 5
U2 8
PU SPRINGERNATURE
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2662-4435
J9 COMMUN EARTH ENVIRON
JI Commun. Earth Environ.
PD OCT 4
PY 2022
VL 3
IS 1
AR 229
DI 10.1038/s43247-022-00505-7
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA 5B8SA
UT WOS:000863837700001
PM 36211134
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Leroux, AD
   Martin, VL
   St John, KA
AF Leroux, Anke D.
   Martin, Vance L.
   St John, Kathryn A.
TI Modeling time varying risk of natural resource assets: Implications of
   climate change
SO QUANTITATIVE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE RV-DCC; realized variance; natural resource portfolio; climate change;
   C32; C53; Q35; Q54
ID REALIZED VOLATILITY; PORTFOLIO DESIGN; UNCERTAINTY; GARCH; RETURN
AB A multivariate GARCH model of natural resources is specified to capture the effects of time varying portfolio risk. A special feature of the model is the inclusion of realized volatility for natural resource assets that are available at multiple frequencies as well as being sensitive to sudden changes in climatic conditions. Natural resource portfolios under climate change are simulated from bootstrapping schemes as well as being derived from global climate model projections. Both approaches are applied to a multiasset water portfolio model consisting of reservoir inflows, rainwater harvesting, and desalinated water. The empirical results show that while reservoirs remain the dominant water asset, adaptation to climate change involves increased contributions from rainwater harvesting and more frequent use of desalinated water. It is estimated that climate change increases annual water supply costs by between 7% and 44% over a 20-year forecast horizon.
C1 [Leroux, Anke D.] Monash Univ, Dept Econ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Martin, Vance L.; St John, Kathryn A.] Univ Melbourne, Dept Econ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
C3 Monash University; University of Melbourne
RP Leroux, AD (corresponding author), Monash Univ, Dept Econ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
EM anke.leroux@monash.edu; vance@unimelb.edu.au; stjohnka@gmail.com
OI Leroux, Anke/0000-0002-5572-8459
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NR 38
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 17
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1759-7323
EI 1759-7331
J9 QUANT ECON
JI Quant. Econ.
PD JAN
PY 2022
VL 13
IS 1
BP 225
EP 257
DI 10.3982/QE1597
PG 33
WC Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA YN3OR
UT WOS:000747171100010
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carver, RE
   Tweed, FS
AF Carver, Rachael E.
   Tweed, Fiona S.
TI Cover the ice or ski on grass? The dilemmas facing ski tourism in a
   deglaciating world
SO GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; SNOW; EVOLUTION; RETREAT
AB Climate change is having a world-wide impact, particularly on the cryosphere, which is experiencing rapid melting with a range of consequences for the environment and society. In many places, reduced snow and ice have implications for the experiences of visitors. This article reviews the impacts of deglaciation on glacier and ski tourism and in doing so, it brings together human and physical geography. We begin by summarising the relationships between glaciers and climate change, highlighting impacts of glacier retreat, before considering tourism in glaciated areas. We explore ways in which some locations are adapting to changing environmental conditions and examine tactics that have been used to manage the effects of deglaciation on tourism, speci?cally in the European Alps. Glacier conservation, snow harvesting, the production of arti?cial snow and modifying the range of tourist experiences all illustrate the dilemmas involved in adapting to climate change in practice.
C1 [Carver, Rachael E.] Coal Author, Mansfield, England.
   [Tweed, Fiona S.] Staffordshire Univ, Dept Crime Soc & Environm, Phys Geog, Stoke On Trent, Staffs, England.
C3 Staffordshire University
RP Carver, RE (corresponding author), Coal Author, Mansfield, England.
EM rachael.carver1@btinternet.com; f.s.tweed@staffs.ac.uk
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NR 41
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 5
U2 27
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0016-7487
EI 2043-6564
J9 GEOGRAPHY
JI Geography
PD SEP 2
PY 2021
VL 106
IS 3
BP 116
EP 127
DI 10.1080/00167487.2021.1970926
PG 12
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA WD6IU
UT WOS:000705042900002
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Foudi, S
   Spadaro, JV
   Chiabai, A
   Polanco-Martínez, JM
   Neumann, MB
AF Foudi, Sebastien
   Spadaro, Joseph V.
   Chiabai, Aline
   Polanco-Martinez, Josue M.
   Neumann, Marc B.
TI The climatic dependencies of urban ecosystem services from green roofs:
   Threshold effects and non-linearity
SO ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban ecosystem services; Green roofs; Climate regulation; Thresholds
ID COST-BENEFIT-ANALYSIS; VALUING MORTALITY RISK; HEAT-RELATED MORTALITY;
   ENERGY-CONSUMPTION; UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS; SOCIAL COST; ISLAND; IMPACTS;
   HEALTH; WAVES
AB This paper proposes a methodology for quantifying benefits and costs of extensive green roofs as an urban strategy for adaptation to climate change. It seeks to highlight the consequences of threshold effects in the delivery of the benefits and non-linearity with respect to green roof coverage. The analysis focuses on energy savings for cooling, carbon footprint reduction, avoided water treatment and reduction of heat-stress related mortality. Applying the methodology to the case study of the city of Madrid ( Spain) reveals that for climate scenarios where observed temperatures are closer to thresholds, misspecification of the services is more likely to bias the decision of using green roofs as an urban strategy to mitigate the effects of climate change. (C) 2017 Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Foudi, Sebastien; Spadaro, Joseph V.; Chiabai, Aline; Polanco-Martinez, Josue M.; Neumann, Marc B.] BC3, Sede Bldg 1,1st Floor,Barrio Sarriena,S-N, Leioa 48940, Spain.
   [Spadaro, Joseph V.] Spadaro Environm Res Consultants LLC, Hillsborough, NJ 08844 USA.
   [Polanco-Martinez, Josue M.] Univ Bordeaux, UMR CNRS EPOC 5805, F-33615 Pessac, France.
   [Neumann, Marc B.] Basque Fdn Sci, Ikerbasque, Bilbao, Spain.
C3 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - National
   Institute for Earth Sciences & Astronomy (INSU); Universite de Bordeaux;
   Basque Foundation for Science
RP Foudi, S (corresponding author), BC3, Sede Bldg 1,1st Floor,Barrio Sarriena,S-N, Leioa 48940, Spain.
EM sebastien.foudi@bc3research.org
RI CHIABAI, ALINE/M-7447-2013; Spadaro, Joseph/F-2938-2012; Neumann, Marc
   B./B-5553-2008; Foudi, Sebastien/I-3466-2013; Polanco-Martinez, Josue
   M./D-4290-2014
OI Neumann, Marc B./0000-0002-4801-3279; Foudi,
   Sebastien/0000-0002-8013-7853; Polanco-Martinez, Josue
   M./0000-0001-7164-0185
FU European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) [308337]; Basque
   Government post-doctoral fellowship [POS_2015_1_0006]; Ramon y Cajal
   Research Fellowship of the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness of
   Spain [RYC-2013-13628]
FX This paper has received funding from the European Union Seventh
   Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under the Grant agreement no: 308337
   (BASE). J.M. Polanco-Martinez was funded by a Basque Government
   post-doctoral fellowship (Ref. No. POS_2015_1_0006). M.B. Neumann
   acknowledges financial support from the Ramon y Cajal Research
   Fellowship of the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness of Spain (no.
   RYC-2013-13628). We are grateful to Pedro Iglesias (UPM) for his support
   related to obtaining information on costs of green roofs.
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NR 80
TC 22
Z9 24
U1 9
U2 117
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0416
J9 ECOSYST SERV
JI Ecosyst. Serv.
PD APR
PY 2017
VL 24
BP 223
EP 233
DI 10.1016/j.ecoser.2017.03.004
PG 11
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EV7GV
UT WOS:000401944800021
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gupta, J
   Bergsma, E
   Termeer, CJAM
   Biesbroek, GR
   van den Brink, M
   Jong, P
   Klostermann, JEM
   Meijerink, S
   Nooteboom, S
AF Gupta, J.
   Bergsma, E.
   Termeer, C. J. A. M.
   Biesbroek, G. R.
   van den Brink, M.
   Jong, P.
   Klostermann, J. E. M.
   Meijerink, S.
   Nooteboom, S.
TI The adaptive capacity of institutions in the spatial planning, water,
   agriculture and nature sectors in the Netherlands
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Adaptive capacity; Climate change; Institutional theory; The
   Netherlands
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; GOVERNANCE; MANAGEMENT; DROUGHT
AB The climate change problem calls for a continuously responding society. This raises the question: Do our institutions allow and encourage society to continuously adapt to climate change? This paper uses the Adaptive Capacity Wheel (ACW) to assess the adaptive capacity of formal and informal institutions in four sectors in the Netherlands: spatial planning, water, agriculture and nature. Formal institutions are examined through an assessment of 11 key policy documents and informal institutions are analysed through four case studies covering each sector. Based on these ACW analyses, both sector-specific and more general strengths and weaknesses of the adaptive capacity of institutions in the Netherlands are identified. The paper concludes that the most important challenge for increasing institutional adaptive capacity lies in combining decentralized, participatory approaches with more top-down methods that generate leadership (visions, goals) standards, instruments, resources and monitoring.
C1 [Gupta, J.; Bergsma, E.] Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam Inst Social Sci Res, Fac Social & Behav Sci, Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, NL-1018 WV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Termeer, C. J. A. M.; Biesbroek, G. R.] Wageningen UR, Wageningen Sch Social Sci, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [van den Brink, M.] Univ Groningen, Fac Spatial Sci, Groningen, Netherlands.
   [Jong, P.] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Architecture & Built Environm, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Klostermann, J. E. M.] Wageningen UR, Alterra, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Meijerink, S.] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Inst Management Res, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
   [Nooteboom, S.] Erasmus Univ, Fac Social Sci, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
   [Gupta, J.] UNESCO IHE Inst Water Educ, Westvest 7, NL-2611 AX Delft, Netherlands.
C3 University of Amsterdam; Wageningen University & Research; University of
   Groningen; Delft University of Technology; Wageningen University &
   Research; Radboud University Nijmegen; Erasmus University Rotterdam;
   Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl Erasmus MC; IHE Delft Institute for
   Water Education
RP Gupta, J (corresponding author), Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam Inst Social Sci Res, Fac Social & Behav Sci, Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, NL-1018 WV Amsterdam, Netherlands.; Gupta, J (corresponding author), UNESCO IHE Inst Water Educ, Westvest 7, NL-2611 AX Delft, Netherlands.
EM j.gupta@uva.nl
RI Biesbroek, Robbert/GZZ-4476-2022; Gupta, Joyeeta/L-8672-2013; Meijerink,
   Sander/D-6490-2012; Nooteboom, Sibout/B-4185-2014; Biesbroek,
   Robbert/I-2384-2013
OI Gupta, Joyeeta/0000-0003-1424-2660; Klostermann,
   Judith/0000-0002-4018-9907; Biesbroek, Robbert/0000-0002-2906-1419; van
   den Brink, Margo/0000-0001-8247-3044
FU Netherlands BSIK-Programme Climate changes Spatial Planning (CcSP)
FX The authors acknowledge that the research was undertaken in the course
   of the project - IC12: Institutions for Adaptation: The Capacity and
   Ability of the Dutch Institutional Framework to Adapt to Climate
   Change', which was funded by the Netherlands BSIK-Programme Climate
   changes Spatial Planning (CcSP).<SUP>1</SUP>
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Z9 26
U1 2
U2 56
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD AUG
PY 2016
VL 21
IS 6
BP 883
EP 903
DI 10.1007/s11027-014-9630-z
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DQ2LS
UT WOS:000379034400005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kahil, MT
   Connor, JD
   Albiac, J
AF Kahil, Mohamed Taher
   Connor, Jeffery D.
   Albiac, Jose
TI Efficient water management policies for irrigation adaptation to climate
   change in Southern Europe
SO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Irrigation; Adaptation; Southern Europe; Stochastic
   programming; Water policies
ID GLOBAL CHANGE; MARKETS; BASIN; AGRICULTURE; SCARCITY; FUTURE; MODELS;
   IMPACT
AB This paper evaluates economic and environmental effects of two incentive-based water management policies to address climate change impacts on irrigated agriculture: water markets and irrigation subsidies. A Southern European case study assesses farmers' long and short-run adaptation responses under climate change and policy interventions with a discrete stochastic programming model. Results indicate that climate change will likely have negative impacts on irrigation activities and water-dependent ecosystems in Southern Europe. However, the severity of impacts depends on government policy settings and farmers' adaptation responses. The comparison between water market and irrigation subsidy policies shows the advantages of water markets over irrigation subsidies in terms of both private and social benefits. These findings could guide policymakers on the design of efficient water institutions and policies to address climate change in the irrigated agriculture of Southern Europe. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Kahil, Mohamed Taher; Albiac, Jose] CITA Govt Aragon, Dept Agr Econ, Zaragoza, Spain.
   [Connor, Jeffery D.] CSIRO Land & Water, Glen Osmond, SA 5064, Australia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Albiac, J (corresponding author), CITA DGA, Dept Agr Econ, Ave Montanana 930, Zaragoza 50059, Spain.
EM mt.kahil@gmail.com; Jeff.Connor@csiro.au; maella@unizar.es
RI Albiac, Jose/J-8827-2012; Connor, Jeff/T-7345-2019; Connor,
   Jeffery/G-5466-2010
OI Kahil, Taher/0000-0002-7812-5271; Connor, Jeffery/0000-0002-2313-8630
FU Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [INIA
   RTA2014-00050-00-00]; MAPFRE Foundation [BIL/13/MA/072]; Instituto
   Nacional de Investigacion y Tecnologia Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA)
FX Support for this research was provided by the project INIA
   RTA2014-00050-00-00 from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and
   Competitiveness, and project BIL/13/MA/072 from MAPFRE Foundation. The
   authors would like to acknowledge the Instituto Nacional de
   Investigacion y Tecnologia Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA) for the doctoral
   scholarship granted to the first author.
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NR 53
TC 68
Z9 70
U1 6
U2 74
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-8009
EI 1873-6106
J9 ECOL ECON
JI Ecol. Econ.
PD DEC
PY 2015
VL 120
BP 226
EP 233
DI 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2015.11.004
PG 8
WC Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics
GA CZ0KF
UT WOS:000366793000022
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bryan, E
   Ringler, C
   Okoba, B
   Roncoli, C
   Silvestri, S
   Herrero, M
AF Bryan, Elizabeth
   Ringler, Claudia
   Okoba, Barrack
   Roncoli, Carla
   Silvestri, Silvia
   Herrero, Mario
TI Adapting agriculture to climate change in Kenya: Household strategies
   and determinants
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Kenya; Agriculture
ID ADAPTATION; INSIGHTS; POVERTY; LEVEL
AB Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa are particularly vulnerable to climate change, given dependence on agricultural production and limited adaptive capacity. Based on farm household and Participatory Rural Appraisal data collected from districts in various agroecological zones in Kenya, this paper examines farmers' perceptions of climate change, ongoing adaptation measures, and factors influencing farmers' decisions to adapt. The results show that households face considerable challenges in adapting to climate change. While many households have made small adjustments to their farming practices in response to climate change (in particular, changing planting decisions), few households are able to make more costly investments, for example in agroforestry or irrigation, although there is a desire to invest in such measures. This emphasizes the need for greater investments in rural and agricultural development to support the ability of households to make strategic, long-term decisions that affect their future wellbeing. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Bryan, Elizabeth; Ringler, Claudia] Int Food Policy Res Inst, Environm & Prod Technol Div, Washington, DC 20006 USA.
   [Okoba, Barrack] Kenya Agr Res Inst Kabete, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Roncoli, Carla] Emory Univ, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA.
   [Silvestri, Silvia; Herrero, Mario] Int Livestock Res Inst, Nairobi 00100, Kenya.
C3 CGIAR; International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI); Emory
   University; CGIAR; International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
RP Bryan, E (corresponding author), Int Food Policy Res Inst, Environm & Prod Technol Div, 2033 K St NW, Washington, DC 20006 USA.
EM e.bryan@cgiar.org
RI ; Herrero, Mario/A-6678-2015
OI Bryan, Elizabeth/0000-0002-0906-222X; Herrero,
   Mario/0000-0002-7741-5090; Ringler, Claudia/0000-0002-8266-0488
FU World Bank through the Trust Fund for Environmentally & Socially
   Sustainable Development (TFESSD)
FX This work was supported by the World Bank through the Trust Fund for
   Environmentally & Socially Sustainable Development (TFESSD). This
   research was conducted under the CGIAR Research Program on Climate
   Change, Agriculture, and Food Security (CCAFS).
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NR 44
TC 510
Z9 559
U1 10
U2 235
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4797
EI 1095-8630
J9 J ENVIRON MANAGE
JI J. Environ. Manage.
PD JAN 15
PY 2013
VL 114
BP 26
EP 35
DI 10.1016/j.jenvman.2012.10.036
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 082DE
UT WOS:000314371700004
PM 23201602
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Matzarakis, A
   Hämmerle, M
   Koch, E
   Rudel, E
AF Matzarakis, Andreas
   Haemmerle, Martin
   Koch, Elisabeth
   Rudel, Ernest
TI The climate tourism potential of Alpine destinations using the example
   of Sonnblick, Rauris and Salzburg
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
ID PHYSIOLOGICAL EQUIVALENT TEMPERATURE; THERMAL COMFORT; SNOWMAKING;
   INDEX; INFORMATION; ADAPTATION; RECREATION; WEATHER; FUTURE; IMPACT
AB The climate tourism potential of a region can be described by methods used in human biometeorology and applied climatology. Frequency analyses based on complex thermal bioclimatic indices (e.g. physiologically equivalent temperature) and diagrams of precipitation patterns based on thresholds offer new approaches of visualisation. An integral approach for tourism climatologic analyses is provided by the climate-tourism/transfer-information-scheme that also bases on frequency distributions of relevant factors and parameters which are important for a destination. The knowledge about the vertical variability of tourism climatologic factors is of high importance because of the several kinds of tourism activities affected by weather. The same holds for a quantification of extreme events like heat waves because of their possible effects on health and recreation over a year's course. The results show that the vertical gradient of bioclimatic and tourism-related parameters can be of value when developing strategies of adaption to climate change.
C1 [Matzarakis, Andreas; Haemmerle, Martin] Univ Freiburg, Inst Meteorol, D-79085 Freiburg, Germany.
   [Koch, Elisabeth; Rudel, Ernest] Cent Inst Meteorol & Geodynam, Vienna, Austria.
C3 University of Freiburg
RP Matzarakis, A (corresponding author), Univ Freiburg, Inst Meteorol, Werthmannstr 10, D-79085 Freiburg, Germany.
EM andreas.matzarakis@meteo.uni-freiburg.de
RI Matzarakis, Andreas/AAO-2676-2021; Matzarakis, Andreas/E-4738-2012
OI Hammerle, Martin/0000-0001-7527-8515; Matzarakis,
   Andreas/0000-0003-3076-555X
FU ZAMG; Austrian Federal Ministry for Science and Research
FX Tourklim project was funded by ZAMG and the Austrian Federal Ministry
   for Science and Research.
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NR 68
TC 38
Z9 43
U1 0
U2 49
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI WIEN
PA SACHSENPLATZ 4-6, PO BOX 89, A-1201 WIEN, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD DEC
PY 2012
VL 110
IS 4
BP 645
EP 658
DI 10.1007/s00704-012-0686-y
PG 14
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 042UW
UT WOS:000311497800015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McIlgorm, A
   Hanna, S
   Knapp, G
   Le Floc'H, P
   Millerd, F
   Pan, ML
AF McIlgorm, Alistair
   Hanna, Susan
   Knapp, Gunnar
   Le Floc'H, Pascal
   Millerd, Frank
   Pan, Minling
TI How will climate change alter fishery governance? Insights from seven
   international case studies
SO MARINE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Fishery governance
ID INSTITUTIONS; VARIABILITY; ADAPTATION; ECOSYSTEMS; TUNA; BAY
AB We examine the implications of climate change for fishery governance using seven international fishery case studies in low, mid and high latitudes, including eastern Australia, the western Pacific Ocean, Alaska, west coast United States, Hawaii, west coast Canada and France. Climate change adds uncertainty about fish stock productivity, migratory patterns, trophic interactions and vulnerability of fish populations to fishing pressure.
   Fishery governance has to address additional uncertainty from climate change in both the system being governed and the governance systems. The case studies reveal governance issues that indicate adaptation will involve more flexible fishery management regimes, schemes for capacity adjustment, catch limitation and alternative fishing livelihoods for fishers.
   Where fishery governance systems have been less developed, fisheries are less able to adapt to climate change impacts. Adaptation involves addressing some of the most intractable allocation issues of fisheries management. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [McIlgorm, Alistair] Univ New England, Natl Marine Sci Ctr, Coffs Harbour, NSW 2450, Australia.
   [McIlgorm, Alistair] So Cross Univ, Coffs Harbour, NSW 2450, Australia.
   [Hanna, Susan] Oregon State Univ, Coastal Oregon Marine Expt Stn, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
   [Knapp, Gunnar] Univ Alaska Anchorage, Inst Social & Econ Res, Anchorage, AK 99508 USA.
   [Le Floc'H, Pascal] Univ Europeenne Bretagne, Univ Brest, F-29334 Quimper, France.
   [Millerd, Frank] Wilfrid Laurier Univ, Dept Econ, Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5, Canada.
   [Pan, Minling] NOAA, Fisheries Serv, Pacific Isl Fishery Sci Ctr, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
C3 Southern Cross University; University of New England; Southern Cross
   University; Oregon State University; University of Alaska System;
   University of Alaska Anchorage; Universite de Bretagne Occidentale;
   Wilfrid Laurier University; National Oceanic Atmospheric Admin (NOAA) -
   USA
RP McIlgorm, A (corresponding author), Univ New England, Natl Marine Sci Ctr, POB 4321, Coffs Harbour, NSW 2450, Australia.
EM amcilgorm@nmsc.edu.au; susan.hanna@oregonstate.edu;
   afgpk@uaa.alaska.edu; pascal.lefloch@univ-brest.fr; fmillerd@wlu.ca;
   Minling.Pan@noaa.gov
OI Mcilgorm, Alistair/0000-0001-6625-5573
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NR 36
TC 87
Z9 93
U1 1
U2 40
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0308-597X
EI 1872-9460
J9 MAR POLICY
JI Mar. Pol.
PD JAN
PY 2010
VL 34
IS 1
BP 170
EP 177
DI 10.1016/j.marpol.2009.06.004
PG 8
WC Environmental Studies; International Relations
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; International Relations
GA 510XU
UT WOS:000271128300023
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Millerd, F
AF Millerd, Frank
GP IEEE
TI Possible locations for adaptation to climate change by Canadian
   commercial navigation on the Great Lakes
SO 2006 IEEE EIC Climate Change Conference, Vols 1 and 2
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT IEEE EIC Climate Change Conference
CY MAY 09-12, 2006
CL Ottawa, CANADA
SP IEEE
DE climate change; adaptation; commercial navigation; Great Lakes
ID SCENARIOS; IMPACTS
AB Climate change is expected to bring about lower water levels and reduced depths in the Great Lakes, with consequent reductions in vessel cargo capacities and increases in shipping costs. Under the most severe conditions annual transportation costs for Great Lakes - St. Lawrence River commercial navigation could increase by 29 percent,- more moderate climate change could result in a 13 percent increase, based on current prices. The impacts vary between commodities and routes. Cost increases of this magnitude suggest that adaptation measures may be worthwhile. The most obvious form of adaptation, and likely the least expensive, is deepening or increasing water depths at harbours and other shallow water points. Depth improvements should be carried out where benefits are highest. A small number of ports and shallow water points are responsible for most of the cost increases. A method of determining the most beneficial depth improvements is proposed.
C1 Wilfrid Laurier Univ, Dept Econ, Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5, Canada.
C3 Wilfrid Laurier University
RP Millerd, F (corresponding author), Wilfrid Laurier Univ, Dept Econ, Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5, Canada.
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NR 18
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 4
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
BN 978-1-4244-0217-5
PY 2006
BP 691
EP 700
PG 10
WC Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BGI75
UT WOS:000247356600091
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dang, HH
   Michaelowa, A
   Tuan, DD
AF Dang, HH
   Michaelowa, A
   Tuan, DD
TI Synergy of adaptation and mitigation strategies in the context of
   sustainable development: the case of Vietnam
SO CLIMATE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; mitigation; climate change; Vietnam; sustainable development
AB An emerging topic in current climate negotiations is the political momentum for recognising adaptation to climate change as a crucial part of a comprehensive climate policy. However, there are a number of arguments and doubts raised by politicians, negotiators and environmentalists alike with regard to the necessity of implementing adaptation in parallel with mitigation. The first aim of this article is to analyse possible contradictions and synergies between these two strategies and analyse the implications for developing countries and sustainable development targets. We then use Vietnam as a case study to demonstrate how to integrate mitigation and adaptation strategies that can provide additional benefits to the social welfare. This empirical analysis provides a basic understanding of how to address thorny questions in a nascent process of designing public climate policy in Vietnam. Lessons drawn from this research should be replicable in other developing countries having similar circumstances. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 Hamburg Inst Int Econ, D-20347 Hamburg, Germany.
   Natl Off Climate Change & Ozone Layer Protect, Hanoi, Vietnam.
RP Hamburg Inst Int Econ, Neuer Jungfenstieg 21, D-20347 Hamburg, Germany.
EM dang.hong.hanh@hwwa.de
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NR 40
TC 69
Z9 76
U1 1
U2 33
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1469-3062
EI 1752-7457
J9 CLIM POLICY
JI Clim. Policy
PY 2003
VL 3
SU 1
BP S81
EP S96
DI 10.1016/j.clipol.2003.10.006
PG 16
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA 761BN
UT WOS:000187879500007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chang, MY
   Kuo, HY
   Chen, HS
AF Chang, Min-Yen
   Kuo, Hung-Yu
   Chen, Han-Shen
TI Perception of Climate Change and Pro-Environmental Behavioral Intentions
   of Forest Recreation Area Users-A Case of Taiwan
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE sustainable tourism; climate change; adaptation intention; partial least
   squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM); theory of planned
   behavior (TPB)
ID COMMUNITY-BASED TOURISTS; PLANNED BEHAVIOR; CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK
   PERCEPTIONS; PLS-SEM; MODEL; MITIGATION; IMPACTS; WILLINGNESS;
   EXPERIENCE
AB This study aims to extend the theory of planned behavior to explore climate change perception, adaptation intention, and behavioral patterns of PEB of tourists in the Xitou Nature Education Area (XNEA) in Taiwan. Furthermore, we analyzed the correlation among various variables using partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM). Data were collected from the close-ended question questionnaires; sample size (n = 626). SPSS 22.0 and AMOS 22.0 for Windows were used as tools for analysis. The results are as follows: the perception of tourists on climate change exerts a significant positive effect on attitudes, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control, which, in turn, exerts significant positive effects on climate change adaptation intentions. Furthermore, climate change adaptation intentions exert a significant positive influence on the behavioral patterns of PEB. Finally, political trust exerts a moderating effect on the relationship between subjective norms and climate change adaptation intentions and between perceived behavioral control and climate change adaptation intentions. Our findings indicate that it is necessary to encourage awareness of climate change, and that it is also very important to increase the value of political trust when making environmental policies.
C1 [Chang, Min-Yen] Jiaxing Univ, Dept Accounting, Jiaxing 314001, Peoples R China.
   [Kuo, Hung-Yu; Chen, Han-Shen] Chung Shan Med Univ, Dept Hlth Ind Technol Management, Taichung 40201, Taiwan.
   [Chen, Han-Shen] Chung Shan Med Univ Hosp, Dept Med Management, 110 Sec 1,Jianguo N Rd, Taichung 40201, Taiwan.
C3 Jiaxing University; Chung Shan Medical University; Chung Shan Medical
   University; Chung Shan Medical University Hospital
RP Chen, HS (corresponding author), Chung Shan Med Univ, Dept Hlth Ind Technol Management, Taichung 40201, Taiwan.; Chen, HS (corresponding author), Chung Shan Med Univ Hosp, Dept Med Management, 110 Sec 1,Jianguo N Rd, Taichung 40201, Taiwan.
EM allen975@csmu.edu.tw
RI ; Chen, Han-Shen/E-5881-2018
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   Chen, Han-Shen/0000-0002-5201-2615
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NR 92
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 7
U2 42
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD SEP
PY 2022
VL 13
IS 9
AR 1476
DI 10.3390/f13091476
PG 17
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 4V4ZG
UT WOS:000859486100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hopkins, D
AF Hopkins, Debbie
TI The sustainability of climate change adaptation strategies in New
   Zealand's ski industry: a range of stakeholder perceptions
SO JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; perceptions; adaptation; maladaptation; sustainability;
   snowmaking
ID SEASONAL SNOW; SNOWMAKING; VULNERABILITY; FUTURE; IMPACT; MITIGATION;
   RESORTS; OPTIONS; CONTEXT; WEATHER
AB Climate change is a critical sustainability challenge for alpine tourism and the ski industry. Climate change adaptation is characterised as identifying and taking advantage of new business opportunities plus reducing physical risks. For adaptation strategies to be sustainable they should consider the environment, economy and society. While several adaptive ski industry strategies have been identified, not all can fulfil these criteria; some adaptive strategies could be perceived as unsustainable, or maladaptive. This paper provides a qualitative, perceptual study of ski industry stakeholders in Queenstown, New Zealand, addressing perceptions of climate change adaptation by the core industry, wider industry actors, local community and tourists. It answers two research questions: What are perceived as the main climate change adaptation strategies for Queenstown's ski industry? How do ski industry stakeholders perceive current adaptation strategies in terms of sustainability? It finds snowmaking central to addressing both current weather variability and medium/long-term future climate change. Ski-field operators use snowmaking to ensure the industry's economic sustainability, to extend seasons even beyond traditional norms, but with little consideration for environmental or social sustainability. It finds some local people questioning snowmaking on ethical and environmental grounds, and skier acceptance of snowmaking connected to activity preference.
C1 Univ Otago, Dept Tourism, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand.
C3 University of Otago
RP Hopkins, D (corresponding author), Univ Otago, Dept Tourism, POB 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand.
EM debbie.hopkins@otago.ac.nz
OI Hopkins, Debbie/0000-0002-7778-8989
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NR 49
TC 72
Z9 76
U1 2
U2 118
PU CHANNEL VIEW PUBLICATIONS
PI CLEVEDON
PA FRANKFURT LODGE, CLEVEDON HALL, VICTORIA ROAD, CLEVEDON, BS21 7HH,
   ENGLAND
SN 0966-9582
EI 1747-7646
J9 J SUSTAIN TOUR
JI J. Sustain. Tour.
PY 2014
VL 22
IS 1
BP 107
EP 126
DI 10.1080/09669582.2013.804830
PG 20
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Hospitality, Leisure, Sport &
   Tourism
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA 292OG
UT WOS:000329911000008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Breton, M
   Sbragia, L
AF Breton, Michele
   Sbragia, Lucia
TI Adaptation to Climate Change: Commitment and Timing Issues
SO ENVIRONMENTAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Leadership; Mitigation; Strategy; Timing
ID MITIGATION; POLICY
AB We study the impact of timing and commitment on adaptation and mitigation policies in the context of international environmental problems. Adaptation policies present the characteristics of a private good and may require a prior investment, while mitigation policies produce a public good. In a stylized model, we evaluate the impact of strategic commitment and leadership considerations when countries with different attitudes towards environmental cooperation coexist. We obtain equilibrium abatement and adaptation levels and environmental costs under partial cooperation for various timing and leadership scenarios. Crucially, global environmental costs suffered by countries are found to be greater when adaptation measures can be used strategically.
C1 [Breton, Michele] HEC Montreal, Dept Decis Sci, 3000 Chemin Cote St Catherine, Montreal, PQ H3T 2A7, Canada.
   [Sbragia, Lucia] Univ Durham, Sch Business, Dept Econ, Durham, England.
C3 Universite de Montreal; HEC Montreal; Durham University
RP Breton, M (corresponding author), HEC Montreal, Dept Decis Sci, 3000 Chemin Cote St Catherine, Montreal, PQ H3T 2A7, Canada.
EM michele.breton@hec.ca
RI Sbragia, Lucia/AAH-1762-2021
OI Breton, Michele/0000-0001-8264-8350
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NR 19
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 1
U2 9
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
SN 0924-6460
EI 1573-1502
J9 ENVIRON RESOUR ECON
JI Environ. Resour. Econ.
PD DEC
PY 2017
VL 68
IS 4
BP 975
EP 995
DI 10.1007/s10640-016-0056-9
PG 21
WC Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FO4HD
UT WOS:000416801700007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Keskitalo, ECH
   Kulyasova, AA
AF Keskitalo, E. Carina H.
   Kulyasova, Antonina A.
TI The role of governance in community adaptation to climate change
SO POLAR RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive capacity; climate change; fishing; governance; Norway; Russia
ID VULNERABILITY; ECONOMY
AB The capacity to adapt to challenges such as climate change can be seen as largely determined by socioeconomic context or social vulnerability. This article examines the adaptive capacity of local actors in response to globalization and climate change, asking: how much of the desirable adaptation can be undertaken at a local level, and how much is determined by actors at other levels, for instance, when resource conflicts occur? Drawing on case studies of fishing in northern Norway and north-west Russia, the paper shows that adaptive capacity beyond the immediate economic adaptations available to local actors is, to a considerable extent, politically determined within larger governance networks.
C1 [Keskitalo, E. Carina H.] Umea Univ, Dept Social & Econ Geog, SE-990187 Umea, Sweden.
   [Kulyasova, Antonina A.] Ctr Independent Social Res, RU-191040 St Petersburg, Russia.
C3 Umea University
RP Keskitalo, ECH (corresponding author), Umea Univ, Dept Social & Econ Geog, SE-990187 Umea, Sweden.
EM carina.keskitalo@geography.umu.se
RI Kulyasova, Antonina/AAY-5709-2020
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NR 32
TC 39
Z9 42
U1 0
U2 14
PU WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
PI MALDEN
PA COMMERCE PLACE, 350 MAIN ST, MALDEN 02148, MA USA
SN 0800-0395
J9 POLAR RES
JI Polar Res.
PD APR
PY 2009
VL 28
IS 1
BP 60
EP 70
DI 10.1111/j.1751-8369.2009.00097.x
PG 11
WC Ecology; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Oceanography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Oceanography
GA 419TH
UT WOS:000264242100005
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mallick, M
   Singh, PK
   Pandey, R
AF Mallick, Manisha
   Singh, Pramod K.
   Pandey, Rajiv
TI Harvesting resilience: Tribal home-gardens as socio-ecological solutions
   for climate change adaptation and sustainable development in a protected
   area
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Indigenous and local knowledge; Indigenous
   people; Nature-based solution; Protected area; Socio-ecological system
ID SIMILIPAL BIOSPHERE RESERVE; LIVELIHOOD; VULNERABILITY; FRAMEWORK;
   SYSTEMS; PERSPECTIVE; TIGER
AB This study delves into the socio-ecological system (SES) of tribal home-gardens within India's Similipal Biosphere Reserve (SBR), unveiling their vital role in fostering biodiversity, resilience, and sustainability. Grounded in an SES framework, our research elucidates the deep interconnectivity between tribal communities and their homegardens, woven into the tapestry of broader environmental and social dynamics. These gardens, rich in crops, forest species, and livestock, serve as dynamic reservoirs of indigenous and local knowledge (ILK), crucial for bolstering local economies and enhancing climate resilience. We analysed 36 focus group discussions across 36 villages and identified 15 indigenous nature-based practices that significantly contribute to 9 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and 22 Sustainable Development Targets (SDTs). Indigenous home-gardening practices underpin climate change adaptation strategies and highlight the importance of integrating biodiversity and socio-economic objectives. Our findings underscore the criticality of diversification in enhancing resilience within indigenous SES, showcasing the balance between human adaptability and ecological symbiosis. The tribal home-gardens, driven by indigenous stewardship, provide essential ecosystem services and are instrumental in ecosystem protection, conservation, and restoration. Additionally, they play a pivotal role in enabling climate change adaptation, fostering gender empowerment, and upholding cultural significance, all sustained by dynamic feedback loops with their natural environment. This paper advocates for the greater recognition and integration of such indigenous-led NbS and ILK in global climate initiatives, emphasising their indispensability in enhancing climate resilience and promoting sustainable development within similar SES.
C1 [Mallick, Manisha] Forest Res Inst, PO New Forest, Dehra Dun 248007, Uttarakhand, India.
   [Singh, Pramod K.] Inst Rural Management Anand IRMA, Anand 388001, Gujarat, India.
   [Pandey, Rajiv] Indian Council Forestry Res & Educ, Pearson Rd,PO New Forest, Dehra Dun 248007, Uttaranchal, India.
C3 Indian Council of Forestry Research & Education (ICFRE); Forest Research
   Institute (FRI); Institute of Rural Management Anand; Indian Council of
   Forestry Research & Education (ICFRE)
RP Mallick, M (corresponding author), Forest Res Inst, PO New Forest, Dehra Dun 248007, Uttarakhand, India.
EM manishasmallick@gmail.com; pramod@irma.ac.in; rajivrsgis@gmail.com
RI Singh, Pramod/AAS-1648-2021; , Rajiv/N-9631-2019
OI Pandey, Rajiv/0000-0003-4849-775X; Singh, Pramod K/0000-0003-2212-0583
FU UGC- NET Research Fellowship, government of India [no-190510088175]
FX The financial support provided for the research, available to Manisha
   Mallick through the UGC- NET Research Fellowship (award letter
   no-190510088175) by the government of India, is duly acknowledged.
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NR 91
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 9
U2 18
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD MAR 15
PY 2024
VL 445
AR 141174
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.141174
EA FEB 2024
PG 13
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA MZ8C4
UT WOS:001197538200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lehmann, R
   Rios, AI
AF Lehmann, Rosa
   Rios, Alejandra Irigoyen
TI The future is local? Contextualizing municipal agendas on climate change
   in Chile
SO NPJ CLIMATE ACTION
LA English
DT Article
ID GOVERNANCE; POLITICS; SUSTAINABILITY; VULNERABILITY; CITIES; POLICY
AB Social science literature on the political strategies used to mitigate and adapt to climate change has discussed the possibilities of local administrations and the multifaceted obstacles in their path. This case study looks at Chile, where debates about local climate agendas and policies have gained political relevance in recent years. It considers municipal administrations, with a focus on their agendas and the (potential) challenges they face. Building on the evaluation of literature, policy documents, and semi-structured interviews, the study concludes that local administrations have gained leeway for action due to changes in national regulation and integration into wider networks, but tight budgets for dedicated climate policies persist. The governance structures in which local climate agendas are embedded, as well as contextual constraints, reflect Chile's institutional and neoliberal politeconomic arrangements.
C1 [Lehmann, Rosa; Rios, Alejandra Irigoyen] Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Ctr Ibero Amer Studies HCIAS, Brunnengasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Lehmann, Rosa] Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Ctr Environm HCE, Neuenheimer Feld 130-1, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Lehmann, Rosa] Heidelberg Univ, Inst Geog, Neuenheimer Feld 348, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
RP Lehmann, R; Rios, AI (corresponding author), Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Ctr Ibero Amer Studies HCIAS, Brunnengasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany.; Lehmann, R (corresponding author), Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Ctr Environm HCE, Neuenheimer Feld 130-1, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.; Lehmann, R (corresponding author), Heidelberg Univ, Inst Geog, Neuenheimer Feld 348, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
EM rosa.lehmann@uni-heidelberg.de; alejandra.irigoyen@uni-heidelberg.de
FU Heidelberg Center for the Environment (HCE), Heidelberg University,
   Project: "Interacting Actors in Polycentric Climate Governance" (PCG);
   Heidelberg Center for the Environment (HCE), Heidelberg University;
   Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; Heidelberg University
FX We thank Johanna Wei ss gerber for supporting the research and work on
   this text and Mark Rebeck and David Chapman for their meticulous review
   of the paper. We are further grateful to the Heidelberg Center for the
   Environment (HCE), Heidelberg University for supporting the research on
   which this paper is based by funding the research project "Interacting
   Actors in Polycentric Climate Governance" (PCG). For the publication fee
   we acknowledge financial support by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
   within the funding programme "Open Access Publikationskosten" as well as
   by Heidelberg University.
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NR 69
TC 0
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U2 0
PU SPRINGERNATURE
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2731-9814
J9 NPJ CLIM ACTION
JI npj Clim. Action
PD MAR 14
PY 2024
VL 3
IS 1
AR 15
DI 10.1038/s44168-023-00095-w
PG 7
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
GA R1P7P
UT WOS:001389263500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Lamadrid, A
   Kelman, I
AF Lamadrid, Armando
   Kelman, Ilan
BE Lamadrid, A
   Kelman, I
TI CLIMATE CHANGE MODELING FOR LOCAL ADAPTATION IN THE HINDU KUSH-HIMALAYAS
SO CLIMATE CHANGE MODELING FOR LOCAL ADAPTATION IN THE HINDU KUSH-HIMALAYAN
   REGION
SE Community Environment and Disaster Risk Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Climate change; climate change knowledge; modeling; mountain peoples;
   mountains; Hindu Kush-Himalayas
ID SCIENTIFIC-KNOWLEDGE
AB This book aims to examine how modeling can be applicable toward local adaptation to climate change, using the Hindu Kush-Himalayas (HKH) as a case study. This introductory chapter sets the stage by summarizing mountain systems and change in the context of the HKH, especially highlighting the importance of involving mountain peoples in any discussion and work. Then, each chapter is summarized. In the final section, limitations and extensions of the work here are reported, focused on developing, testing, and implementing solutions on the terms of the people most affected without losing sight of wider contexts. Modeling is one knowledge system among many that is needed for adaptation and other development work in the HKH and other mountain areas.
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NR 31
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PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY, W YORKSHIRE BD16 1WA, ENGLAND
SN 2040-7262
BN 978-1-78052-486-3
J9 COMM ENV DISAST RISK
PY 2012
VL 11
BP 1
EP 16
DI 10.1108/S2040-7262(2012)0000011007
PG 16
WC Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BFF38
UT WOS:000319658800002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tanner, T
AF Tanner, Thomas
TI Shifting the Narrative: Child-led Responses to Climate Change and
   Disasters in El Salvador and the Philippines
SO CHILDREN & SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE children; climate change; disasters; participation
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; PARTICIPATION; CRISIS; HEALTH; RISK
AB Children and young people are commonly treated in the climate change and disasters literature as victims of natural events requiring protection by adults. This article critiques that narrative, drawing on examples from the Philippines and El Salvador that explore how children's groups have responded to such issues through child-centred initiatives. This highlights the importance of understanding children's perception and communication of risks facing their lives and livelihoods, their potential as agents of change in preventing disasters and adapting to climate change, and the implications for the theory and practice of child participation, particularly in developing countries. (C) 2010 The Author(s). Journal compilation (C) 2010 National Children's Bureau and Blackwell Publishing Limited.
C1 Univ Sussex, Inst Dev Studies, Brighton BN1 9RE, E Sussex, England.
C3 University of Sussex
RP Tanner, T (corresponding author), Univ Sussex, Inst Dev Studies, Brighton BN1 9RE, E Sussex, England.
EM t.tanner@ids.ac.uk
OI Tanner, Thomas/0000-0001-7975-4267
FU ESRC [ES/F001827/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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NR 59
TC 86
Z9 92
U1 5
U2 28
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0951-0605
EI 1099-0860
J9 CHILD SOC
JI Child. Soc.
PD JUL
PY 2010
VL 24
IS 4
SI SI
BP 339
EP 351
DI 10.1111/j.1099-0860.2010.00316.x
PG 13
WC Social Work
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Work
GA 604RQ
UT WOS:000278296600009
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fileccia, CM
AF Fileccia, Costanza Maria
TI CLIMATE CHANGE, ADAPTATION AND ECONOMIC OUTCOMES: EVIDENCE FROM
   AGRICULTURE IN INDIA
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; climate adaptation; long-run; panel data; India
ID IMPACTS; WEATHER; FARMERS; DAMAGES; YIELDS; OUTPUT
AB Agriculture is strongly affected by climate change (CC). However, its vulnerability is also determined by how farmers adapt to these long-run changes. Using an innovative approach recently proposed in the literature, this study investigates whether it is possible to find evidence of long-run adaptation in the climate-yield relationship of India's agriculture and what the implications for future scenarios may be. District-level time series data on rice and chickpea yield are combined with weather data on cumulative growing season precipitation and growing degree days, and a quadratic regression with fixed effects augmented with climate penalty terms to account for climate adaptation is used. The estimates are utilized to extrapolate future scenarios. The estimation results suggest that rice might have some potential adaptation to precipitation, although adaptation to temperature appears to be dependent on irrigation. Chickpeas, on the other hand, adapt to temperature whereas adaptation to precipitation is limited. The findings also reveal that crop yields in projected climate scenarios are expected to respond differently depending on whether adaptation measures are implemented or not. Adaptation measures are likely to mitigate CC and reduce crop yield losses while also increasing productivity in some crops.
C1 [Fileccia, Costanza Maria] Univ Bern, Dept Econ, Schanzeneckstr 1, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland.
   [Fileccia, Costanza Maria] Univ Bern, Oeschger Ctr Climate Res, Schanzeneckstr 1, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland.
C3 University of Bern; University of Bern
RP Fileccia, CM (corresponding author), Univ Bern, Dept Econ, Schanzeneckstr 1, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland.; Fileccia, CM (corresponding author), Univ Bern, Oeschger Ctr Climate Res, Schanzeneckstr 1, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland.
EM costanza.fileccia@unibe.ch
OI Fileccia, Costanza Maria/0009-0007-3915-3070
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NR 63
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 13
U2 24
PU WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD
PI SINGAPORE
PA 5 TOH TUCK LINK, SINGAPORE 596224, SINGAPORE
SN 2010-0078
EI 2010-0086
J9 CLIM CHANG ECON
JI Clim. Chang. Econ.
PD FEB
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 01
DI 10.1142/S2010007823500288
EA JAN 2024
PG 45
WC Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ME4N3
UT WOS:001153322700002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Becker, A
   Kretsch, E
AF Becker, Austin
   Kretsch, Eric
TI The Leadership Void for Climate Adaptation Planning: Case Study of the
   Port of Providence (Rhode Island, United States)
SO FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE leadership; stakeholder systems; seaport systems; climate change
   adaptation; barriers; resilience planning
ID COASTAL; VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; BARRIERS
AB Climate adaptation requires leadership from a diverse group of stakeholders to shift investment priorities and generate political will for long-term planning. This is especially true for seaport stakeholders. Ports serve as access points to goods and services from around the world, promoting a higher and more robust quality of life. However, with the increased likelihood of intense storms, rising sea levels, and resource scarcity facing coastal communities, stakeholders will need to adapt coastal infrastructure to ensure long-term viability. Solving such problems requires leadership and participation from government across jurisdictional boundaries and/or the private sector. Using the case of Port of Providence (Rhode Island, United States), this study finds stakeholder perceptions of leadership responsibility contribute to an institutional void, in which it is unclear who is responsible and who should pay for resilience investment.
   HIGHLIGHT
   - "Leadership" is defined within the context of coastal resilience planning for seaports.
   - Empirical results suggest leadership voids serves as barrier to resilience planning.
   - Respondents value dialog that engages stakeholders in transformational planning as a first step to developing leadership.
C1 [Becker, Austin; Kretsch, Eric] Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Marine Affairs, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
C3 University of Rhode Island
RP Becker, A (corresponding author), Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Marine Affairs, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
EM abecker@uri.edu
FU Rhode Island Department of Transportation; Federal Highway
   Administration [FHWA-RIDOT-RTD-17-3]
FX This study received funding support from the Rhode Island Department of
   Transportation and Federal Highway Administration Grant Number -
   FHWA-RIDOT-RTD-17-3.
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NR 50
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 3
U2 14
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-6463
J9 FRONT EARTH SC-SWITZ
JI Front. Earth Sci.
PD FEB 22
PY 2019
VL 7
AR 29
DI 10.3389/feart.2019.00029
PG 13
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology
GA HX2ME
UT WOS:000467225300002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sussams, LW
   Sheate, WR
   Eales, RP
AF Sussams, L. W.
   Sheate, W. R.
   Eales, R. P.
TI Green infrastructure as a climate change adaptation policy intervention:
   Muddying the waters or clearing a path to a more secure future?
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Green infrastructure; Climate change adaptation; Biodiversity; Ecosystem
   services; Multifunctionality; Interdisciplinary
AB As dangerous climate change looms, decision-makers are increasingly realising that societies will need to adapt to this threat as well as mitigate against it. Green infrastructure (GI) is increasingly seen as an ideal climate change adaptation policy response. However, with this research the authors identify a number of crucial knowledge gaps within GI and, consequently, call for caution and for a concerted effort to understand the concept and what it can really deliver. GI has risen to prominence in a range of policy areas in large part due to its perceived ability to produce multiple benefits simultaneously, termed 'multifunctionality'. This characteristic strengthens the political appeal of the policy in question at a time when environmental issues have slipped down political agendas.
   Multifunctionality, however, brings its own set of new challenges that should be evaluated fully before the policy is implemented. This research takes important first steps to developing a critical understanding of what is achievable within GI's capacity. It focuses on one of GI's single objectives, namely climate change adaptation, to focus the analysis of how current obstacles in applying GI's multifunctionality could lead to the ineffective delivery of its objective.
   By drawing on expert opinion from government officials and representatives from the private, non-government organisation (NGO) and academic sectors, this research questions GI's ability to be effectively 'multifunctional' with an inconsistent definition at its core, deficiencies in its understanding and conflicts within its governance. In light of these observations, the authors then reflect on the judiciousness of applying GI to achieve the other objectives it has also been charged with delivering. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Sussams, L. W.] Carbon Tracker, London, England.
   [Sheate, W. R.] Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol & Med, London SW7 2AZ, England.
   [Sheate, W. R.; Eales, R. P.] Collingwood Environm Planning Ltd, London, England.
C3 Imperial College London
RP Sussams, LW (corresponding author), Carbon Tracker, London, England.
EM luke@carbontracker.org
RI Sheate, William/M-5349-2019
OI Sheate, William/0000-0001-8413-7458
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NR 42
TC 84
Z9 96
U1 1
U2 91
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4797
EI 1095-8630
J9 J ENVIRON MANAGE
JI J. Environ. Manage.
PD JAN 1
PY 2015
VL 147
BP 184
EP 193
DI 10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.09.003
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AS7FW
UT WOS:000344423500018
PM 25281936
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU van Proosdij, D
   Perrott, B
   Carrol, K
AF van Proosdij, Danika
   Perrott, Barbara
   Carrol, Ken
TI Development and Application of a Geo-temporal Atlas for Climate Change
   Adaptation in Bay of Fundy Dykelands
SO JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT 12th International Coastal Symposium (ICS)
CY APR 09-12, 2013
CL Plymouth Univ, Sch Marine Sci & Engn, Coastal Proc Res Grp, Plymouth,
   ENGLAND
HO Plymouth Univ, Sch Marine Sci & Engn, Coastal Proc Res Grp
DE LiDAR; sea level rise; storm surge; erosion; marsh; macrotidal.
ID SEA-LEVEL
AB Globally, dykelands (former marsh areas protected by dykes) are of strategic importance for climate change adaptation. Many were originally designed to protect agricultural land, yet now protect valuable infrastructure. The purpose of this project was to develop a comprehensive digital atlas incorporating historical plans, shore protection, coastal geomorphology and LiDAR to serve as a basis for climate change adaptation planning in the Bay of Fundy. 110 paper plans were scanned, geo-referenced and features such as current and historical dykes, aboiteaux (tide gates), armouring, ditches, creeks, property boundaries, foreshore marsh, and geodetic elevations were digitized using ArcGIS. Attributes included age of structure, material, dimensions, and ownership. Dyke elevations were surveyed using an RTK GPS, and individual sections were identified as being vulnerable to storm surge and sea level rise. Erosion rates and width of foreshore marsh were calculated per dyke segment. At present, 55% of dykes within Nova Scotia are within 0.5 m of critical elevations established in the 1960s, 2% are more than 0.5 m below critical and all are below the predicted rates of SLR by 2055. There is also a strong relationship between the placement of armouring along the dyke toe and foreshore erosion. Conversely, timely placement of armouring along the foreshore marsh decreased rates of erosion. This was most effective in areas with the largest fetch; less effective where erosion was driven by tidal currents. All data were integrated into ArcReader for use by Agriculture personnel and have been essential for cost effective climate change adaptation planning including dyke topping, hazard mitigation and education.
C1 [van Proosdij, Danika] St Marys Univ, Dept Geog, Halifax, NS B3H 3C3, Canada.
   [Perrott, Barbara] St Marys Univ, Maritime Prov Spatial Anal Res Ctr, Halifax, NS B3H 3C3, Canada.
   [Carrol, Ken] Nova Scotia Dept Agr Agr & Food Advisory Serv, Land Protect Sect, Truro, NS, Canada.
C3 Saint Marys University - Canada; Saint Marys University - Canada
RP van Proosdij, D (corresponding author), St Marys Univ, Dept Geog, Halifax, NS B3H 3C3, Canada.
EM dvanproo@smu.ca; barbara.perrott@smu.ca
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   Perrott B, 2012, SHORE ZONE CHARACTER
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NR 23
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 18
PU COASTAL EDUCATION & RESEARCH FOUNDATION
PI COCONUT CREEK
PA 5130 NW 54TH STREET, COCONUT CREEK, FL 33073 USA
SN 0749-0208
EI 1551-5036
J9 J COASTAL RES
JI J. Coast. Res.
PY 2013
SI 65
BP 1069
EP 1074
DI 10.2112/SI65-181.1
PN 1
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences; Geography, Physical; Geosciences,
   Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography; Geology
GA AJ8ZB
UT WOS:000337995500182
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Moser, C
   Stein, A
AF Moser, Caroline
   Stein, Alfredo
TI Implementing urban participatory climate change adaptation appraisals: a
   methodological guideline
SO ENVIRONMENT AND URBANIZATION
LA English
DT Article
DE asset adaptation; asset vulnerability; climate change; participatory
   urban appraisal methodology; severe weather
ID ORIGINS
AB This paper provides conceptual and methodological guidelines for researchers seeking to undertake an urban participatory climate change adaptation appraisal (PCCAA), illustrated with examples from appraisals in Mombasa (Kenya) and Esteli (Nicaragua). It highlights the importance of hearing local people's voices regarding incrementally worsening and often unrecorded severe weather. The conceptual framework distinguishes between the analysis of asset vulnerability and the identification of asset-based operational strategies, and sets out a number of methodological principles and practices for undertaking a PCCAA. This PCCAA addressed five main themes: community characteristics; severe weather; vulnerability to severe weather; asset adaptation; and institutions supporting local adaptation. For each of these, it identified potential tools for eliciting information, illustrated by examples from Mombasa and Esteli.
C1 [Moser, Caroline; Stein, Alfredo] Univ Manchester, GURC, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England.
C3 University of Manchester
RP Moser, C (corresponding author), Univ Manchester, GURC, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England.
EM Caroline.Moser@manchester.ac.uk; Alfredo.Stein@manchester.ac.uk
RI Stein, Alfredo/P-7515-2019
OI Stein Heinemann, Alfredo/0000-0001-5952-8262
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NR 28
TC 56
Z9 56
U1 0
U2 25
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0956-2478
EI 1746-0301
J9 ENVIRON URBAN
JI Environ. Urban.
PD OCT
PY 2011
VL 23
IS 2
BP 463
EP 485
DI 10.1177/0956247811418739
PG 23
WC Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Urban Studies
GA 831LJ
UT WOS:000295731900009
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Baard, P
AF Baard, Patrik
TI Adaptive Ideals and Aspirational Goals: The Utopian Ideals and Realist
   Constraints of Climate Change Adaptation
SO JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL & ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Agriculture; Utopia; Realism; Goals
ID RESPONSIBILITY; FEASIBILITY; MITIGATION
AB There is a growing need to implement anticipatory climate change adaptation measures, particularly in vulnerable sectors, such as in agriculture. However, setting goals to adapt is wrought with several challenges. This paper discusses two sets of challenges to goals of anticipatory adaptation, of (1) empirical and (2) normative character. The first set of challenges concern issues such as the extent to which the climate will change, the local impacts of such changes, and available adaptive responses. In the second set of uncertainties are issues such as the distribution of burdens to enhance adaptive capacities in vulnerable agents with a legitimate claim to such resources, and what anticipatory adaptation ideally should result in. While previous discussions have been limited to either discuss the first or second set of uncertainties, this paper suggests that both dimensions should be considered when setting goals in social planning with long time frames. A taxonomy will be suggested that combines both dimensions. Furthermore, strategies for managing situations in which there are either empirical, or normative, uncertainties will be proposed which could be used in social decision-making with long planning time-frames in which goals must be set.
C1 Royal Inst Technol, Div Philosophy, S-10044 Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Royal Institute of Technology
RP Baard, P (corresponding author), Royal Inst Technol, Div Philosophy, Brinellvagen 32, S-10044 Stockholm, Sweden.
EM patrik.baard@abe.kth.se
OI Baard, Patrik/0000-0003-2835-919X
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NR 42
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 14
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1187-7863
EI 1573-322X
J9 J AGR ENVIRON ETHIC
JI J. Agric. Environ. Ethics
PD AUG
PY 2015
VL 28
IS 4
BP 739
EP 757
DI 10.1007/s10806-015-9557-8
PG 19
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Ethics; Environmental Sciences; History
   & Philosophy Of Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Agriculture; Social Sciences - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences &
   Ecology; History & Philosophy of Science
GA CN7GE
UT WOS:000358601500010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Loring, PA
   Gerlach, SC
   Penn, HJ
AF Loring, Philip A.
   Gerlach, S. Craig
   Penn, Henry J.
TI "Community Work" in a Climate of Adaptation: Responding to Change in
   Rural Alaska
SO HUMAN ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Agency; Arctic; Climate change; Development; Indigenous
   peoples; Niche construction; Alaska
ID NICHE-CONSTRUCTION; INTEGRATED ASSESSMENT; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY;
   VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; INDICATORS; PATTERNS; CULTURE; WATER
AB We draw on our research experiences with municipal workers in Alaska, where the impacts of climate change are already extensive, to examine adaptation and related concepts, such as resilience and vulnerability, which have become widely used in science and policy formulation for addressing climate change despite also being subject to multiple critiques. We use local people's experiences with environmental challenges to illustrate limitations of the climate change adaptation paradigm, and offer the additional concept of "community work" - analogous to niche construction - as a counterpart to the adaptive process at the community level. Whereas climate change adaptation insinuates active and purposive change, the reality we have repeatedly encountered is that people in these communities focus not on changing but on building and maintaining capacity and achieving stability: keeping aging and overtaxed infrastructure running while also working toward improving quality of life and services in their communities. We discuss how these findings are congruent with recent calls to better situate climate change adaptation policy in the context of community development, and argue that scientists and policymakers need to understand this context of community work to avoid the pitfalls that potentially accompany the adaptation paradigm.
C1 [Loring, Philip A.] Univ Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada.
   [Gerlach, S. Craig] Univ Calgary, Dept Anthropol & Archaeol, Calgary, AB, Canada.
   [Penn, Henry J.] Univ Alaska Fairbanks, Water & Environm Res Ctr, Fairbanks, AK USA.
C3 University of Saskatchewan; University of Calgary; University of Alaska
   System; University of Alaska Fairbanks
RP Loring, PA (corresponding author), Univ Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada.
EM phil.loring@usask.ca
RI Loring, Philip/I-1716-2019
OI Loring, Philip/0000-0001-6039-2331
FU Directorate For Geosciences; Office of Polar Programs (OPP) [1263853]
   Funding Source: National Science Foundation
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NR 78
TC 29
Z9 31
U1 4
U2 49
PU SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
SN 0300-7839
EI 1572-9915
J9 HUM ECOL
JI Hum. Ecol.
PD FEB
PY 2016
VL 44
IS 1
BP 119
EP 128
DI 10.1007/s10745-015-9800-y
PG 10
WC Anthropology; Environmental Studies; Sociology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Anthropology; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Sociology
GA DJ6PR
UT WOS:000374335900009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Lange, W
   Sandholz, S
   Viezzer, J
   Becher, M
   Nehren, U
AF Lange, Wolfram
   Sandholz, Simone
   Viezzer, Jennifer
   Becher, Martin
   Nehren, Udo
BE Nehren, U
   Schluter, S
   Raedig, C
   Sattler, D
   Hissa, H
TI Ecosystem-Based Approaches for Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate
   Change Adaptation in Rio de Janeiro State
SO STRATEGIES AND TOOLS FOR A SUSTAINABLE RURAL RIO DE JANEIRO
SE Springer Series on Environmental Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Natural hazards; Disaster risk reduction; Climate change adaptation;
   Ecosystem-based approaches; Rio de Janeiro state
AB In the mountain ranges (Regiao Serrana) of the Rio de Janeiro state (RJ), natural hazards such as landslides, mudslides, and flooding are recurrent, causing considerable human and economic losses. These events are of natural origin, but landscape degradation contributes significantly to increased disaster risk. Extreme climatic events that triggered past disasters are predicted to increase in frequency and intensity in the future. The approaches of ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) and ecosystem-based disaster risk reduction (Eco-DRR) aim at the sustainable management, conservation, and restoration of ecosystems to cope with the adverse effects of climate change and reduce the impacts of natural hazards. In this context, this chapter provides a comprehensive overview of climate change adaptation (CCA) and disaster risk reduction (DRR) policies at national and state level, before analyzing the linkages between CCA/DRR and biodiversity and ecosystem management. Finally, EbA/Eco-DRR measures that are currently planned or have already been implemented are presented, and the further potential and limitations of EbA/Eco-DRR in RJ are discussed.
C1 [Lange, Wolfram] Univ Cologne, Dept Geog, Cologne, Germany.
   [Sandholz, Simone] United Nations Univ, Inst Environm & Human Secur UNU EHS, Bonn, Germany.
   [Viezzer, Jennifer] Minist Meio Ambiente MMA, Fed Minist Environm, Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Becher, Martin] Deutsch Gesell Tech Zusammenarbeit GmbH GIZ, Eschborn, Germany.
   [Nehren, Udo] TH Koln Univ Appl Sci, Inst Technol & Resources Management Trop & Subtro, Cologne, Germany.
C3 University of Cologne
RP Lange, W (corresponding author), Univ Cologne, Dept Geog, Cologne, Germany.
EM sandholz@ehs.unu.edu; jennifer.viezzer@mma.gov.br;
   martin.becher@gmx.net; udo.nehren@th-koeln.de
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NR 34
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 5
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 0172-6161
BN 978-3-319-89644-1; 978-3-319-89643-4
J9 SPRINGER SER ENV MAN
JI Springer Ser. Environ. Manag.
PY 2019
BP 345
EP 359
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-89644-1_22
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-89644-1
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies; Geography, Physical; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Physical Geography; Public Administration
GA BN7ZK
UT WOS:000487753800023
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Fatima, B
   ul Hasan, F
   Choudhary, MA
AF Fatima, Bareerah
   ul Hasan, Faizan
   Choudhary, Muhammad Abbas
BE Kocaoglu, DF
   Anderson, TR
   Kozanoglu, DC
   Niwa, K
   Steenhuis, HJ
TI Cost Benefit/Fiffectiveness Analysis of Climate Change Adaptation in
   Potohar Region by Building Rainwater Harvesting Dams
SO 2019 PORTLAND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MANAGEMENT OF ENGINEERING AND
   TECHNOLOGY (PICMET)
SE Portland International Conference on Management of Engineering and
   Technology
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Portland International Conference on Management of Engineering and
   Technology (PICMET)
CY AUG 25-29, 2019
CL Portland, OR
SP Portland State Univ, Dept Engn & Technol Management, IEEE Technol & Engn Management Soc, Portland State Univ Fdn, Portland State Univ, Maseeh Coll Engn & Comp Sci, Portland State Univ Off Informat Technol, WHOVA Event Management
AB Northern Punjab region of Pakistan, known as Potohar region comprises 2.26 (Million IIectre) of rich land with mean annual rainfall varying from 400 mm to 1400 mm that has high runoff potential. Climate of this region is affected by variation in rainfall frequency, flash floods and long dry periods. The increasing gap in water supply and demand put huge stress on already scarce water resources. Considering the potential of rainwater harvesting in Potohar, the Government has been subsidizing rainwater harvesting projects since 1980's. Given the historical uncertainties of climate, importance of rainwater harvesting is increased fur it being a must feasible climate change adaptation option. Rainwater harvesting is evaluated as climate change adaptation option by performing cost benefit analysis and cost effectiveness analysis. A total 400 farming families were reviewed in this research that were reported to have benefitted from subsidized rainwater harvesting projects. For this research, 21 farmers and farms were surveyed and their cases were collected across the Potohar region. Findings of this research have revealed that, 60% of the surveyed farmers have higher understanding of climate change and they arc willing to add value into their farming practice to increase their income, while 67% of farmers recognized that Potohar region has high potential for rainwater harvesting. Older dams had higher income and showed higher benefit cost ratio, on the other hand dams constructed during last two years have shown marginal to lower benefits. Overall economic benefits and effectiveness had established rainwater harvesting as suitable climate change adaptation option.
C1 [Fatima, Bareerah; ul Hasan, Faizan] PCRWR, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Choudhary, Muhammad Abbas] Dadabhoy Univ Karachi, Karachi, Pakistan.
RP Fatima, B (corresponding author), PCRWR, Islamabad, Pakistan.
FU ABAD (Agency for Barani Area Development); BARI (Barani Agriculture
   Research Institute); SAWCRI (Soil and Water Conservation Research
   Institute); NARC (National Agriculture Research Centre); PMD (Pakistan
   Meteorology Department); PCRWR (Pakistan Council of Research in Water
   Resources)
FX The help and support of ABAD (Agency for Barani Area Development), BARI
   (Barani Agriculture Research Institute), SAWCRI (Soil and Water
   Conservation Research Institute), NARC (National Agriculture Research
   Centre), PMD (Pakistan Meteorology Department) and PCRWR (Pakistan
   Council of Research in Water Resources). ABAD and SAWCRI has provided
   project documents, reports and farmer profile for verification of farmer
   provided information. NARC, BARI, PMD has provided detailed climate data
   to determine climate variations in the region. PCRWR has provided
   rainfall runoff information and potential for the region.
CR ABAD, 2015, REV PC 1 RAINW HARV
   Anil D. M. A. D. N. P., 2003, RAINWATER HARVESTING, P46
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NR 16
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
SN 2159-5100
BN 978-1-890843-40-3
J9 PORTL INT CONF MANAG
PY 2019
PG 7
WC Engineering, Electrical & Electronic
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering
GA BO5RJ
UT WOS:000518681200085
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ranabhat, S
   Ghate, R
   Bhatta, LD
   Agrawal, NK
   Tankha, S
AF Ranabhat, Sunita
   Ghate, Rucha
   Bhatta, Laxmi Dutt
   Agrawal, Nand Kishor
   Tankha, Sunil
TI Policy Coherence and Interplay between Climate Change Adaptation
   Policies and the Forestry Sector in Nepal
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Forestry sector; Least developed countries
ID GOVERNANCE
AB Least Developed Countries are likely to be hit the hardest by climate change and need focused efforts towards adaptation. Nepal recognizes that it needs to integrate climate change adaptation into various policies, but limited understanding of how to make these policies coherent is among the factors that hinder effective adaptation action. This can lead to wasted resources and lost opportunities. This paper applies concepts from policy coherence for development frameworks and policy content analysis to examine coherence in Nepal's climate and forest policies-and discusses the factors hindering effective implementation. The policies are analyzed at the horizontal/external level at three layers-motivation, measures, and planned implementation process. The paper finds that policies are more consistent on motivation level and adaptation measures, but are less coherent on implementation. The National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA) is more explicit in identifying institutions, organizations, roles and responsibilities, resource allocation (financial), and a monitoring and evaluation plan for climate change adaptation while other policies such as Climate Change Policy 2011, National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan 2014-2020, Forest Policy 2015, and Forest Sector Strategy 2016 have critical gaps in this area. This paper conclude that formulation of a policy, articulating targets, and mobilizing financial resources are in themselves not sufficient to effectively address climate change adaptation. Policy-based legislation is required, together with development of a supportive collaborative multi-stakeholder approach at different levels of governance, backed up by effective, collaborative monitoring and enforcement.
C1 [Ranabhat, Sunita; Ghate, Rucha; Bhatta, Laxmi Dutt; Agrawal, Nand Kishor] Int Ctr Integrated Mt Dev ICIMOD, Kathmandu, Nepal.
   [Tankha, Sunil] Erasmus Univ, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
C3 Erasmus University Rotterdam; Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl
   Erasmus MC
RP Ranabhat, S (corresponding author), Int Ctr Integrated Mt Dev ICIMOD, Kathmandu, Nepal.
EM sunita.ranabhat@icimod.org
FU Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norway; Swedish International Development
   Agency (SIDA); ICIMOD by the Governments of Afghanistan; ICIMOD by the
   Governments of Australia; ICIMOD by the Governments of Austria; ICIMOD
   by the Governments of Bangladesh; ICIMOD by the Governments of Bhutan;
   ICIMOD by the Governments of China; ICIMOD by the Governments of India;
   ICIMOD by the Governments of Myanmar; ICIMOD by the Governments of
   Nepal; ICIMOD by the Governments of Norway; ICIMOD by the Governments of
   Pakistan; ICIMOD by the Governments of Switzerland; ICIMOD by the
   Governments of United Kingdom
FX This study was undertaken by the Himalayan Climate Change Adaptation
   Program (HICAP) at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain
   Development (ICIMOD). HICAP is implemented jointly by ICIMOD, CICERO,
   and Grid-Arendal in collaboration with local partners and is funded by
   the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norway, the Swedish International
   Development Agency (SIDA), and core funds from ICIMOD contributed by the
   Governments of Afghanistan, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
   China, India, Myanmar, Nepal, Norway, Pakistan, Switzerland, and the
   United Kingdom. The views and interpretations in this publication are
   those of the authors and should not be attributed to ICIMOD, HICAP, or
   their donors.
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NR 69
TC 28
Z9 28
U1 1
U2 23
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0364-152X
EI 1432-1009
J9 ENVIRON MANAGE
JI Environ. Manage.
PD JUN
PY 2018
VL 61
IS 6
BP 968
EP 980
DI 10.1007/s00267-018-1027-4
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GE2PD
UT WOS:000431056200007
PM 29605830
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rossi, J
   Ruhl, JB
AF Rossi, Jim
   Ruhl, J. B.
TI Adapting Private Law for Climate Change Adaptation
SO VANDERBILT LAW REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
ID COMMON-LAW; CHANGE LITIGATION; JUSTICE; RISK; PRINCIPLES; SCIENCE;
   STATIONARITY; ATTRIBUTION; RESILIENCE; NEGLIGENCE
AB The private law of torts, property, and contracts will and should play an important role in resolving disputes regarding how private individuals and entities respond to and manage the harms of climate change that cannot be avoided through mitigation (known in climate change policy dialogue as ???adaptation)???. While adaptation is commonly presented as a problem needing legislative solutions, this Article presents a novel and overdue case for private law to take climate adaptation seriously. To date, the role of private law is a significant blind spot in scholarly discussions of climate adaptation. Litigation invoking common-law doctrines in climate adaption disputes has not yet taken off the way that the wave of high -profile lawsuits against sources of emissions causing climate change has, but it is inevitable that it will, making it ripe for attention in legal scholarship. The Article begins in Part I by highlighting several features of climate change and adaptation that will place inevitable disruptive pressure on existing doctrines and principles of private law. The new normal of climate change questions some key factual predicates embedded in private law doctrine. For example, climate change is radically moving the long-stable upper and lower extremes of multiple biophysical conditions (what scientists call ???nonstationarity)???, meaning individuals increasingly will be unable to accurately predict the future based entirely on past data (what scientists call the ???no-analog future)???. Private law nonetheless must operate in a manner that provides practical and meaningful guidance to stakeholders, which will require it to confront the new realities presented by climate adaptation, including how
C1 [Rossi, Jim; Ruhl, J. B.] Vanderbilt Univ, Law, Nashville, TN 37235 USA.
C3 Vanderbilt University
RP Rossi, J (corresponding author), Vanderbilt Univ, Law, Nashville, TN 37235 USA.
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   1934, RESTATEMENT TORTS
NR 284
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU VANDERBILT LAW REVIEW
PI NASHVILLE
PA VANDERBILT UNIV SCHOOL OF LAW, NASHVILLE, TN 37240 USA
SN 0042-2533
EI 1942-9886
J9 VANDERBILT LAW REV
JI Vanderbilt Law Rev.
PD APR
PY 2023
VL 76
IS 3
BP 827
EP 898
PG 72
WC Law
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law
GA F8BT6
UT WOS:000984553000003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Morsut, C
   Engen, OA
   Neby, S
   Angell, E
AF Morsut, Claudia
   Engen, Ole Andreas
   Neby, Simon
   Angell, Elisabeth
TI Translations of climate change consequences at the local level: Climate
   change adaptation in Bergen and Stavanger municipalities in Norway
SO RISK HAZARDS & CRISIS IN PUBLIC POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate risks; local climate change adaptation; risk discourse;
   translation zones; translations
ID RISK; TERRORISM
AB This paper uncovers a local-level approach to the likely adverse effects of climate change through climate change policies, measures and practices concerning climate change adaptation. The study is sustained by the literature that addresses climate change through a securitization lens, which has identified security discourses on climate change in terms of threat or risk. To understand the origin of local discourse, we have adopted the concepts of translations and translation zones from security studies, allowing us to define encounters between different conceptual expressions of ways to handle threats and risks. In this paper, 'translations' mean negotiations of meanings between security, threat and risk, and 'translation zones' indicate where these negotiations take place. Discourses are studied in the two Norwegian municipalities of Bergen and Stavanger. Both experience similar consequences of climate change and are bound to follow national laws and regulations for developing adaptive responses. Despite these similarities, translations and translation zones unveil differences in the organisation of adaptation work. Risk discourses thus allow several possible translation pathways, and adaptation remains a distinctly local phenomenon despite commonalities in risk discourse and translation processes.
C1 [Morsut, Claudia] Univ Stavanger, Dept Safety Econ & Planning, Societal Secur, Stavanger, Norway.
   [Engen, Ole Andreas] Univ Stavanger, Dept Safety Econ & Planning, Risk Management & Societal Secur, Stavanger, Norway.
   [Neby, Simon] Univ Bergen, Dept Govt, Bergen, Norway.
   [Neby, Simon] Univ Bergen, Ctr Climate & Energy Transformat, Bergen, Norway.
   [Angell, Elisabeth] NORCE Bergen Norway, Bergen, Norway.
C3 Universitetet i Stavanger; Universitetet i Stavanger; University of
   Bergen; University of Bergen
RP Morsut, C (corresponding author), Univ Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway.
EM claudia.morsut@uis.no
OI Morsut, Claudia/0000-0002-9502-4093
FU Research Council of Norway [302599]
FX The Research Council of Norway, Grant/Award Number: 302599
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NR 90
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 1
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1944-4079
J9 RISK HAZARDS CRISIS
JI Risk Hazards Crisis Public Policy
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 4
SI SI
BP 468
EP 490
DI 10.1002/rhc3.12320
EA OCT 2024
PG 23
WC Public Administration
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Public Administration
GA O6N3Y
UT WOS:001335891600001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dany, V
   Bajracharya, B
   Lebel, L
   Regan, M
   Taplin, R
AF Dany, Va
   Bajracharya, Bhishna
   Lebel, Louis
   Regan, Michael
   Taplin, Ros
TI Narrowing gaps between research and policy development in climate change
   adaptation work in the water resources and agriculture sectors of
   Cambodia
SO CLIMATE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Cambodia; climate change adaptation; research policy
ID PATHWAYS; CANADA; PART
AB Narrowing research and policy, while challenging, is especially important in climate change adaptation work (CCA) due to the high uncertainties involved in planning for climate change. This article aims to seek stakeholders' opinions regarding how research and policy development can be bridged within the Cambodian water resources and agriculture sectors. The study used institutional ethnography methods with informants from government organizations, local academia, and development partners (DPs). This article identifies a number of challenges, and barriers for narrowing research policy development gaps, including: limited effectiveness of governmental policies and planning; lack of relevant information required to promote evidence-based planning and policy development; and communication barriers. Evidence-based planning is valued by government officials most when there is actual and effective implementation of policies and plans. In practice, this often implies that governmental policies and plans need be scoped and scaled down to meet the available budget, and thus be achievable. In the long term, it also means building the capacity for policy-relevant research on climate change adaptation within Cambodia. Engaging policy stakeholders in research process for co-producing adaptation knowledge, and introducing knowledge intermediaries are suggested by informants as means to narrowing gaps between research and policy development. The presence of the Cambodia's Prime Minister in research policy dialogues is recommended as important for attracting the attention of high-level policy makers.
C1 [Dany, Va; Bajracharya, Bhishna; Regan, Michael] Bond Univ, Inst Sustainable Dev & Architecture, Gold Coast, Qld 4229, Australia.
   [Dany, Va] Royal Univ Phnom Penh, Dept Environm Sci, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
   [Lebel, Louis] Chiang Mai Univ, Unit Social Res, Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand.
   [Taplin, Ros] Univ New S Wales, Australian Ctr Sustainable Min Practices, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
C3 Bond University; Chiang Mai University; University of New South Wales
   Sydney
RP Dany, V (corresponding author), Bond Univ, Inst Sustainable Dev & Architecture, Gold Coast, Qld 4229, Australia.; Dany, V (corresponding author), Royal Univ Phnom Penh, Dept Environm Sci, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
EM dva@bond.edu.au
RI Bajracharya, Bhishna/ABC-6656-2021; Lebel, Louis/D-4130-2014
OI Lebel, Louis/0000-0001-6187-6418; Regan, Michael/0000-0003-3415-6786;
   Bajracharya, Bhishna/0000-0003-2560-468X
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NR 32
TC 16
Z9 17
U1 0
U2 47
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1469-3062
EI 1752-7457
J9 CLIM POLICY
JI Clim. Policy
PD FEB 17
PY 2016
VL 16
IS 2
BP 237
EP 252
DI 10.1080/14693062.2014.1003523
PG 16
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA DB7YI
UT WOS:000368733100007
OA Green Accepted, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lehmann, M
   Major, DC
   Fitton, JM
   Doust, K
   O'Donoghue, S
AF Lehmann, Martin
   Major, David C.
   Fitton, James M.
   Doust, Ken
   O'Donoghue, Sean
TI Towards a typology for coastal towns and small cities for climate change
   adaptation planning
SO OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Coastal hazards; Climate change; Data collection; Climate adaptation
ID VULNERABILITY
AB The impacts of climate change will manifest differently in urban areas depending upon the individual characteristics and contexts of each settlement. The study of climate adaptation planning for towns and small cities is a relatively under-researched field, there has thus far not been a standard typology for characterising towns and cities located at the coast. A typology can inform stakeholders about the physical hazards a coastal town or small city may be exposed currently and in the future; identify the impact that may have to the local population and the economic, cultural, and environmental assets in the settlement; and identify any barriers or opportunities to plan, develop, and implement adaptation strategies. A typology is presented here that includes 34 parameters that cover physical, economic, environmental and social characteristics. This typology has been used within this Special Issue to obtain information about all 22 case studies of the Special Issue. Future work will concentrate on developing the typology further and analysing the data collected to provide a systematic understanding of some of the data gaps that still exist within the field of adaptation in coastal towns and small cities and allow future research to focus on the aspects that are most needed.
C1 [Lehmann, Martin; Fitton, James M.] Aalborg Univ, Dept Planning, Aalborg, Denmark.
   [Fitton, James M.] Univ Coll Cork, Environm Res Inst, MaREI, Cork, Ireland.
   [Doust, Ken] Southern Cross Univ, Sch Environm Sci & Engn, Lismore, NSW, Australia.
   [O'Donoghue, Sean] Dept Environm Planning & Climate Protect, eThekwini Municipal Durban, Durban, South Africa.
   [O'Donoghue, Sean] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Life Sci, Durban, South Africa.
C3 Aalborg University; University College Cork; Southern Cross University;
   University of Kwazulu Natal
RP Fitton, JM (corresponding author), Univ Coll Cork, MaREI Ctr, Beauft Bldg ERI,Haulbowline Rd, Cork, Ireland.
EM james.fitton@ucc.ie
RI Fitton, James/H-7514-2019; Doust, Ken/AAQ-7404-2021
OI Doust, Ken/0000-0002-0686-1659
FU Aalborg University via the International Postdoctoral Researcher Fund;
   Aalborg University via Visiting Scholar Fund
FX The Authors acknowledge support from Aalborg University via the
   International Postdoctoral Researcher Fund and yVisiting Scholar Fund.
   The authors would like to thank the reviewers for extremely helpful and
   constructive comments on earlier drafts of the manuscript.
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NR 19
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 3
U2 11
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-5691
EI 1873-524X
J9 OCEAN COAST MANAGE
JI Ocean Coastal Manage.
PD OCT 15
PY 2021
VL 212
AR 105784
DI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2021.105784
EA JUL 2021
PG 6
WC Oceanography; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Oceanography; Water Resources
GA WB5JF
UT WOS:000703607300014
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Liu, Y
   Ruiz-Menjivar, J
   Zavala, M
   Zhang, JB
AF Liu, Yong
   Ruiz-Menjivar, Jorge
   Zavala, Monica
   Zhang, Junbiao
TI Examining the effects of climate change adaptation on technical
   efficiency of rice production
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation strategies; Technical efficiency (TE);
   Spatial stochastic frontier model (SSFA); Rice farmers
ID STOCHASTIC FRONTIER MODELS; FARMERS ADAPTATION; SPATIAL DEPENDENCE; FOOD
   SECURITY; RESILIENCE; IMPACTS; DETERMINANTS; AGRICULTURE; STRATEGIES;
   MANAGEMENT
AB This study examined the impact of eight climate change adaptation practices on technical efficiency (TE) among 843 rice farmers in Central China. Data were collected across ten counties in Hubei province in 2019. Given that spatial dependency is present in social and economic systems, we accounted for the spatial autocorrelation of TE. We estimated both a one-step nonspatial stochastic frontier model and a spatial stochastic frontier model. We verified that spatial spillovers were present in the TE of rice farmers, suggesting that the nonspatial stochastic frontier model underestimated TE. Results showed that adopting climate change adaptation strategies significantly affected TE. These effects, however, varied in directionality by the different adaptation measures evaluated in this study. Overall, adjusting preparation dates, improving irrigation systems, and increasing cultivated areas positively affected TE at 1%, 0.1%, and 5% significance levels. In contrast, the coefficients for both using flood-tolerant rice varieties and adjusting sowing dates were negative and significant at 5% and 10% significant levels. Interestingly, the effects of using high-yield rice varieties and adjusting fertilizer use were not significant. Finally, this study did not find any evidence that adaptation intensity affected the TE of rice production. Based on these results, we discussed implications for future climate-smart agriculture programs addressing the adverse effects of climate change on agricultural production in China.
C1 [Liu, Yong] Chaohu Univ, Coll Econ & Law, Hefei 238024, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Yong; Ruiz-Menjivar, Jorge; Zavala, Monica] Univ Florida, Sustainable Dev & Socio Econ Resilience SDSR Lab, 3025C McCarty Hall D,POB 110310, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
   [Ruiz-Menjivar, Jorge] Univ Florida, Dept Family Youth & Community Sci, Gainesville, FL 32607 USA.
   [Zhang, Junbiao] Zhejiang Agr & Forestry Univ, Coll Econ & Management, Hangzhou 311300, Peoples R China.
C3 Chaohu University; State University System of Florida; University of
   Florida; State University System of Florida; University of Florida;
   Zhejiang A&F University
RP Ruiz-Menjivar, J (corresponding author), Univ Florida, Sustainable Dev & Socio Econ Resilience SDSR Lab, 3025C McCarty Hall D,POB 110310, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.; Ruiz-Menjivar, J (corresponding author), Univ Florida, Dept Family Youth & Community Sci, Gainesville, FL 32607 USA.
EM yongliu2023@outlook.com; jorgerm@ufl.edu; mz.zavala23@gmail.com;
   zhangjb513@126.com
RI Liu, Yong/ABA-6780-2020
OI Ruiz-Menjivar, Jorge/0000-0003-1167-4839; Liu, Yong/0000-0003-1939-2799
FU University of Florida International Center
FX No Statement Available
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NR 105
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 2
U2 5
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 28
IS 8
AR 55
DI 10.1007/s11027-023-10092-3
PG 25
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DL4V7
UT WOS:001132194500002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Al-Amin, A
   Masud, MM
   Sarkar, MSK
   Leal, W
   Doberstein, B
AF Al-Amin, Abul Quasem
   Masud, Muhammad Mehedi
   Sarkar, Md Sujahangir Kabir
   Leal Filho, Walter
   Doberstein, Brent
TI Analysing the socioeconomic and motivational factors affecting the
   willingness to pay for climate change adaptation in Malaysia
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Agriculture; Farmer; Willingness to pay;
   Policy
ID ADAPTING AGRICULTURE; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; FOOD-PRODUCTION; PREFERENCES;
   VARIABILITY; MITIGATION; MANAGEMENT; VALUATION; SECURITY; POLICIES
AB The main purpose of this article is to shed light on the processes leading to a climate change adaptation policy by estimating the socioeconomic and motivational factors affecting farmers' willingness to pay (WTP) for an adaptation program. This study was conducted in North-West Selangor, Malaysia to examine the WTP of farmers for climate change adaptation in the agriculture sector. Data was collected from 385 farmers in the Integrated Agricultural Development Area through face-to-face interview. A contingent valuation method (CVM) was applied as a mechanism to quantify the factors affecting WTP. This study identified that socioeconomic factors and motivational aspects act as predictors to engage in WTP for an adaptation program. The findings indicated that several factors influence the WTP for a planned adaptation program, such as the income of the farmer (beta = 0.363), their education level (beta = 0.1.638), farm size (beta = 0.341), household size (beta = 0.293), concern about environmental protection irrespective of cost (beta = 0.260), climatic impact on agricultural production (beta = 0.421) and risk concerns due to climate change (beta = 0.229). The findings describe the relevance and preferences related to WTP for the implementation of the correct adaptation policies. This study should help national policymakers to take appropriate decisions for planned adaptation programs in Malaysia.
C1 [Al-Amin, Abul Quasem; Sarkar, Md Sujahangir Kabir] Univ Tenaga Nas, Inst Energy Policy & Res IEPRe, Kajang 43000, Malaysia.
   [Al-Amin, Abul Quasem; Doberstein, Brent] Univ Waterloo, Dept Geog & Environm Management, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
   [Masud, Muhammad Mehedi] Univ Malaya, Fac Econ & Adm, Dept Dev Studies, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia.
   [Sarkar, Md Sujahangir Kabir] Patuakhali Sci & Technol Univ, Dept Econ & Sociol, Dumki 8602, Patuakhali, Bangladesh.
   [Leal Filho, Walter] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Sch Sci & Environm, Chester St, Manchester M1 5GD, Lancs, England.
C3 Universiti Tenaga Nasional; University of Waterloo; Universiti Malaya;
   Manchester Metropolitan University
RP Al-Amin, A (corresponding author), Univ Waterloo, Dept Geog & Environm Management, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
EM Qalamin@uwaterloo.ca
RI Leal, Walter/ACX-9082-2022; Masud, Muhammad Mehedi/Q-6565-2016; Sarkar,
   Md. Sujahangir Kabir/AAD-2000-2021; Al-Amin, Abul Quasem/JXY-5980-2024;
   Al-Amin, Abul Quasem/B-8135-2010
OI Masud, Mehedi/0000-0003-0476-4481; Leal Filho,
   Walter/0000-0002-1241-5225; Al-Amin, Abul Quasem/0000-0002-6097-1197;
   Sarkar, Md. Sujahangir Kabir/0000-0003-0028-9775
FU UNITEN BOLD grants [10289176/B/9/2017/18]; UNITEN
FX This work is supported by UNITEN BOLD grants (Project Code:
   10289176/B/9/2017/18). The authors would like to thank UNITEN for the
   financial support to carry out the study.
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NR 65
TC 19
Z9 20
U1 1
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD NOV
PY 2020
VL 50
AR 101708
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2020.101708
PG 8
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA PG3PF
UT WOS:000599650100005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Garcia, A
   Tschakert, P
   Karikari, NA
AF Garcia, Alicea
   Tschakert, Petra
   Karikari, Nana Afia
TI 'Less able': how gendered subjectivities warp climate change adaptation
   in Ghana's Central Region
SO GENDER PLACE AND CULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Agriculture; gendered inequalities; power; (re)negotiation;
   subjectivities; transformational adaptation
ID FARMING HOUSEHOLDS; FOOD SECURITY; WOMEN; PARTICIPATION; VULNERABILITY;
   STRATEGIES; CAPACITY; POLICIES; POWER
AB Vulnerabilities to climate change and adaptive action vary based on social differences that are bound up in complex power dynamics in any given place, culture, or context. Scholarly interest has shifted from gendered dynamics of climate change adaptation to the socio-political drivers of gendered inequalities that produce discriminatory opportunities for adaptation. This study utilises an intersectional subjectivities lens to examine how entrenched power dynamics and social norms related to gender, as well as age and marital status, galvanise or inhibit capacities to adapt in farming communities of Ghana's Central Region. Through the use of interviews, focus group discussions, and photovoice sessions, we highlight gendered and intersectional subjectivities, roles, and responsibilities that centre on perceived differences in men's and women's strength and power. We then link resulting normative performances of gender to specific barriers to adaptation, such as lack of resources and agency, and demonstrate a pronounced dichotomy as women experience the brunt of these barriers and a persistent power imbalance that positions them as 'less able' to adapt than men. Such nuanced assessments of intersectional subjectivities are instrumental in supporting marginalised groups when deliberating and renegotiating inequitable power relations in climate change adaptation. Through repeated efforts at power subversion, emboldened social actors and critical scholars attuned to navigating power differentials can strengthen adaptive capacities and facilitate trajectories toward transformation.
C1 [Garcia, Alicea; Tschakert, Petra] Univ Western Australia UWA, Fac Arts Business Law & Educ, Dept Geog & Planning, 35 Stirling Hwy, Perth, WA 6009, Australia.
   [Karikari, Nana Afia] Univ Cape Coast UCC, Dept Sociol & Anthropol, Cape Coast, Ghana.
C3 University of Western Australia
RP Garcia, A (corresponding author), Univ Western Australia UWA, Fac Arts Business Law & Educ, Dept Geog & Planning, 35 Stirling Hwy, Perth, WA 6009, Australia.
EM alicea.garcia@research.uwa.edu.au
OI Garcia, Alicea/0000-0002-1980-264X; Tschakert,
   Petra/0000-0002-4268-3378; Karikari, Nana Afia/0000-0001-6757-1498
FU Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship;
   University of Western Australia
FX This work was supported by an Australian Government Research Training
   Program (RTP) Scholarship and The University of Western Australia.
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NR 60
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 0
U2 5
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0966-369X
EI 1360-0524
J9 GENDER PLACE CULT
JI Gend. Place Cult.
PD JUL 10
PY 2020
VL 27
IS 11
BP 1602
EP 1627
DI 10.1080/0966369X.2020.1786017
EA JUL 2020
PG 26
WC Geography; Women's Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Women's Studies
GA OI6BB
UT WOS:000547732300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Bartlett, A
   Parsons, M
   Neef, A
AF Bartlett, Ashley
   Parsons, Meg
   Neef, Andreas
BE Neef, A
   Pauli, N
TI THE EFFECTS OF PRIVATE HOUSEHOLD INSURANCE ON CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION
   STRATEGIES IN SAMOA
SO CLIMATE-INDUCED DISASTERS IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC REGION: Response,
   Recovery, Adaptation
SE Community Environment and Disaster Risk Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Community-based climate adaptation; disaster risk management; household
   insurance; social contract; Samoa; South Pacific
ID ISLAND DEVELOPING STATES; COMMUNITY-BASED ADAPTATION; RISK-MANAGEMENT;
   ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; RESILIENCE; VULNERABILITY; TRANSFORMATION; INSIGHTS;
   HAZARDS
AB Private household insurance has been relatively uncommon among households in Samoa to date. Meanwhile, numerous other adaptation interventions are also being implemented, including community-based adaptation (CBA) projects which draw on the skills of the community to address the climate change-related hazards that are expected to affect local communities. Through semi-structured interviews with community members from the urban/peri-urban area around Apia (with and without insurance) and an insurance company representative, this research explores private household natural perils insurance uptake in Samoa and the effect that the uptake of this insurance has on household engagement in other climate change adaptation (CCA) strategies such as CBA projects. Findings suggest that individuals whose homes are already insured with natural perils insurance are more likely to express more individualistic values or beliefs than those without natural perils insurance. Insured homeowners commonly framed adaptation as a technical challenge, with insurance being part of the technical and expert-led approach to prepare for, manage and recover from extreme events. In contrast, householders without insurance perceived CCA as less of a technical task and more of a social process. Those individuals with private household natural perils insurance coverage (in keeping with their more individualistic values) reported that they were less engaged in CBA projects compared to participants without insurance (who held more communalistic values). Given the importance of household participation in CBA projects, an increased uptake of insurance may have problematic outcomes for the adaptive capacity of the broader community.
C1 [Bartlett, Ashley] Univ Auckland, Sci, Environm Management, Auckland, New Zealand.
   [Parsons, Meg] Univ Auckland, Sch Environm, Environm Management, Auckland, New Zealand.
   [Neef, Andreas] Univ Auckland, Dev Studies, Auckland, New Zealand.
C3 University of Auckland; University of Auckland; University of Auckland
RP Bartlett, A (corresponding author), Univ Auckland, Sci, Environm Management, Auckland, New Zealand.
RI Neef, Andreas/F-6102-2010
OI Neef, Andreas/0000-0002-5079-3323
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NR 62
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 4
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY, W YORKSHIRE BD16 1WA, ENGLAND
SN 2040-7262
BN 978-1-83909-986-1; 978-1-83909-987-8
J9 COMM ENV DISAST RISK
PY 2021
VL 22
BP 167
EP 191
DI 10.1108/S2040-726220200000022007
PG 25
WC Environmental Studies; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health;
   Sociology
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Sociology
GA BT7OB
UT WOS:000850272200009
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ikendi, S
   Pinzón, N
   Koundinya, V
   Taku-Forchu, N
   Roche, LM
   Ostoja, SM
   Parker, LE
   Zaccaria, D
   Cooper, MH
   Diaz-Ramirez, JN
   Brodt, S
   Battany, M
   Rijal, JP
   Pathak, TB
AF Ikendi, Samuel
   Pinzon, Natalia
   Koundinya, Vikram
   Taku-Forchu, Namah
   Roche, Leslie M.
   Ostoja, Steven M.
   Parker, Lauren E.
   Zaccaria, Daniele
   Cooper, Mark H.
   Diaz-Ramirez, Jairo N.
   Brodt, Sonja
   Battany, Mark
   Rijal, Jhalendra P.
   Pathak, Tapan B.
TI Climate smart agriculture: assessing needs and perceptions of
   California's farmers
SO FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE needs assessment; extension program development; climate adaptation;
   climate change; climate-smart agriculture; decision support tools;
   California farmers
ID RESILIENCE
AB California is the largest agricultural economy in the United States; however, its current and projected climate risks pose significant challenges. Farmers will need to adapt to climate change in their farming practices. The goal of this needs assessment was to understand farmers' perceptions and experiences with climate change exposures; the risk management practices they currently use; and what tools and resources would assist them in making strategic decisions. A statewide survey was conducted through Qualtrics with farmers (n = 341). Results showed that 67% of the farmers agree (agree + strongly agree) that climate change is happening, and 53.1% agreed that actions are required. Moreover, historically underrepresented farmers were very concerned about climate change-related impacts related to water, temperatures, and natural disasters. Farmers are currently implementing adaptation practices related to water management, soil health, and renewable energy and are also seeking insurance and government assistance programs to increase agricultural resilience. They also expressed interest and a high need for information on those adaptation practices to acquire skills and knowledge to manage various challenges of farming in variable climates. Also, the assessment established that farmers (47.5%) use decision-support tools, mostly weather stations (22.4%); and 51.9% indicated their interest in using online tools designed to translate climate information into forms that support production decision-making. Farmers (60.8%) responded that they would or may attend workshops to learn about adaptation practices. The findings of this needs assessment will inform the development of extension education programs on climate-smart agriculture for farmers in California and elsewhere.
C1 [Ikendi, Samuel; Koundinya, Vikram; Roche, Leslie M.; Zaccaria, Daniele; Diaz-Ramirez, Jairo N.; Brodt, Sonja; Battany, Mark; Rijal, Jhalendra P.; Pathak, Tapan B.] Univ Calif Agr & Nat Resources, Davis, CA 95618 USA.
   [Ikendi, Samuel] Univ Calif Merced, Merced, CA USA.
   [Pinzon, Natalia; Koundinya, Vikram; Cooper, Mark H.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Human Ecol, Davis, CA USA.
   [Pinzon, Natalia; Cooper, Mark H.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Anim Sci, Davis, CA USA.
   [Taku-Forchu, Namah] Univ Wisconsin, Nat Resources Inst, Div Extens, Madison, WI USA.
   [Roche, Leslie M.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Plant Sci, Davis, CA USA.
   [Ostoja, Steven M.; Parker, Lauren E.] United States Dept Agr, Calif Climate Hub, Davis, CA USA.
   [Parker, Lauren E.] Univ Calif Davis, Inst Environm, Davis, CA USA.
   [Zaccaria, Daniele] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Land & Air & Water Resources, Davis, CA USA.
   [Diaz-Ramirez, Jairo N.] Univ Calif Holtville, Desert Res & Extens Ctr, Holtville, CA USA.
   [Brodt, Sonja] Univ Calif Davis, Sustainable Agr Res & Educ Program, Davis, CA USA.
   [Battany, Mark] Univ Calif San Luis Obispo, San Luis Obispo Cty Extens, San Luis Obispo, CA USA.
   [Rijal, Jhalendra P.] Univ Calif Davis, Integrated Pest Management Statewide Program, Davis, CA USA.
   [Pathak, Tapan B.] Univ Calif Merced, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Merced, CA 95343 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Merced;
   University of California System; University of California Davis;
   University of California System; University of California Davis;
   University of Wisconsin System; University of Wisconsin Madison;
   University of California System; University of California Davis; United
   States Department of Agriculture (USDA); University of California
   System; University of California Davis; University of California System;
   University of California Davis; University of California System;
   University of California Davis; University of California System;
   University of California Davis; University of California System;
   University of California Merced
RP Pathak, TB (corresponding author), Univ Calif Agr & Nat Resources, Davis, CA 95618 USA.; Pathak, TB (corresponding author), Univ Calif Merced, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Merced, CA 95343 USA.
EM tpathak@ucmerced.edu
RI Pinzón, Natalia/K-5160-2016
OI Pinzon Jimenez, Natalia/0000-0002-2610-9552
FU U.S. Department of Agriculture-National Institute of Food and
   Agriculture [2022-68017-36358]
FX The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the
   research, authorship, and/or publication of thisarticle. The study was
   funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture-National Institute of Food
   and Agriculture, Grant Number: 2022-68017-36358.
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NR 74
TC 2
Z9 3
U1 8
U2 8
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2571-581X
J9 FRONT SUSTAIN FOOD S
JI Front. Sustain. Food Syst.
PD JUN 14
PY 2024
VL 8
AR 1395547
DI 10.3389/fsufs.2024.1395547
PG 15
WC Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Food Science & Technology
GA XH9Z1
UT WOS:001260922000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Asante, F
   Guodaar, L
   Arimiyaw, S
AF Asante, Felix
   Guodaar, Lawrence
   Arimiyaw, Saasi
TI Climate change and variability awareness and livelihood adaptive
   strategies among smallholder farmers in semi-arid northern Ghana
SO ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change and variability; Livelihood adaptive strategy;
   Smallholder farmers; Food security; Northern Ghana
ID ADAPTATION STRATEGIES; FOOD SECURITY; VULNERABILITY; PERCEPTIONS;
   DETERMINANTS; CONSERVATION; AGRICULTURE; COMMUNITIES; STRESSORS;
   BARRIERS
AB This study examined smallholder farmers' observation of climate change and variability, its effect on agricultural output, and the livelihood adaptive strategies being used in response to such dynamic changes. A total of 121 smallholder farmers were randomly selected from three vulnerable rural farming communities in northern Ghana through a mixed methodological approach involving household surveys, interviews and focus group discussions. Data were analysed using descriptive and binary logistic regression with the help of IBM SPSS statistical software package integrated with qualitative thematic analysis involving transcription, categorization and interconnecting. The results show that majority (95.9%) of the smallholders have observed climatic changes in their local ecology with manifestations involving protracted drought (95.9%), unpredictable rainfall pattern (94.2%), high temperature (99.2%), strong winds (66.9%) and frequent flood events (99.2%). As a consequence, smallholders have observed that changes in temperature (99.2%) and rainfall patterns (97.5%) result in decreased agricultural output. In resolving the impacts, these smallholders employ preferred livelihood adaptive strategies involving non-farm diversification (51.2%), crop diversification (75.2%), changes in farm location (76.9%) and agrochemical application (100%) with moderate or high levels of effectiveness across space. The logistic regression results revealed that factors such as age, gender and access to credit significantly influenced smallholder farmers' observation and adaptation to climate change and variability. The findings suggest the need for a location-specific climate adaptation policy. By this, the local knowledge, adaptive capacity and resilience of smallholder farmers could be built upon to mitigate their vulnerability to food insecurity and poverty.
C1 [Asante, Felix] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Geog & Rural Dev, Kumasi, Ghana.
   [Guodaar, Lawrence] Univ Adelaide, Dept Geog Environm & Populat, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
   [Arimiyaw, Saasi] Sci Po, Paris Sch Int Affairs, 28 Rue St Peres, F-75007 Paris, France.
C3 Kwame Nkrumah University Science & Technology; University of Adelaide;
   Institut d'Etudes Politiques Paris (Sciences Po)
RP Asante, F (corresponding author), Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Geog & Rural Dev, Kumasi, Ghana.
EM fasante.cass@knust.edu.gh
OI Guodaar, Lawrence/0000-0003-3227-6709; Asante, Felix/0000-0002-0601-6877
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NR 94
TC 31
Z9 35
U1 1
U2 32
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2211-4645
EI 2211-4653
J9 ENVIRON DEV
JI Environ. Dev.
PD SEP
PY 2021
VL 39
AR 100629
DI 10.1016/j.envdev.2021.100629
EA AUG 2021
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA UD6KL
UT WOS:000687314000005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Triyanti, A
   Chu, E
AF Triyanti, Annisa
   Chu, Eric
TI A survey of governance approaches to ecosystem-based disaster risk
   reduction: Current gaps and future directions
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT 3rd International Science-Policy Workshop of the
   Partnership-for-Environment-and-Disaster-Risk-Reduction (PEDRR)
CY JUN 14-16, 2016
CL United Nat Univ Inst Environm & Human Secur, Bonn, GERMANY
SP Partnership Environm & Disaster Risk Reduct
HO United Nat Univ Inst Environm & Human Secur
DE Disaster risk reduction; Governance; Ecosystem-based approaches; Climate
   change adaptation; Eco-DRR; Ecological engineering
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE GOVERNANCE; LOCAL-GOVERNMENT;
   COASTAL; COMMUNITIES; RESILIENCE; SERVICES; VULNERABILITY; KNOWLEDGE;
   UNCERTAINTIES
AB Climate change will increase the unpredictability, magnitude, and frequency of both slow and rapid onset disaster events. Although large-scale engineered interventions have been common for the purposes of risk reduction and adaptation in the past, emerging ecosystem-based approaches are gaining attention. In contrast to 'hard' infrastructure, ecosystem-based solutions that integrate risk management priorities with natural processes are touted as being more cost effective, socially equitable, and environmentally sustainable. Current developments in ecosystem-based approaches to climate adaptation (EbA) and ecosystem-based disaster risk reduction (Eco-DRR) tend to focus on scientific projections, engineering techniques, and their respective roles in shaping economic benefits. However, recent studies show that effective implementation of such solutions is dependent on the governance practices and interactions between relevant actors, interests, and institutional structures. In response, this paper reviews the current status of governance studies in the context of EbA and Eco-DRR. The analysis is grounded in the interdisciplinary theories of governance, socio-ecological systems, infrastructure studies, and multilevel politics, with sources derived from scientific databases including Scopus and Science Direct advanced query. Based on the review, we evaluate existing governance theories, assessment methods, and implementation through illustrating emblematic examples from around the world. The paper concludes with a synthesis of governance gaps and opportunities, and notes that while emerging ecological engineering approaches provide distinct opportunities, there is a lack of comprehensive assessment beyond diagnosing potential financial, institutional, and political shortfalls. We therefore highlight the need for future research on the socio-ecological, spatial/scalar, and political dimensions of EbA and Eco-DRR.
C1 [Triyanti, Annisa] Univ Amsterdam, Governance & Inclus Dev, Dept Geog Planning & Int Dev Studies, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Chu, Eric] Univ Birmingham, Sch Geog Earth & Environm Sci, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
C3 University of Amsterdam; University of Birmingham
RP Triyanti, A (corresponding author), Univ Amsterdam, Governance & Inclus Dev, Dept Geog Planning & Int Dev Studies, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
EM A.Triyanti@uva.nl; E.Chu@bham.ac.uk
RI Chu, Eric/O-6464-2015
OI Chu, Eric/0000-0002-5648-6615; Triyanti, Annisa/0000-0001-5524-7551
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NR 138
TC 28
Z9 33
U1 3
U2 64
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD DEC
PY 2018
VL 32
SI SI
BP 11
EP 21
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2017.11.005
PG 11
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA GY3JB
UT WOS:000448446000003
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Grasso, VF
   Dilley, M
   Delju, A
   Msemo, N
AF Grasso, Veronica F.
   Dilley, Maxx
   Delju, Amir
   Msemo, Nakiete
TI A methodology for assessing climate services' needs: West Africa case
   study
SO CLIMATE SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Climate services; Climate financing;
   Capacity; Climate resilience
AB As of April 2021, 192 Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), out of 197, have submitted their first Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), eight Parties have submitted their second NDCs, and 70 Parties have submitted an updated first NDC outlining priorities and commitments with respect to the implementation of the Paris Agreement, including in the area of adaptation. Climate finance has reached record levels, crossing the US$ half-trillion mark annually for the first time in 2017-18 (CPI, 2019). Action still falls far short of what is needed under a 1.5 degrees C scenario, however. Estimates include that US$ 180 billion will be needed annually for the period 2020-2030 (Global Commission on Adaptation, 2019), of which US $ 50 billion a year is necessary for Non-Annex countries1 to deliver their NDCs (UNEP, 2018). Adaptation finance is only a very small fraction (5%) of the total available climate finance, and financing for climate services and early warning systems needed to support adaptation is only a fraction of that. This paper analyses NDC adaptation priorities, the allocation of international funding, and the current status of countries' capacities to provide the climate services needed to support adaptation, using West Africa as a test case. We conclude that there is considerable potential for using such information to assess the degree to which adaptation programmes implemented with international funding are effectively addressing national adaptation priorities and improving priority adaptation outcomes, but that additional data, analysis and coordination would be needed to fully realize this potential. Finally, we identify key areas that require further investment, which, if strengthened, would leverage sustainable benefits from the funds being invested in climate change adaptation in West Africa
C1 [Grasso, Veronica F.; Dilley, Maxx; Delju, Amir; Msemo, Nakiete] WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.
C3 World Health Organization
RP Grasso, VF (corresponding author), WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.
EM veronica.grasso@gmail.com
OI Delju, Amir Hooshang/0000-0001-9489-6204
CR African Development Bank (AfDB), 2019, AN AD COMP AFR NAT
   [Anonymous], 2018, The Adaptation Gap Report 2018
   [Anonymous], 2012, Climate change adaptation in Senegal
   Buchner B., 2019, GLOBAL LANDSCAPE CLI
   Global Commission on Adaptation, 2019, AD NOW GLOB CALL LEA
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NR 16
TC 0
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 7
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2405-8807
J9 CLIM SERV
JI Clim. Serv.
PD AUG
PY 2021
VL 23
AR 100252
DI 10.1016/j.cliser.2021.100252
EA SEP 2021
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA WB6BO
UT WOS:000703655600002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Trenberth, KE
AF Trenberth, Kevin E.
TI An imperative for climate change planning: tracking Earth's global
   energy
SO CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
ID ANNUAL CYCLE; TRENDS; BUDGET; REEVALUATION; IMPACT
AB Planned adaptation to climate change requires information about what is happening and why. While a long-term trend is for global warming, short-term periods of cooling can occur and have physical causes associated with natural variability. However, such natural variability means that energy is rearranged or changed within the climate system, and should be traceable. An assessment is given of our ability to track changes in reservoirs and flows of energy within the climate system. Arguments are given that developing the ability to do this is important, as it affects interpretations of global and especially regional climate change, and prospects for the future.
C1 Natl Ctr Atmospher Res, Boulder, CO 80307 USA.
C3 National Center Atmospheric Research (NCAR) - USA
RP Trenberth, KE (corresponding author), Natl Ctr Atmospher Res, POB 3000, Boulder, CO 80307 USA.
EM trenbert@ucar.edu
RI Trenberth, Kevin/A-5683-2012
OI Trenberth, Kevin/0000-0002-1445-1000
FU NOAA [NA06OAR4310145, NA07OAR4310051]; National Science Foundation
FX This research is partially sponsored by the NOAA CLIVAR and CCDD
   programs under grants NA06OAR4310145 and NA07OAR4310051.Sponsored by the
   National Science Foundation.
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NR 49
TC 74
Z9 81
U1 2
U2 63
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1877-3435
EI 1877-3443
J9 CURR OPIN ENV SUST
JI Curr. Opin. Environ. Sustain.
PD OCT
PY 2009
VL 1
IS 1
BP 19
EP 27
DI 10.1016/j.cosust.2009.06.001
PG 9
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 657LG
UT WOS:000282413600004
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Iizumi, T
   Masutomi, Y
   Takimoto, T
   Hirota, T
   Yatagai, A
   Tatsumi, K
   Kobayashi, K
   Hasegawa, T
AF Iizumi, Toshichika
   Masutomi, Yuji
   Takimoto, Takahiro
   Hirota, Tomoyoshi
   Yatagai, Akiyo
   Tatsumi, Kenichi
   Kobayashi, Kazuhiko
   Hasegawa, Toshihiro
TI Emerging research topics in agricultural meteorology and assessment of
   climate change adaptation
SO JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL METEOROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Crop model; Detection and attribution;
   Diffusion of technology
ID CROP GROWTH-MODEL; RICE V. 1; LAND-SURFACE; HISTORICAL CHANGES; GLOBAL
   YIELDS; SIMRIW-RS; TEMPERATURE; PREDICTION; RESOLUTION; JAPAN
AB Climate change is virtually certain and efforts for adaptation is essential not only to decrease the negative consequences but also to increase the opportunities. To achieve the goal, we need to address emerging research topics in the field of agricultural meteorology with regard to climate change adaptation. We touch upon how harvesting insights from crop models with different complexities can be improved, the detection and attribution of impacts on agricultural ecosystems associated with climate and technological changes, and how crop and weather datasets can be improved. We conclude by discussing important knowledge gaps that need to be addressed in future research.
C1 [Masutomi, Yuji] Ibaraki Univ, Grad Sch Agr, Mito, Ibaraki, Japan.
   [Takimoto, Takahiro] Ibaraki Univ, Inst Global Change Adaptat Sci, Mito, Ibaraki, Japan.
   [Yatagai, Akiyo] Hirosaki Univ, Grad Sch Sci & Technol, Hirosaki, Aomori, Japan.
   [Tatsumi, Kenichi] Tokyo Univ Agr & Technol, Grad Sch Agr, Tokyo, Japan.
   [Kobayashi, Kazuhiko] Univ Tokyo, Grad Sch Agr & Life Sci, Tokyo, Japan.
C3 Ibaraki University; Ibaraki University; Hirosaki University; Tokyo
   University of Agriculture & Technology; University of Tokyo
EM iizumit@affrc.go.jp
RI Tatsumi, Kenichi/G-1077-2013; Kobayashi, Kazuhiko/AAN-7096-2020;
   Hasegawa, Toshihiro/H-8211-2019; TATSUMI, Kenichi/LRT-0676-2024
OI TATSUMI, Kenichi/0000-0001-6763-6909; Hasegawa,
   Toshihiro/0000-0001-8501-5612
FU Ministry of the Environment, JSPS KAKENHI [26310305, JP16KT0036];
   "SI-CAT (Social Implementation Program on Climate Change Adaptation
   Technology)" of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and
   Technology; Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16KT0036, 26310305]
   Funding Source: KAKEN
FX The contents of this article are based on discussions at SAMJ2017. We
   thank Dr. Masaki Yokoyama at NARO for informing us of the EOS Land
   Viewer. This research is partly supported by the Global Environment
   Research Fund (S-14) of the Ministry of the Environment, JSPS KAKENHI
   Grant Numbers 26310305 and JP16KT0036, and "SI-CAT (Social
   Implementation Program on Climate Change Adaptation Technology)" of the
   Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.
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NR 49
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 22
PU SOC AGRICULTURAL METEOROLOGY JAPAN
PI TSUKUBA
PA C/O SADANORI SASE, MANAGING EDITOR, LAB OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL IN
   AGRICULTURAL BUILDINGS, NATIONA, TSUKUBA, IBARAKI, 305-8609 00000, JAPAN
SN 0021-8588
EI 1881-0136
J9 J AGRIC METEOROL
JI J. Agric. Meteorol.
PD JAN
PY 2018
VL 74
IS 1
BP 54
EP 59
DI 10.2480/agrmet.D-17-00021
PG 6
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA FS7FQ
UT WOS:000419963700007
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Roberts, D
   Boon, R
   Diederichs, N
   Douwes, E
   Govender, N
   McInnes, A
   McLean, C
   O'Donoghue, S
   Spires, M
AF Roberts, Debra
   Boon, Richard
   Diederichs, Nicci
   Douwes, Errol
   Govender, Natasha
   McInnes, Alistair
   McLean, Cameron
   O'Donoghue, Sean
   Spires, Meggan
TI Exploring ecosystem-based adaptation in Durban, South Africa:
   "learning-by-doing" at the local government coal face
SO ENVIRONMENT AND URBANIZATION
LA English
DT Article
DE bio-infrastructure; community ecosystem-based adaptation; Durban;
   ecosystem-based adaptation; green economy; local government
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; NATAL SARDINE RUN; ENVIRONMENTAL-CONDITIONS;
   CONSERVATION; LEVEL
AB The lack of progress in establishing ambitious and legally binding global mitigation targets means that the need for locally based climate change adaptation will increase in vulnerable localities such as Africa. Within this context, "ecosystem-based adaptation" (EBA) is being promoted as a cost-effective and sustainable approach to improving adaptive capacity. Experience with the ongoing development of Durban's Municipal Climate Protection Programme indicates that achieving EBA in cities means moving beyond the conceptualization of a uniform, one-size-fits-all layer of street trees and parks to a more detailed understanding of the complex ecology of indigenous ecosystems and their resilience under climate change conditions. It also means engaging with the role that this "bio-infrastructure" plays in improving the quality of life and socioeconomic opportunities of the most vulnerable human communities. Despite the long-term sustainability gains of this approach, implementation in Durban has been shown to be both technically challenging and resource intensive. The close association between human and ecological systems in addressing climate change adaptation has also led to the development of the concept of "community ecosystem-based adaptation".
C1 [Roberts, Debra] EPCPD, Environm Planning & Climate Protect Dept, Durban, South Africa.
   [Diederichs, Nicci] Future Works, ZA-3625 Durban, South Africa.
RP Roberts, D (corresponding author), EPCPD, Environm Planning & Climate Protect Dept, POB 680, Durban, South Africa.
EM robertsd@durban.gov.za; nicci@futureworks.co.za
RI Mander, Nicola/LDE-4790-2024; Douwes, Errol/D-6208-2015
OI Douwes, Errol/0000-0002-7390-9325
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NR 69
TC 136
Z9 140
U1 0
U2 80
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0956-2478
EI 1746-0301
J9 ENVIRON URBAN
JI Environ. Urban.
PD APR
PY 2012
VL 24
IS 1
BP 167
EP 195
DI 10.1177/0956247811431412
PG 29
WC Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Urban Studies
GA 932XW
UT WOS:000303324800013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kuhl, L
AF Kuhl, Laura
TI Engaging with climate adaptation in transition studies
SO ENVIRONMENTAL INNOVATION AND SOCIETAL TRANSITIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; Transformational change; Developing countries; Just
   transitions
ID TECHNOLOGICAL-INNOVATION SYSTEMS; GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE;
   TRANSFORMATIONAL ADAPTATION; MULTILEVEL PERSPECTIVE; SUSTAINABILITY;
   MITIGATION; RESILIENCE; PATHWAYS; PROJECTS
AB Transitions studies has much to offer to the study of climate adaptation. While there are several factors that explain why climate adaptation has not been the subject of sustainable transitions research historically, the process of adapting to climate impacts is well-suited to the analytical frameworks developed in transitions studies. Key areas where sustainable transitions research could contribute to adaptation include: the normative and directed nature of adaptation, crossscalar politics associated with transformation, and the role of the private sector in adaptation. Similarly, adaptation research can inform the understanding of the role of disturbance and disasters in transitions, and increase attention to vulnerabilities, inequality and uneven impacts of transitions. Synergies between mitigation and adaptation, insights into the relationship between transitions and transformation, and just transitions are likely to be productive areas for collaborative engagement.
C1 [Kuhl, Laura] Northeastern Univ, Sch Publ Policy, 360 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
   [Kuhl, Laura] Northeastern Univ, Urban Affairs & Int Affairs Program, 360 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
C3 Northeastern University; Northeastern University
RP Kuhl, L (corresponding author), Northeastern Univ, Sch Publ Policy, 360 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115 USA.; Kuhl, L (corresponding author), Northeastern Univ, Urban Affairs & Int Affairs Program, 360 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
EM l.kuhl@northeastern.edu
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NR 41
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 10
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2210-4224
EI 2210-4232
J9 ENVIRON INNOV SOC TR
JI Environ. Innov. Soc. Trans.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 41
SI SI
BP 60
EP 63
DI 10.1016/j.eist.2021.10.024
EA NOV 2021
PG 4
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XO8NF
UT WOS:000730434700012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Delgado, JA
   Mosquera, VHB
   Alwang, JR
   Villacis-Aveiga, A
   Ayala, YEC
   Neer, D
   Monar, C
   López, LOE
AF Delgado, Jorge A.
   Barrera Mosquera, Victor H.
   Alwang, Jeffrey R.
   Villacis-Aveiga, Alexis
   Cartagena Ayala, Yamil E.
   Neer, Donna
   Monar, Carlos
   Escudero Lopez, Luis O.
BE Sparks, DL
TI Potential use of cover crops for soil and water conservation, nutrient
   management, and climate change adaptation across the tropics
SO ADVANCES IN AGRONOMY, VOL 165
SE Advances in Agronomy
LA English
DT Review; Book Chapter
ID GRASS-SELECTIVE HERBICIDE; VETCH-RYE MIXTURE; NO-TILLAGE CORN; CROPPING
   SYSTEMS; NITROGEN MANAGEMENT; MUCUNA-PRURIENS; GREEN MANURE; CARBON
   SEQUESTRATION; SUBSURFACE DRAINAGE; USE EFFICIENCY
AB One of the greatest challenges in the 21st century is the question of how humanity will adapt to a changing climate to continue producing food at the production levels that will be necessary to feed an increasing global population while conserving soil and water resources. While there are political, social and economic factors that impact agricultural development, this paper will not be focusing on those factors, instead focusing on the potential use of cover crops as a nutrient management tool, a soil and water conservation practice, and a good approach to adapting to a changing climate. The potential of using cover crops for climate change adaptation and mitigation will be reviewed. Cover crops are a key tool that could contribute to increased yields, conservation of surface and groundwater quality, reduced erosion potential, sequestration of atmospheric carbon (C), and improved soil quality and health across the tropics. However, there are a lot of research gaps, and there is a need for additional research about the potential use of cover crops for soil, human, and animal health, as well as a need for an open-access data information system about research on cover crops in the tropics. While cover crops show a lot of promise, they are not a silver bullet, and in some circumstances, they can also contribute to reduced yields. We evaluated the use of cover crops and we ranked the different ways that cover crops can contribute to climate change adaptation, on a scale ranging from very low potential to contribute to climate change adaptation to very high potential. For example, cover crops have very high potential to reduce erosion generated by a changing climate in humid systems. On average, cover crops appear to be a good practice for climate change adaptation and mitigation across the tropics, and nutrient managers, agronomists, and soil and water conservation practitioners could add them to their management toolbox for different regions of the tropics. The 4 Rs of cover crops should be applied when using this tool (the right cover crop, the right timing of placement, the right timing of killing, and the right management).
C1 [Delgado, Jorge A.; Neer, Donna] USDA ARS, Ft Collins, CO 80526 USA.
   [Barrera Mosquera, Victor H.; Cartagena Ayala, Yamil E.; Escudero Lopez, Luis O.] Inst Nacl Invest Agropecurarias INIAP, Estn Expt Santa Catalina, Panamericana Km 1, Quito, Ecuador.
   [Alwang, Jeffrey R.; Villacis-Aveiga, Alexis] Virginia Polytech Inst & State Univ, Blacksburg, VA USA.
   [Monar, Carlos] Univ Estatal Bolivar, Guaranda, Ecuador.
C3 United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); Virginia Polytechnic
   Institute & State University
RP Delgado, JA (corresponding author), USDA ARS, Ft Collins, CO 80526 USA.
EM jorge.delgado@usda.gov
RI Villacis, Alexis/ABB-1439-2020
OI Villacis, Alexis/0000-0001-5423-1507
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NR 181
TC 19
Z9 20
U1 5
U2 46
PU ELSEVIER ACADEMIC PRESS INC
PI SAN DIEGO
PA 525 B STREET, SUITE 1900, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101-4495 USA
SN 0065-2113
EI 2213-6789
BN 978-0-12-824573-6
J9 ADV AGRON
JI Adv. Agron.
PY 2021
VL 165
BP 175
EP 247
DI 10.1016/bs.agron.2020.09.003
PG 73
WC Agronomy; Soil Science
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S); Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA BS6SU
UT WOS:000752704800006
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ergon, R
AF Ergon, R.
TI Microevolutionary system identification and climate response predictions
SO MODELING IDENTIFICATION AND CONTROL
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate response predictions; Microevolutionary system identification;
   MIMO system; Pre-diction error method; Reaction norm model; Reference
   environment
ID PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; ADAPTATION; SELECTION; EVOLUTION
AB Microevolutionary system identification was introduced in Ergon (2022), with the specific purpose to show that predictions of genetic adaptations to climate change require that environmental reference values are properly defined. The theoretical development was then limited to single-input single-output (SISO) systems, and the simulations used a toy example with spring temperature as input and mean breeding date as output. Generations were assumed to be non-overlapping. Here, the theory is extended to cover multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems, while the simulation example uses two environmental inputs (spring temperature and rainfall) and two adaptive phenotypic outputs (breeding date and breeding habitat). These extended simulations reveal difficulties involved in predictions of genetic adaptations for complex systems based on short data, where the reference environment values are not included.
C1 [Ergon, R.] Univ South Eastern Norway, Dept Elect Engn Informat Technol & Cybernet, Porsgrunn, Norway.
C3 University College of Southeast Norway
RP Ergon, R (corresponding author), Univ South Eastern Norway, Dept Elect Engn Informat Technol & Cybernet, Porsgrunn, Norway.
EM rolf.ergon@usn.no
FU University of South-Eastern Norway
FX I thank University of South-Eastern Norway for support.
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NR 14
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 1
PU MIC
PI TRONDHEIM
PA DIV ENG CYBERNETICS, 7034 TRONDHEIM, NORWAY
SN 0332-7353
EI 1890-1328
J9 MODEL IDENT CONTROL
JI Model. Identif. Control
PY 2022
VL 43
IS 3
BP 91
EP 99
DI 10.4173/mic.2022.3.1
PG 9
WC Automation & Control Systems; Computer Science, Cybernetics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Automation & Control Systems; Computer Science
GA 4D1MB
UT WOS:000846910000001
OA gold, Green Published, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Castaing, P
AF Castaing, Pauline
TI Joint liability and adaptation to climate change: evidence from
   Burkinabe cooperatives
SO EUROPEAN REVIEW OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE sharing obligations; group lending; climate change; adaptation; Burkina
   Faso
ID RISK-SHARING NETWORKS; FORCED SOLIDARITY; FIELD EXPERIMENT; STRATEGIES;
   AGRICULTURE; INCOME; DETERMINANTS; VARIABILITY; IMPACT; TIES
AB In semi-arid lands, the resilience of farmers facing climate change is uncertain. The main objective of this paper is to explore whether mutual assistance within a group of cotton farmers implies reduced adoption of risk-mitigating strategies. I investigate the case of Burkina Faso where cotton farmers collectively purchase inputs from the cotton wholesale companies and pay for their purchase under the constraint of joint liability. Specifically, I try to understand whether this joint liability is correlated with the adoption of strategies which reduce exposure to climatic risks. I proxy peer pressure by the size of the network and find it to be associated with reduced investment in both incremental and transformational self-protection against weather shocks.
C1 [Castaing, Pauline] Univ Clermont Auvergne, CNRS, IRD, CERDI, F-63000 Clermont Ferrand, France.
C3 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Institut de
   Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Universite Clermont Auvergne
   (UCA)
RP Castaing, P (corresponding author), Univ Clermont Auvergne, CNRS, IRD, CERDI, F-63000 Clermont Ferrand, France.
EM pauline.castaing@uca.fr
FU Agence Nationale de la Recherche of the French government
   "Investissements d'avenir" [ANR-10-LABX-14-01]
FX I thank Catherine Araujo Bonjean and Antoine Leblois for their guidance
   and support. This paper has been developed using the database of PRISE
   (Pathways to Resilience in Semi-arid Economies). I would like to
   acknowledge the guidance of Elizabeth Carabine and Catherine Simonet who
   developed the survey and the data collection strategy at the Overseas
   Development Institute. I also acknowledge national team, supervised by
   Denis Akouwerabou, who implemented the data collection in Burkina Faso.
   This paper has been improved thanks to comments received at the EAERE
   Conference in Manchester, JMA Conference in Casablanca and the seminars
   held at University of Clermont-Ferrand and University of Lorraine. This
   work also benefited from the helpful suggestions from the two anonymous
   reviewers. This work was supported by the Agence Nationale de la
   Recherche of the French government "Investissements d'avenir"
   ANR-10-LABX-14-01.
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NR 58
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 6
U2 34
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0165-1587
EI 1464-3618
J9 EUR REV AGRIC ECON
JI Eur. Rev. Agric. Econ.
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 48
IS 3
BP 502
EP 537
DI 10.1093/eurrag/jbaa020
PG 36
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Economics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics
GA UM3OH
UT WOS:000693242800003
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Camacho, AP
   Ilijama, MV
   Aroca, GB
   Betancourt, EG
AF Paucar Camacho, Abelardo
   Vallejo Ilijama, Maria
   Barragan Aroca, Grey
   Gavilanes Betancourt, Eva
TI Perception of social vulnerability to the climate variability of the
   population of the microbasin of the Chazo Juan River, Ecuador
SO REVISTA GEOGRAFICA VENEZOLANA
LA Spanish
DT Article
DE socio-cultural threats; farmer; risk; climate variability; perception of
   social vulnerability
ID COMMUNITY; PROPOSAL; RISKS
AB The research reveals the main conceptualizations regarding the risks that cause vulnerability, arising from climate variability in Ecuador. The study summarized the main factors that converge on the perception of vulnerability and adaptation to climate change affecting the population. A structured survey was applied that measured the perception of vulnerability to climate variability and socionatural threats to 105 household managers, through a simple random probability sampling. The determinants of vulnerability were obtained as a result through multiple correlations of Spearman's Rho, determining the significant extent of the major risks that would affect the vulnerability of the population under study. Water and soil pollution, rise and increase of poverty, confirmation of plagues as an effect of climate change and climate variability determine the main risk factors of vulnerability.
C1 [Paucar Camacho, Abelardo; Vallejo Ilijama, Maria; Barragan Aroca, Grey; Gavilanes Betancourt, Eva] Univ Estatal Bolivar, Fac Ciencias Salud, Carrera Ingn Adm Desastres & Gest Riesgo, Guaranda, Provincia De Bo, Ecuador.
RP Camacho, AP (corresponding author), Univ Estatal Bolivar, Fac Ciencias Salud, Carrera Ingn Adm Desastres & Gest Riesgo, Guaranda, Provincia De Bo, Ecuador.
EM apaucar@ueb.edu.ec; mvallejo@ueb.edu.ec; grbarragan@ueb.edu.ec;
   egavilanez@ueb.edu.ec
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NR 34
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 3
PU UNIV ANDES, INST GEOGRAFIA & CONSERVACION RECURSOS NATURALES
PI MERIDA
PA VIA LOS CHORRAS DE MILLA, MERIDA, 5101, VENEZUELA
SN 1012-1617
EI 2244-8853
J9 REV GEOGR VENEZ
JI Rev. Geogr. Venez.
PD JAN-JUN
PY 2021
VL 62
IS 1
BP 146
EP 159
PG 14
WC Geography
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geography
GA XT1WM
UT WOS:000733386000010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dirks, H
   Al Ajmi, H
   Kienast, P
   Rausch, R
AF Dirks, Heiko
   Al Ajmi, Hussain
   Kienast, Peter
   Rausch, Randolf
TI Hydrogeology of the Umm Er Radhuma Aquifer (Arabian peninsula)
SO GRUNDWASSER
LA English
DT Article
ID FOSSIL GRADIENTS; SAUDI-ARABIA
AB The aim of this article is to enhance the understanding of the Umm Er Radhuma aquifer's genesis, and its hydraulic and hydrochemical development over time. This is a prerequisite for wise use of the fossil groundwater resources contained within.
   The Umm Er Radhuma is a karstified limestone aquifer, extending over 1.6aEuro ($) over bar Mio. km(2) in the eastern part of the Arabian Peninsula. Both epigene and hypogene karstification contributed to the genesis of what is today the most prolific aquifer in the region. Besides man-made abstractions, even the natural outflows are higher than the small recharge (natural storage depletion). The Umm Er Radhuma shows that large aquifers in arid regions are never in "steady state" (where inflows equal outflows), considering Quaternary climate history. The aquifer's adaption to climate changes (precipitation, sea level) can be traced even after thousands of years, and is slower than the climate changes themselves.
C1 [Dirks, Heiko] Dornier Consulting, Abu Dhabi, U Arab Emirates.
   [Al Ajmi, Hussain] Minist Water & Elect, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
   [Rausch, Randolf] Tech Univ Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany.
C3 Technical University of Darmstadt
RP Dirks, H (corresponding author), Dornier Consulting, Abu Dhabi, U Arab Emirates.
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   randolf_rausch@yahoo.de
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NR 35
TC 16
Z9 18
U1 0
U2 8
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1430-483X
EI 1432-1165
J9 GRUNDWASSER
JI Grundwasser
PD MAR
PY 2018
VL 23
IS 1
SI SI
BP 5
EP 15
DI 10.1007/s00767-017-0388-6
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA FW7VT
UT WOS:000425535700003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kant, P
   Wu, SR
AF Kant, Promode
   Wu, Shuirong
TI Should adaptation to climate change be given priority over mitigation in
   tropical forests?
SO CARBON MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
AB Limiting warming to 2 degrees C is critical for avoiding dangerous consequences and adaptive actions are needed to limit damage from climatic changes. There is sharp imbalance in investments in mitigation and adaptation, with the latter attracting barely 5% of the allocated funds. Adaptation is limited not only by restricted access to money and technology, but also by endogenous causes related to willingness to invest in the future, and attitude to risk taking and integration of technology. Models based on paleoecological evidence of early Holocene floral migration can be used for initiating intelligent adaptive actions. Developed countries should concentrate on transformational changes using the latest technologies through their mitigation efforts, rather than crowd out the developing countries from low-cost and low-technology mitigation opportunities in the forestry sector. Confluence of adaptation with mitigation in tropical forests is a challenge yet a possibility, and the UNFCCC mechanisms should actively encourage this overlap.
C1 [Kant, Promode] Inst Green Econ, New Delhi 110024, India.
   [Wu, Shuirong] Chinese Acad Forestry, Inst Forest Policy & Informat, Beijing, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Forestry
RP Kant, P (corresponding author), Inst Green Econ, New Delhi 110024, India.
EM promode.kant@gmail.com
RI Wu, Shuirong/GSD-9778-2022
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NR 25
TC 7
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 19
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1758-3004
EI 1758-3012
J9 CARBON MANAG
JI Carbon Manag.
PD JUN
PY 2012
VL 3
IS 3
BP 303
EP 311
DI 10.4155/CMT.12.29
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 094BP
UT WOS:000315238300015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ward, RET
   Herweijer, C
   Patmore, N
   Muir-Wood, R
AF Ward, Robert E. T.
   Herweijer, Celine
   Patmore, Nicola
   Muir-Wood, Robert
TI The role of insurers in promoting adaptation to the impacts of climate
   change
SO GENEVA PAPERS ON RISK AND INSURANCE-ISSUES AND PRACTICE
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT Workshop on Insurance and Adaptation to Climate Change
CY MAR 13, 2007
CL Paris, FRANCE
SP Ecole Polytech, French Environm & Energy Management Fdn
DE insurance; climate change; weather; adaptation; mitigation
AB Scientific evidence is accumulating that climate change is having an impact on the frequency, intensity and geographical distribution of extreme weather events. With these trends likely to continue for the foreseeable future, the insurance industry can help society to adapt, by limiting and managing risks associated with extreme weather, and thereby maintaining the insurability of potentially vulnerable and exposed populations. There are already examples of the insurance industry promoting efforts to mitigate the impacts of weather hazards, by disseminating information about reducing the vulnerability of properties, offering financial incentives to invest in mitigating the impacts of extreme weather, and by working in partnership with policy-makers to establish maximum thresholds of acceptable risk. However, these efforts need to be more widely promoted by insurers to make a significant contribution to society's adaptation to climate change.
C1 [Ward, Robert E. T.; Herweijer, Celine; Patmore, Nicola; Muir-Wood, Robert] Risk Management Solut, London EC3R 8NB, England.
RP Ward, RET (corresponding author), Risk Management Solut, Peninsular House,30 Monument St, London EC3R 8NB, England.
EM bob.ward@rms.com
RI Ward, Robert/E-1250-2011
OI Ranger, Nicola/0000-0003-4677-7782
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NR 21
TC 24
Z9 26
U1 2
U2 37
PU PALGRAVE MACMILLAN LTD
PI BASINGSTOKE
PA BRUNEL RD BLDG, HOUNDMILLS, BASINGSTOKE RG21 6XS, HANTS, ENGLAND
SN 1018-5895
EI 1468-0440
J9 GENEVA PAP R I-ISS P
JI Geneva Pap. Risk Insur.-Issues Pract.
PD JAN
PY 2008
VL 33
IS 1
BP 133
EP 139
DI 10.1057/palgrave.gpp.2510153
PG 7
WC Business, Finance
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Business & Economics
GA 254NJ
UT WOS:000252593000013
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Supín, M
   Loucanová, E
   Olsiaková, M
AF Supin, M.
   Loucanova, E.
   Olsiakova, M.
BE Jelacic, D
TI FORESTS, WOOD PRODUCTS AND BIOENERGY IN CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION AND
   MITIGATION
SO SUSTAINABILITY OF FOREST-BASED INDUSTRIES IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 13th International Scientific Conference WoodEMA / 31st International
   Scientific Conference on Wood Science and Technology (ICWST)
CY SEP 28-30, 2020
CL ELECTR NETWORK
SP Int Assoc Econ & Management Wood Proc & Furniture Mfg, Univ Zagreb, Fac Forestry, Competence Ctr Ltd
DE climate change; sustainability; bio-economy; bioenergy; renewable
   resources
AB Global challenges like climate change, ecosystem degradation, limited resources coupled with a growing population force us to seek new ways of producing, consuming and innovating while respecting the ecological boundaries of our planet. This also applies to the wood processing industry. The main objective of this paper is to describe, analyze and forecast the development of the forests, wood products and bioenergy in climate change adaptation and mitigation. At the same time, it is necessary to achieve sustainability, which constitutes a strong incentive to modernize and innovate wood and furniture industries as well as the way of using wood as source of bioenergy and thus to also reinforce their position in a highly competitive global economy. They have to produce and consume products and materials within healthy ecosystems through a sustainable bio-economy.
C1 [Supin, M.; Loucanova, E.; Olsiakova, M.] Tech Univ, Fac Wood Sci & Technol, Dept Mkt Trade & World Forestry, Zvolen, Slovakia.
C3 Technical University Zvolen
RP Supín, M (corresponding author), Tech Univ, Fac Wood Sci & Technol, Dept Mkt Trade & World Forestry, Zvolen, Slovakia.
EM supin@tuzvo.sk
RI Olsiakova, Miriam/D-8819-2018; Loucanova, Erika/D-9492-2018
OI Loucanova, Erika/0000-0003-0505-3251; Supin, Mikulas/0000-0002-1705-3841
FU Scientific Grant Agency of the Ministry of Education, Science, Research
   and Sport of the Slovak Republic; Slovak Academy of Sciences [1/0674/19,
   1/0666/19]; KEGA Grant project [003TU Z4/2018]
FX The authors would like to thank the Scientific Grant Agency of the
   Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sport of the Slovak
   Republic and the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Grant number 1/0674/19,
   "Proposal of a model for the eco-innovation integration into the
   innovation process of companies in Slovakia in order to increase their
   performance" and Grant number 1/0666/19 "Determination of the
   development of a wood-based bio-economy" and KEGA Grant project 003TU
   Z4/2018 "Creation of the microclimate in interiors and buildings heating
   firewood".
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NR 16
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU WOODEMA, IA-INT ASSOC ECON & MANAG WOOD PROCESSING & FURN MANUF
PI ZAGREB
PA SVETOSIMUNSKA 25, ZAGREB, 00000, CROATIA
BN 978-953-57822-8-5
PY 2020
BP 19
EP 23
PG 5
WC Economics; Forestry; Management; Materials Science, Paper & Wood
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Business & Economics; Forestry; Materials Science
GA BS4LM
UT WOS:000720085300004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Wilson, LA
AF Wilson, Lynn A.
GP Informat Resources Management Assoc
TI Learning and Climate Change Adaptation: Moving towards Resilience in an
   Era of Escalating Instability
SO NATURAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT: CONCEPTS, METHODOLOGIES, TOOLS, AND
   APPLICATIONS
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
AB Youth play an ever-increasing role as counter-cyclical agents that can be mobilized for developing and implementing adaptation responses to build resilience in communities under stress from climate change. Organizations with a coupled research and educational focus are well situated to partner with formal and informal educational institutions to create valuable opportunities for simultaneous learning and practice for youth and their communities in building resilience to climate change. In this chapter, the author argues that climate-knowledgeable and empowered youth are positioned to show new, resilient behavior as critical environmental and social thresholds are approached. Using human health as a gauge for sustainable action, the study by NGO SeaTrust Institute that is analyzed in this chapter shows potentially effective learning approaches, programs and systems for engaging youth as transformational agents to catalyze community leadership for climate change adaptation in an age of escalating environmental and social instability.
C1 [Wilson, Lynn A.] SeaTrust Inst, Port Townsend, WA 98368 USA.
RP Wilson, LA (corresponding author), SeaTrust Inst, Port Townsend, WA 98368 USA.
CR [Anonymous], 2012, Resilience: Why Things Bounce Back
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NR 21
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU IGI GLOBAL
PI HERSEY
PA 701 E CHOCOLATE AVE, STE 200, HERSEY, PA 17033-1240 USA
BN 978-1-5225-0804-5; 978-1-5225-0803-8
PY 2017
BP 1560
EP 1583
DI 10.4018/978-1-5225-0803-8.ch074
D2 10.4018/978-1-5225-0803-8
PG 24
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA BN2WQ
UT WOS:000477803700075
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Muys, B
   Messier, C
AF Muys, Bart
   Messier, Christian
TI Climate-smart forest management caught between a rock and a hard place
SO ANNALS OF FOREST SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Disturbance; Mitigation; Adaptation; Conservation;
   Assisted migration; Tree diversity; Invasiveness; Exotic
ID ASSISTED MIGRATION; TREES; DROUGHT
AB Key messageThe UNFCCC COP 27 in Sharm El-Sheikh confirmed that climate policies too heavily rely on climate mitigation by forests rather than on de-fossilizing the energy system, to keep global warming within the safe 1.5 degrees C. Reliable mitigation by forests would imply healthy productive forests well adapted to climate change, and this is no longer the case. The current trend in loss of forest vitality shows that the adaptation of forests is urgently needed, but measures are being insufficiently adopted by foresters on the ground. In this letter, we wonder about the reasons for this inaction paralyzing climate-smart forestry and propose a way forward using a diversity-based no-regret approach in line with available knowledge.
C1 [Muys, Bart] Katholieke Univ Leuven, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Celestijnenlaan 200E Box 2411, B-3001 Louvain, Belgium.
   [Messier, Christian] Univ Quebec Montreal, Dept Biol Sci, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
C3 KU Leuven; University of Quebec; University of Quebec Montreal
RP Muys, B (corresponding author), Katholieke Univ Leuven, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Celestijnenlaan 200E Box 2411, B-3001 Louvain, Belgium.
EM bart.muys@kuleuven.be
RI Muys, Bart/A-3194-2015
OI Muys, Bart/0000-0001-9421-527X
FU Francqui Foundation, Belgium
FX Christian Messier (C. M.) was awarded an International Collen-Francqui
   Chair from the Francqui Foundation, Belgium.
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NR 30
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 2
U2 15
PU SPRINGER FRANCE
PI PARIS
PA 22 RUE DE PALESTRO, PARIS, 75002, FRANCE
SN 1286-4560
EI 1297-966X
J9 ANN FOREST SCI
JI Ann. For. Sci.
PD NOV 7
PY 2023
VL 80
IS 1
AR 43
DI 10.1186/s13595-023-01208-5
PG 3
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA X4LQ6
UT WOS:001098187400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU O'Neill, BC
   Crutzen, P
   Grübler, A
   Duong, MH
   Keller, K
   Kolstad, C
   Koomey, J
   Lange, A
   Obersteiner, M
   Oppenheimer, M
   Pepper, W
   Sanderson, W
   Schlesinger, M
   Treich, N
   Ulph, A
   Webster, M
   Wilson, C
AF O'Neill, Brian C.
   Crutzen, Paul
   Gruebler, Arnulf
   Duong, Minh Ha
   Keller, Klaus
   Kolstad, Charles
   Koomey, Jonathan
   Lange, Andreas
   Obersteiner, Michael
   Oppenheimer, Michael
   Pepper, William
   Sanderson, Warren
   Schlesinger, Michael
   Treich, Nicolas
   Ulph, Alistair
   Webster, Mort
   Wilson, Chris
TI Learning and climate change
SO CLIMATE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE learning; uncertainty; climate change; decision analysis
ID UNCERTAINTY
AB Learning - i.e. the acquisition of new information that leads to changes in our assessment of uncertainty plays a prominent role in the international climate policy debate. For example, the view that we should postpone actions until we know more continues to be influential. The latest work on learning and climate change includes new theoretical models, better informed simulations of how learning affects the optimal timing of emissions reductions, analyses of how new information could affect the prospects for reaching and maintaining political agreements and for adapting to climate change, and explorations of how learning could lead us astray rather than closer to the truth. Despite the diversity of this new work, a clear consensus on a central point is that the prospect of learning does not support the postponement of emissions reductions today.
C1 Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
   Brown Univ, Watson Inst Int Studies, Providence, RI USA.
   Max Planck Inst Chem, D-55128 Mainz, Germany.
   Yale Univ, Sch Forestry & Environm Studies, New Haven, CT USA.
   CIRED, CNRS, Paris, France.
   Penn State Univ, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
   Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Donald Bren Sch Environm Sci & Management, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA.
   Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   Univ Maryland, AREC, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
   Princeton Univ, Woodrow Wilson Sch, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA.
   Princeton Univ, Dept Geosci, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA.
   SUNY Stony Brook, Dept Econ, Stony Brook, NY USA.
   Univ Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801 USA.
   Toulouse Sch Econ, INRA, LERNA, Toulouse, France.
   Univ Manchester, Manchester, Lancs, England.
   Univ N Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
C3 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); Brown
   University; Max Planck Society; Yale University; Centre National de la
   Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); AgroParisTech; Institut Polytechnique de
   Paris; Ecole des Ponts ParisTech; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of
   Higher Education (PCSHE); Pennsylvania State University; Pennsylvania
   State University - University Park; University of California System;
   University of California Santa Barbara; Stanford University; University
   System of Maryland; University of Maryland College Park; Princeton
   University; Princeton University; State University of New York (SUNY)
   System; Stony Brook University; University of Illinois System;
   University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Universite de Toulouse;
   Universite Toulouse 1 Capitole; Toulouse School of Economics; INRAE;
   University of Manchester; University of North Carolina; University of
   North Carolina Chapel Hill
RP O'Neill, BC (corresponding author), Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
EM oneill@iiasa.ac.at
RI Koomey, Jonathan/AAR-6685-2021; Obersteiner, Michael/ADG-8592-2022;
   Sanderson, Warren/R-3398-2019; Crutzen, Paul/F-6044-2012; Oppenheimer,
   Michael/ACV-2153-2022; O'Neill, Brian/E-6531-2013; Gruebler,
   Arnulf/KCZ-0610-2024; Keller, Klaus/A-6742-2013; Treich,
   Nicolas/AAX-2608-2020
OI /0000-0001-9518-5308; Sanderson, Warren/0000-0002-2205-948X; Ha-Duong,
   Minh/0000-0001-9988-2100; Oppenheimer, Michael/0000-0002-9708-5914;
   Grubler, Arnulf/0000-0002-6225-7712
CR [Anonymous], AVOIDING DANGEROUS C
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NR 20
TC 19
Z9 23
U1 0
U2 19
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1469-3062
EI 1752-7457
J9 CLIM POLICY
JI Clim. Policy
PY 2006
VL 6
IS 5
BP 585
EP 589
DI 10.1080/14693062.2006.9685623
PG 5
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA 176LC
UT WOS:000247085600008
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chan, S
   Amling, W
AF Chan, Sander
   Amling, Wanja
TI Does orchestration in the Global Climate Action Agenda effectively
   prioritize and mobilize transnational climate adaptation action?
SO INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS-POLITICS LAW AND ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Orchestration; Governance; Climate change adaptation; UNFCCC; Non-state
   actors
ID NON-STATE; GOVERNANCE; INITIATIVES; UNFCCC
AB Climate change adaptation is increasingly seen as a question that involves globally connected vulnerabilities and impacts which necessitate transboundary action by non-state and subnational (transnational) actors. Traditional actors such as governments and international organizations leave deficits in norm development, enforcement, capacity building, and financing. Orchestration has been suggested under the functionalist assumption that transnational actors can make up for these deficits, through optimizing complementarity between the realms of international and transnational governance and through eliciting more action toward the achievement of globally agreed climate goals. In the context of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), orchestration has taken the form of an evolving Global Climate Action Agenda (GCAA). Few studies have examined the role of orchestration in bolstering transnational adaptation. This article therefore asks: Has the GCAA effectively mobilized and prioritized transnational adaptation action? Further, has it effectively addressed functional, participatory, and geographic deficits? Analyzing a unique dataset of a hundred cooperative climate actions, this study finds that current patterns are incongruent with some functionalist expectations. GCAA orchestration has featured a political prioritization of both adaptation and mitigation and a focus on building a positive narrative of climate action. This combination of priorities has led to neglect of underperforming actions-many of them adaptation actions in developing countries. Subsequent iterations of the GCAA failed to recognize these actions and did not identify support needed for them. This has strengthened the bias toward mitigation aspects of climate change and exacerbated imbalances in the geography of transnational action under the GCAA.
C1 [Chan, Sander] DIE, German Dev Inst, Bonn, Germany.
   [Chan, Sander] Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Utrecht, Netherlands.
C3 Deutsches Institut Entwicklungspolitik (DIE); Utrecht University
RP Chan, S (corresponding author), DIE, German Dev Inst, Bonn, Germany.
EM sander.chan@die-gdi.de
OI Chan, Sander/0000-0001-7852-3838
FU Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)
FX We wish to thank Dr. Robert Falkner, Research Director of the Grantham
   Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environmentand Associate
   Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics
   and Political Science (LSE), with whom an earlier version of the GAFCA
   database was developed. We also thank Johanna Goetz, Till Neukirch,
   Philipp Sebastian Voss, Matthew Goldberg, Jade Zhao, Alexander Rothe,
   and Friederike Eichhorn, for their assistance with data gathering. This
   work was conducted in the "Klimalog' project of the German Development
   Institute/Deutsches Institut fur Entwicklungspolitik (DIE), generously
   supported by the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and
   Development (BMZ).
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NR 62
TC 31
Z9 34
U1 2
U2 16
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1567-9764
EI 1573-1553
J9 INT ENVIRON AGREEM-P
JI Int. Environ. Agreem.-Polit. Law Econom.
PD OCT
PY 2019
VL 19
IS 4-5
SI SI
BP 429
EP 446
DI 10.1007/s10784-019-09444-9
PG 18
WC Economics; Environmental Studies; Law; Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Government & Law
GA IK5EN
UT WOS:000476608600005
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Medina, H
   Tian, D
AF Medina, Hanoi
   Tian, Di
TI Synergistic contributions of climate and management intensifications to
   maize yield trends from 1961 to 2017
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate; management intensification; crop yield; trend
ID UNITED-STATES; WINTER-WHEAT; CROP MANAGEMENT; IMPACTS; CORN;
   TEMPERATURE; VARIABILITY; EVAPOTRANSPIRATION; CULTIVARS; PHENOLOGY
AB Understanding contributions of climate and management intensifications to crop yield trends is essential to better adapt to climate changes and gauge future food security. Here we quantified the synergistic contributions of climate and management intensifications to maize yield trends from 1961 to 2017 in Iowa (United States) using a process-based modeling approach with a detailed climatic and agronomic observation database. We found that climate (management intensifications) contributes to approximately 10% (90%), 26% (74%), and 31% (69%) of the yield trends during 1961-2017, 1984-2013, and 1982-1998, respectively. However, the climate contributions show substantial decadal or multi-decadal variations, with the maximum decadal yield trends induced by temperature or radiation changes close to management intensifications induced trends while considerably larger than precipitation induced trends. Management intensifications can produce more yield gains with increased precipitation but greater losses of yields with increased temperature, with extreme drought conditions diminishing the yield gains, while radiation changes have little effect on yield gains from management intensifications. Under the management condition of recent years, the average trend at the higher warming level was about twice lower than that at the lower warming level, and the sensitivity of yield to warming temperature increased with management intensifications from 1961 to 2017. Due to such synergistic effects, management intensifications must account for global warming and incorporate climate adaptation strategies to secure future crop productions. Additional research is needed to understand how plausible adaptation strategies can mitigate synergistic effects from climate and management intensifications.
C1 [Medina, Hanoi; Tian, Di] Auburn Univ, Dept Crop Soil & Environm Sci, Auburn, AL 36849 USA.
   [Medina, Hanoi] RiceTec Inc, Alvin, TX USA.
C3 Auburn University System; Auburn University
RP Tian, D (corresponding author), Auburn Univ, Dept Crop Soil & Environm Sci, Auburn, AL 36849 USA.
EM tiandi@auburn.edu
OI Tian, Di/0000-0001-7752-947X
FU National Science Foundation CAREER award [EAR-2144293]; National
   Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Foundational and Applied
   Science program [USDA-2019-67021-29937]; NIFA Hatch program [1012578]
FX AcknowledgmentsThis work is supported in part by the National Science
   Foundation CAREER award (EAR-2144293), the National Institute of Food
   and Agriculture (NIFA) Foundational and Applied Science program
   (USDA-2019-67021-29937), and NIFA Hatch program (Accession No. 1012578).
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NR 54
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 4
U2 39
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD FEB 1
PY 2023
VL 18
IS 2
AR 024020
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/acb27f
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 8D7UO
UT WOS:000918493700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Saboohi, R
   Barani, H
   Khodagholi, M
   Sarvestani, AA
   Tahmasebi, A
   Feuer, HN
AF Saboohi, Razieh
   Barani, Hossein
   Khodagholi, Morteza
   Sarvestani, Ahmad Abedi
   Tahmasebi, Asghar
   Feuer, Hart Nadav
TI Aligning Trends in Climatic Parameters and Nomads' Indigenous Knowledge
   about Climate Change in Central Iran (Case Study: Semirom Town)
SO WEATHER CLIMATE AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Social Science; Climate change; Climate records; Downscaling; Time
   series; Adaptation; Indigenous knowledge
AB Nomadic pastoral communities are considered some of the most vulnerable to climate change. While Indigenous knowledge can play an effective role in mitigating or responding to some impacts of climate change, the extent of their capacity to adapt their livestock and rangeland management is under question. This research aims to assess the scope and applicability of climate change-related knowledge acquired in the management of summer rangeland, with a case study in Semirom, Isfahan Province, Iran. To do so, objective weather conditions (precipitation, minimum temperatures, and maximum temperatures) were evaluated using the Mann-Kendall nonparametric test and compared with subjective evaluations by nomad community members. Specifically, the study targeted a community of 7700 members of the Qashqai, a conglomeration of nomadic tribes in Iran. Their understanding of the weather was evaluated using focus groups and self-administered questionnaires, with a descriptive approach to data analysis. The findings of the climatic investigation revealed a possible shift in the climate in the study area, particularly in winter and autumn. The findings of subjective evaluation showed similar changes in wind, precipitation, and temperature to be the main characteristics of climate change in the region, with about 90% of informants directly citing decreasing precipitation and increasing temperature and wind speeds. The community evaluation also highlighted some adaptations to climate change, such as delays in beginning the seasonal migration, increased reliance on concrete homes, reservoir construction, decreasing livestock yields, and increasing diversification of resources to feed livestock. Understanding the perceptions of nomadic pastoralists, their meteorological basis, and ongoing climate adaptations can facilitate governmental planning.
C1 [Saboohi, Razieh; Barani, Hossein] Gorgan Univ Agr & Nat Resources, Dept Rangeland & Watershed Management, Gorgan, Golestan, Iran.
   [Khodagholi, Morteza] Agr Res Educ & Extens Org, Rangeland Res Div, Res Inst Forests & Rangelands, Tehran, Iran.
   [Sarvestani, Ahmad Abedi] Gorgan Univ Agr & Nat Resources, Fac Agr Management, Gorgan, Golestan, Iran.
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   Kyoto Univ, Div Nat Resource Econ, Kyoto, Japan.
C3 Kharazmi University; Kyoto University
RP Saboohi, R (corresponding author), Gorgan Univ Agr & Nat Resources, Dept Rangeland & Watershed Management, Gorgan, Golestan, Iran.
EM razieh_saboohi@yahoo.com
RI Abedi Sarvestani, Ahmad/AAC-7587-2019; Saboohi, Razieh/AGH-1479-2022;
   Tahmasebi, Asghar/AAX-6369-2020
OI Saboohi, Razieh/0000-0001-5165-570X; Abedi Sarvestani,
   Ahmad/0000-0002-5808-4505
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NR 46
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 3
PU AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
PI BOSTON
PA 45 BEACON ST, BOSTON, MA 02108-3693, UNITED STATES
SN 1948-8327
EI 1948-8335
J9 WEATHER CLIM SOC
JI Weather Clim. Soc.
PD JUL
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 3
BP 769
EP 782
DI 10.1175/WCAS-D-21-0041.1
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 7K4RK
UT WOS:000905271600009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hanger, S
   Haug, C
   Lung, T
   Bouwer, LM
AF Hanger, Susanne
   Haug, Constanze
   Lung, Tobias
   Bouwer, Laurens M.
TI Mainstreaming climate change in regional development policy in Europe:
   five insights from the 2007-2013 programming period
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate mainstreaming; Cohesion policy; Regional development; EU; Burden
   sharing
ID INDICATORS; ADAPTATION; INTEGRATION; CAPACITY
AB The EU Structural and Cohesion Funds (SCF) are potentially important instruments for supporting climate policy-related efforts and addressing unevenly distributed capacities for successful mitigation and adaptation across the EU. This paper reports on the level of climate mainstreaming in EU regional development policy in the 2007-2013 programming period: first, we explore the normative commitment to climate change concerns through an analysis of the National Strategic Reference Frameworks (NSRFs) in which all 27 Member States specify their development and funding priorities. Second, we analyze the substantive commitments by mapping financial allocations from the SCF related to climate mitigation and adaptation. Based on this, we gain five main insights, which are relevant to future mainstreaming efforts and which may have important implications for the wider debate on the purpose of European regional policy: (1) mitigation appears well mainstreamed in EU cohesion policies, both in normative and financial terms, whereas adaptation is hardly considered. (2) Rhetorical commitment to climate concerns in the strategy documents does not necessarily match financial allocations to respective priorities. (3) Neither mitigation nor adaptation-relevant priorities and allocations in the NSRFs can be linked to the ambitious mitigation targets and low adaptive capacity, respectively. (4) There is ample potential to improve climate-relevant SCF support in the area of adaptation, particularly given that several existing priority areas for funding coincide with the climate adaptation agenda. (5) By conditioning a minimum percentage of funds to be spent on priority areas (earmarking), cohesion policy also gains meaning as a burden sharing instrument for adaptation to climate change.
C1 [Hanger, Susanne] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
   [Hanger, Susanne; Haug, Constanze; Bouwer, Laurens M.] Vrije Univ, Inst Environm Studies IVM, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Lung, Tobias] IES, DG Joint Res Ctr JRC, European Commiss, I-21027 Ispra, VA, Italy.
   [Bouwer, Laurens M.] Deltares, NL-2600 MH Delft, Netherlands.
C3 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); Vrije
   Universiteit Amsterdam; European Commission Joint Research Centre; EC
   JRC ISPRA Site; Deltares
RP Hanger, S (corresponding author), Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Schlosspl 1, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
EM hanger@iiasa.ac.at
RI Bouwer, Laurens/AAV-7628-2021
OI Bouwer, Laurens/0000-0003-3498-2586; Hanger, Susanne/0000-0001-7223-9991
FU DG Research through the FP7 project European RESPONSES to Climate Change
FX The research for this study has been funded by DG Research through the
   FP7 project European RESPONSES to Climate Change. We would like to thank
   Eleni Dellas and Laura Meller for their help with the document analysis
   in Cyprus and Finland, as well as Anthony Patt and Tim Rayner for
   comments on an earlier draft of this paper. Finally, we are very
   grateful to the experts from DG Regio, who provided input on the
   weighting of priority themes and two anonymous reviewers for their
   constructive feedback. Any remaining errors of fact or interpretation
   are our own.
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NR 31
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 15
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD AUG
PY 2015
VL 15
IS 6
SI SI
BP 973
EP 985
DI 10.1007/s10113-013-0549-9
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CN2ZY
UT WOS:000358294000003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Harris-Glenville, F
   Cloos, P
AF Harris-Glenville, Fiona
   Cloos, Patrick
TI "I think they should give primary health care a little more priority".
   The primary health care in Caribbean SIDS: what can be said about
   adaptation to the changing climate? The case of Dominica- a qualitative
   study
SO BMC PRIMARY CARE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Primary health care; Caribbean; West Indies; Small
   islands developing states; Adaptation; Vulnerability; Essential public
   health functions; Essential environmental public health functions
AB BackgroundAdaptation to climate change (CC) is a priority for Small Island Developing States (SIDS) in the Caribbean, as these countries and territories are particularly vulnerable to climate-related events. Primary health care (PHC) is an important contributor to CC adaptation. However, knowledge on how PHC is prepared for CC in Caribbean SIDS is very limited. The aim of this paper is to discuss health system adaptation to climate change, with a focus on PHC.MethodsWe explored the perspectives of PHC professionals in Dominica on PHC adaptation to climate change. Focus group discussions (FGDs) were conducted in each of the seven health districts in Dominica, a Caribbean SIDS, between November 2021 and January 2022. The semi-structured interview guide was based on the Essential Public Health Functions: assessment, access to health care services, policy development and resource allocation. Data coding was organized accordingly.ResultsFindings suggest that health care providers perceive climate change as contributing to an increase in NCDs and mental health problems. Climate-related events create barriers to care and exacerbate the chronic deficiencies within the health system, especially in the absence of high-level policy support. Healthcare providers need to take a holistic view of health and act accordingly in terms of disease prevention and health promotion, epidemiological surveillance, and ensuring the widest possible access to healthcare, with a particular focus on the environmental and social determinants of vulnerability.ConclusionThe primary health care system is a key stakeholder in the design and operationalization of adaptation and transformative resilience. The Essential Public Health Functions should integrate social and climate and other environmental determinants of health to guide primary care activities to protect the health of communities. This study highlights the need for improved research on the linkages between climate events and health outcomes, surveillance, and development of plans informed by contextual knowledge in the SIDS.
C1 [Harris-Glenville, Fiona] Univ West Indies, Fac Med Sci, Dept Community Hlth & Psychiat, Mona Campus, Kingston, Jamaica.
   [Cloos, Patrick] Univ Montreal, Sch Social Work, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
   [Cloos, Patrick] Univ Montreal, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social & Prevent Med, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
   [Cloos, Patrick] Univ Montreal, Ctr Rech Sante Publ, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
C3 University West Indies Mona Jamaica; Universite de Montreal; Universite
   de Montreal; Universite de Montreal
RP Harris-Glenville, F (corresponding author), Univ West Indies, Fac Med Sci, Dept Community Hlth & Psychiat, Mona Campus, Kingston, Jamaica.
EM ftglenville@gmail.com
RI , Patrick Cloos/KHD-9628-2024
OI Harris-Glenville, Fiona/0009-0001-3514-1466
FU Programme Audace, Fonds de la recherche societe et culture (FQRSC),
   Quebec [2020-AUDC-272290]; Reseau de recherche en sante des populations
   du Quebec (Ethics and Global Health, RRSPQ)
FX This study was made possible by a grant from the programme Audace, Fonds
   de la recherche societe et culture (FQRSC), Quebec (2020-AUDC-272290)
   and a grant from the Reseau de recherche en sante des populations du
   Quebec (Ethics and Global Health, RRSPQ) awarded to Patrick Cloos. The
   funder had no role in study design, data collection or analysis or in
   drafting the manuscript. The funder did not provide Open Access funding.
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NR 54
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 5
PU BMC
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2731-4553
J9 BMC PRIM CARE
JI BMC Prim. Care
PD FEB 22
PY 2024
VL 25
IS 1
AR 65
DI 10.1186/s12875-024-02311-w
PG 15
WC Primary Health Care; Medicine, General & Internal
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC General & Internal Medicine
GA IY0D0
UT WOS:001169773600003
PM 38388362
OA Green Published, gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Ludwig, F
   Asseng, S
AF Ludwig, F.
   Asseng, S.
BE Zerger, A
   Argent, RM
TI Impacts and Adaptation to Climate Change in Western Australian Wheat
   Cropping Systems
SO MODSIM 2005: INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MODELLING AND SIMULATION:
   ADVANCES AND APPLICATIONS FOR MANAGEMENT AND DECISION MAKING: ADVANCES
   AND APPLICATIONS FOR MANAGEMENT AND DECISION MAKING
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Congress on Modelling and Simulation (MODSIM05)
CY DEC 12-15, 2005
CL Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
DE Climate change; APSIM; farming systems; wheat; plant traits; crop
   simulation model
ID WATER-DEFICIT; MODEL; APSIM; TEMPERATURE; PERFORMANCE; SIMULATION;
   NITROGEN; YIELD; CO2
AB The environment in which crops will be grown in the future will change. Temperatures and CO(2) concentrations [CO(2)] will increase. Also a decline in winter rainfall of up to 30% in 2070 is predicted for south-west Australia. Effects of climate change on cropping systems were simulated with the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM-Nwheat) using transformed historic weather data. Fifty years of yield were simulated for three soil types at different locations on a north - south transect within the wheatbelt of south-west Australia.
   Simulation results showed that there were complex interactions between different aspects of climate change on crop systems. Effects of higher temperatures, elevated [CO(2)] and changed rainfall were in general not linear and differed significantly between soil types and location. Higher [CO(2)] increased yield especially at drier sites while higher temperatures especially had a positive effect in the cooler and wetter southern part of the region. The main difference between soil types was that heavier clay soils were most vulnerable to reduced rainfall while sandy soils were more vulnerable to higher temperatures.
   We tested which changes in crop traits would be a good adaptation to climate change for wheat systems. Earlier flowering varieties can increase production at lower rainfall and ambient temperatures. At increased temperatures a later maturing variety will promote wheat production.
   On clay soils early vigor did not improve yields for historic and future climate scenarios. Also increased rooting depth did not positively affect yields on clay soils. So the options for adapting cropping systems to climate change on clay seem to be limited. This in combination with the results that yields on clay soils are reduced the most by climate change makes these soils very vulnerable to the impacts of a drying climate.
   On loamy sand soils however there are plenty of opportunities to adapt cropping systems to climate change. In addition to longer season varieties and early vigor also increased rooting depth can significantly increase yields under future climate change.
EM Fulco.Ludwig@CSIRO.au
RI Ludwig, Fulco/N-7732-2013; Asseng, Senthold/Y-6014-2019
OI Asseng, Senthold/0000-0002-7583-3811; LUDWIG, FULCO/0000-0001-6479-9657
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NR 12
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 13
PU UNIV WESTERN AUSTRALIA
PI NEDLANDS
PA NEDLANDS, WA, AUSTRALIA
BN 978-0-9758400-2-3
PY 2005
BP 512
EP 517
PG 6
WC Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Operations Research &
   Management Science; Mathematics, Applied; Mathematics, Interdisciplinary
   Applications
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Computer Science; Operations Research & Management Science; Mathematics
GA BUQ81
UT WOS:000290114100074
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Prityi, M
AF Prityi, Marek
BE Junker, KW
   Farah, PD
TI Going beyond the law The potential and limits of public participation in
   the context of sustainable development
SO GLOBALIZATION, ENVIRONMENTAL LAW, AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN THE
   GLOBAL SOUTH: Challenges for Implementation
SE Routledge Explorations in Environmental Studies
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; CITIZEN PARTICIPATION; RISK; ENVIRONMENT;
   CHINA; POLICY; TRUST
C1 [Prityi, Marek] Slovak Minist Environm, Bratislava, Slovakia.
RP Prityi, M (corresponding author), Slovak Minist Environm, Bratislava, Slovakia.
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NR 45
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 0
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-0-367-74926-2; 978-1-003-16023-6; 978-0-367-74913-2
J9 ROUTL EXPL ENV STUD
PY 2022
BP 256
EP 275
DI 10.4324/9781003160236-14
D2 10.4324/9781003160236
PG 20
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies; Law
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Government & Law
GA BT9EP
UT WOS:000859958300013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Turhan, E
   Kallis, G
   Zografos, C
AF Turhan, Ethemcan
   Kallis, Giorgos
   Zografos, Christos
BE LaJeunesse, I
   Larrue, C
TI Power Asymmetries, Migrant Agricultural Labour, and Adaptation
   Governance in Turkey: A Political Ecology of Double Exposures
SO FACING HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL EXTREME EVENTS: A GOVERNANCE ISSUE
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; AGRARIAN CHANGE; VULNERABILITY; INSECURITY;
   BASIN; WATERMELON; MANAGEMENT; DROUGHT
C1 [Turhan, Ethemcan] KTH Royal Inst Technol, Lab Environm Humanities, Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Kallis, Giorgos] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Inst Ciencia & Tecnol Ambientals ICTA, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Kallis, Giorgos] Inst Catalana Recerca & Estudis Avancats ICREA, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Zografos, Christos] Autonomous Univ Barcelona, Environm Sci & Technol Inst ICTA, Barcelona, Spain.
C3 Royal Institute of Technology; Autonomous University of Barcelona;
   ICREA; Autonomous University of Barcelona
RP Turhan, E (corresponding author), KTH Royal Inst Technol, Lab Environm Humanities, Stockholm, Sweden.
RI Zografos, Christos/AAH-7300-2021; KALLIS, GIORGOS/B-9448-2015
FU Generalitat de Catalunya
FX We would like to thank the editors and anonymous reviewers for their
   comments. Ethemcan Turhan acknowledges FI-DGR 2011 fellowship of
   Generalitat de Catalunya and two visiting research periods in Durham
   University and Middle East Technical University. We are most grateful to
   all seasonal workers and landowners, who contributed to this research,
   for their time and hospitality.
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NR 88
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
PI CHICHESTER
PA THE ATRIUM, SOUTHERN GATE, CHICHESTER PO19 8SQ, WEST SUSSEX, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-119-38346-8; 978-1-119-38354-3
PY 2020
BP 261
EP 281
PG 21
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA BQ7QY
UT WOS:000618331200013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhu, JX
   Wang, S
   Wang, DG
   Zeng, XT
   Cai, YP
   Zhang, BE
AF Zhu, Jinxin
   Wang, Shuo
   Wang, Dagang
   Zeng, Xueting
   Cai, Yanpeng
   Zhang, Boen
TI Upholding labor productivity with intensified heat stress: Robust
   planning for adaptation to climate change under uncertainty
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate projection; Labor productivity; Optimization; Uncertainty;
   Adaptation; Heat stress
ID HIGH-TEMPERATURE; URBAN MIGRATION; WORKFORCE; CHINA; MODEL; DECISIONS;
   IMPACTS
AB The intensification of heat stress in a changing climate poses great threats to both human health and labor productivity. It is of great practical importance to assess the impacts of climate-induced heat stress on labor productivity and to develop effective adaptation strategies. In this paper, an integrated optimization-based productivity restoration modeling framework is proposed for the first time to develop the optimal policies for adaptation to climate change. To address underlying uncertainties associated with climate and labor management systems, we take into account ensemble projections from five global climate models (GCMs) under two Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP2.6 and RCP8.5) and inexact system costs. The system costs, including direct and indirect costs such as management costs, energy costs, and labor costs, are presented as interval numbers due to inherent uncertainty caused by population growth, technology development, and other social-economic factors. Uncertain information can be effectively communicated into the optimization processes in this study to generate optimal and reliable decision alternatives. We find that the increased Wet-Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) will lead to a large reduction in labor capacities over China except for the Tibetan Plateau under both RCPs by the end of the 21st century. The less developed regions tend to achieve the minimum system cost by having labor productivity recovered through working overtime due to the relatively low cost of overtime. This could result in more heat-related work injuries in the less developed regions. Since the less developed regions are not heat-prone areas in China, the changing climate would be a more dangerous threat and cause more damages to these regions where the residents are less acclimatized to heat stress. Moreover, we obtain a range of minimum system costs from 1.86 to 8.97 billion dollars under RCP2.6 and from 9.42 to 32.31 billion dollars under RCP8.5 (about 0.2% of China's GDP in 2019, 0.01% of China's GDP projected in 2100 under a sustainable socio-economic development scenario) for the restoration of labor productivity in a warming climate. We argue that urgent actions are needed to mitigate global warming impacts on labor productivity.
C1 [Zhu, Jinxin; Wang, Dagang] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Geog & Planning, Guangzhou, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Shuo; Zhang, Boen] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Land Surveying & Geoinformat, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Zeng, Xueting] Capital Univ Econ & Business, Sch Labor Econ, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Cai, Yanpeng] Guangdong Univ Technol, Inst Environm & Ecol Engn, Guangzhou, Peoples R China.
C3 Sun Yat Sen University; Hong Kong Polytechnic University; Capital
   University of Economics & Business; Guangdong University of Technology
RP Wang, S (corresponding author), Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Land Surveying & Geoinformat, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
EM shuo.s.wang@polyu.edu.hk
RI Zeng, Xueting/HGA-5899-2022; Zhang, Boen/GPK-7523-2022; Chen,
   Xiang/JUF-0248-2023; Wang, Shuo/I-3017-2013
OI Zeng, Xueting/0000-0003-0540-5851; Wang, Shuo/0000-0001-7827-187X
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [51809223]; Hong Kong
   Research Grants Council Early Career Scheme [25222319]
FX CMIP5 data used in this paper are freely available at
   https://esgfnode.llnl.gov/projects/cmip5/.We acknowledge and thank the
   climate modeling groups (listed in Supplementary Information Table S1)
   in the World Climate Research Programme's Working Group on Coupled
   Modelling (which is responsible for CMIP5) for generating their model
   outputs and making them available. This research was supported by the
   National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 51809223) and
   the Hong Kong Research Grants Council Early Career Scheme (Grant No.
   25222319). The authors declare no competing financial interests.
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NR 46
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PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
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J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD NOV 1
PY 2021
VL 322
AR 129083
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.129083
EA OCT 2021
PG 13
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA WE6PF
UT WOS:000705744300002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mazza, G
   Sarris, D
AF Mazza, Gianluigi
   Sarris, Dimitrios
TI Identifying the full spectrum of climatic signals controlling a tree
   species' growth and adaptation to climate change
SO ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate-tree growth relationships; Dendroecology; Dendroclimatology;
   Standardization methods; Tree-rings; Water table; Pinus pinea
ID LOW-FREQUENCY VARIABILITY; PINUS-HALEPENSIS; TIME-SERIES; SILVER FIR;
   DROUGHT; VEGETATION; CARBON; ECOSYSTEMS; RESPONSES; FORESTS
AB Identifying the key climatic parameters controlling a tree species' growth in a given environment can improve our understanding of the species' adaptability to climate change. However, this can be significantly affected by the detection and analytical methodologies used, at least for water-limited ecosystems. To address this issue, we tested together for the first time the five key methods widely applied for detecting climatic drivers of tree growth. The test was applied on the growth dynamics of Pinus pinea L. (the last ca. 130 years) and for evaluating its climatic sensitivity (the last ca. 60 years), under contrasting climatic conditions, from sites in Italy and Greece. As predictors, we selected a high number of seasonal, annual, and multi-annual climate integration periods (626 variables in total for precipitation and SPEI) through running correlation analysis. Methods that retain low-frequency variability and persistence of past climatic signals in radial growth (ABD, RCS, and raw BAI) revealed that long-term precipitation accumulated over 3-6 years was the key driver for P. pinea growth in the wettest sites. These signals probably appeared because of the cumulative effects of past years' rainfall in determining water table levels. They would have been missed if low-frequency climate and growth variability were not considered, how it happens using standardized BAI and TRW. In the driest site, productivity was low and explained by 1-2 years precipitation signals, suggesting that mostly moisture stored in topsoil from more recent rainfall sustained P. pinea growth, a typical shallow-rooted species. Thus, the loss in root contact with the declining water table may explain the higher vulnerability to drought stress at its dry-end distribution range, particularly under low precipitation. A further drop in water table levels, driven by global warming, will most likely increase such vulnerability. Hence, conservation efforts will require maintaining a stable water table, prohibiting groundwater overexploitation at P. pinea habitats. Reducing competition from other deeper rooted tree species, better adapted to drought and fire, may further benefit the species' conservation status.
C1 [Mazza, Gianluigi] CREA Res Ctr Forestry & Wood, I-52100 Arezzo, Italy.
   [Sarris, Dimitrios] Univ Cyprus, Dept Biol Sci, CY-1678 Nicosia, Cyprus.
   [Sarris, Dimitrios] Open Univ Cyprus, Fac Pure & Appl Sci, CY-2252 Nicosia, Cyprus.
   [Sarris, Dimitrios] KES Res Ctr, CY-1055 Nicosia, Cyprus.
C3 University of Cyprus; Open University of Cyprus
RP Mazza, G (corresponding author), CREA Res Ctr Forestry & Wood, I-52100 Arezzo, Italy.
EM gianluigi.mazza@crea.gov.it
RI Mazza, Gianluigi/C-8955-2013
OI Sarris, Dimitrios/0000-0003-1379-1465
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NR 88
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 1
U2 16
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1470-160X
EI 1872-7034
J9 ECOL INDIC
JI Ecol. Indic.
PD NOV
PY 2021
VL 130
AR 108109
DI 10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.108109
EA AUG 2021
PG 12
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA UM6RG
UT WOS:000693457200009
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Sinclair, AJ
   Diduck, AP
   Parkins, JR
AF Sinclair, A. John
   Diduck, Alan P.
   Parkins, John R.
BE Hanna, K
TI INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO ACHIEVING MEANINGFUL PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IN
   NEXT-GENERATION IMPACT ASSESSMENT
SO ROUTLEDGE HANDBOOK OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT
SE Routledge Environment and Sustainability Handbooks
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT; EMPIRICAL
   LITERATURE; COMANAGEMENT; GOVERNANCE; OUTCOMES
C1 [Sinclair, A. John] Univ Manitoba, Nat Resources Inst, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
   [Diduck, Alan P.] Univ Winnipeg, Dept Environm Studies & Sci, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
   [Parkins, John R.] Univ Alberta, Dept Resource Econ & Environm Sociol, Environm Sociol, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
C3 University of Manitoba; University of Winnipeg; University of Alberta
RP Sinclair, AJ (corresponding author), Univ Manitoba, Nat Resources Inst, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
RI Parkins, John/M-2702-2016
CR [Anonymous], 2016, The IAP2 public participation spectrum
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NR 60
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-032-13001-9; 978-0-429-28249-2; 978-0-367-24447-7
J9 Routldg Env Sustain
PY 2022
BP 239
EP 258
DI 10.4324/9780429282492-15
D2 10.4324/9780429282492
PG 20
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BV8PV
UT WOS:001080732400015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kom, Z
   Nethengwe, NS
   Mpandeli, S
   Chikoore, H
AF Kom, Zongho
   Nethengwe, Nthaduleni S.
   Mpandeli, Sylvester
   Chikoore, Hector
TI Indigenous knowledge indicators employed by farmers for adaptation to
   climate change in rural South Africa
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE indigenous knowledge systems; adaptation strategies; local farmers;
   Vhembe district; indigenous indicators; climate change
ID TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE; FORECASTS; PERCEPTION; BEHAVIOR;
   PROVINCE; WEATHER; REGION
AB The majority of indigenous farmers in South Africa depend on rain-fed agricultural production for their livelihoods. Reliable indigenous weather forecasts are, therefore, required to guide rural farmers' decisions in regard to climate change. Much of the literature has shown that western scientific knowledge has failed at rural level. Indigenous knowledge has, for the past century assisted rural farmers' households in tackling the challenges of climate stressors and enhanced decision-making for adaptation. There is, therefore, much room for advancement in assessment processes to ensure adequate credit for indigenous knowledge systems. This study aimed to address two major knowledge gaps (i) to assess the relevance of indigenous knowledge in weather forecasts used by local farmers for climate adaptation, and (ii) examine farmers' perceptions in regard to climate change in Levubu and Nwanedi sites. Indigenous knowledge indicators used by farmers for weather forecasting, within their communities, were collected through questionnaires, interviews and focus group discussions. The results revealed various forms of indigenous indicators used by local farmers for weather forecasting, such as, star and moon movement, appearance of red and black ants and mist-cover on mountains. A better knowledge of indigenous knowledge systems should play an important role in determining suitable adaptation strategies toward climate change. It is recommended, hence, that policy makers should enhance indigenous knowledge among local communities regarding the implications of climatic stressors to increase crop production.
C1 [Kom, Zongho; Nethengwe, Nthaduleni S.; Mpandeli, Sylvester] Univ Venda, Fac Sci Engn & Agr, Dept Geog & Environm Sci, Thohoyandou, Limpopo Provinc, South Africa.
   [Mpandeli, Sylvester] Water Res Commiss, Pretoria, South Africa.
   [Chikoore, Hector] Univ Limpopo, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, Polokwane, Limpopo, South Africa.
C3 University of Venda; University of Limpopo
RP Kom, Z (corresponding author), Univ Venda, Fac Sci Engn & Agr, Dept Geog & Environm Sci, Thohoyandou, Limpopo Provinc, South Africa.
EM zogokom@yahoo.fr
RI Kom, Zongho/AAV-7123-2021; Mpandeli, Sylvester/KDP-0391-2024; Chikoore,
   Hector/AAS-4123-2021
OI khorombi, musiiwa/0009-0001-9152-7312; Kom, Zongho/0000-0002-3294-8651
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NR 61
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 2
U2 25
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-0568
EI 1360-0559
J9 J ENVIRON PLANN MAN
JI J. Environ. Plan. Manag.
PD NOV 10
PY 2023
VL 66
IS 13
BP 2778
EP 2793
DI 10.1080/09640568.2022.2086854
EA JUN 2022
PG 16
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA Q3VF9
UT WOS:000818840500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lu, X
   Wrathall, DJ
   Sundsoy, PR
   Nadiruzzaman, M
   Wetter, E
   Iqbal, A
   Qureshi, T
   Tatem, AJ
   Canright, GS
   Engo-Monsen, K
   Bengtsson, L
AF Lu, Xin
   Wrathall, David J.
   Sundsoy, Pal Roe
   Nadiruzzaman, Md.
   Wetter, Erik
   Iqbal, Asif
   Qureshi, Taimur
   Tatem, Andrew J.
   Canright, Geoffrey S.
   Engo-Monsen, Kenth
   Bengtsson, Linus
TI Detecting climate adaptation with mobile network data in Bangladesh:
   anomalies in communication, mobility and consumption patterns during
   cyclone Mahasen
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Migration; Resilience; Mobile network data;
   Anomaly detection; Disaster risk
ID TEMPERATURE; OSCILLATION; MIGRATION; ELEVATION; TRENDS
AB Large-scale data from digital infrastructure, like mobile phone networks, provides rich information on the behavior of millions of people in areas affected by climate stress. Using anonymized data on mobility and calling behavior from 5.1 million Grameenphone users in Barisal Division and Chittagong District, Bangladesh, we investigate the effect of Cyclone Mahasen, which struck Barisal and Chittagong in May 2013. We characterize spatiotemporal patterns and anomalies in calling frequency, mobile recharges, and population movements before, during and after the cyclone. While it was originally anticipated that the analysis might detect mass evacuations and displacement from coastal areas in the weeks following the storm, no evidence was found to suggest any permanent changes in population distributions. We detect anomalous patterns of mobility both around the time of early warning messages and the storm's landfall, showing where and when mobility occurred as well as its characteristics. We find that anomalous patterns of mobility and calling frequency correlate with rainfall intensity (r = .75, p < 0.05) and use calling frequency to construct a spatiotemporal distribution of cyclone impact as the storm moves across the affected region. Likewise, from mobile recharge purchases we show the spatiotemporal patterns in people's preparation for the storm in vulnerable areas. In addition to demonstrating how anomaly detection can be useful for modeling human adaptation to climate extremes, we also identify several promising avenues for future improvement of disaster planning and response activities.
C1 [Lu, Xin; Bengtsson, Linus] Karolinska Inst, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Lu, Xin; Wetter, Erik; Tatem, Andrew J.; Bengtsson, Linus] Flowminder Fdn, Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Lu, Xin] Natl Univ Def Technol, Coll Informat Syst & Management, Changsha, Hunan, Peoples R China.
   [Wrathall, David J.] Oregon State Univ, Coll Earth Ocean & Atmospher Sci, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
   [Sundsoy, Pal Roe; Iqbal, Asif; Qureshi, Taimur; Canright, Geoffrey S.; Engo-Monsen, Kenth] Telenor Res, Oslo, Norway.
   [Nadiruzzaman, Md.] Univ Exeter, Dept Geog, Exeter, Devon, England.
   [Nadiruzzaman, Md.] Int Ctr Climate Change & Dev, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Wetter, Erik] Stockholm Sch Econ, Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Tatem, Andrew J.] Univ Southampton, Dept Geog & Environm, WorldPop, Southampton, Hants, England.
C3 Karolinska Institutet; National University of Defense Technology -
   China; Oregon State University; University of Exeter; Stockholm School
   of Economics; University of Southampton
RP Bengtsson, L (corresponding author), Karolinska Inst, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Stockholm, Sweden.; Bengtsson, L (corresponding author), Flowminder Fdn, Stockholm, Sweden.
EM linus.bengtsson@flowminder.org
RI Iqbal, Asif/A-6742-2011; Nadiruzzaman/AAF-4528-2019; Wetter,
   Erik/KFT-0764-2024; Engø-Monsen, Kenth/M-3223-2019; Nadiruzzaman,
   Md/AAD-2520-2021; Engo-Monsen, Kenth/A-2838-2011; lu, xin/C-1940-2009
OI Tatem, Andrew/0000-0002-7270-941X; Nadiruzzaman, Md/0000-0002-4829-5114;
   Engo-Monsen, Kenth/0000-0003-1618-7597; lu, xin/0000-0002-3547-6493;
   Wetter, Erik/0000-0002-5821-6651
FU Rockefeller Foundation; Munich Re Foundation; United Nations
   University-Institute for Environment and Human Security; International
   Centre for Climate Change and Development; Natural Science Foundation of
   China [71301165, 71522014]; Wellcome Trust [106866/Z/15/Z]; Bill and
   Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1106427, 1032350, OPP1134076, OPP1117016];
   Swedish Research Council; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1117016,
   OPP1134076] Funding Source: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
FX Grameenphone provided data, analysis and dedicated support to the
   project. The Bangladesh Telecommunications Regulatory Commission
   provided guidance and assured that the project adhered to regulatory
   standards. Rockefeller Foundation financed the work. DW and MN
   acknowledge Munich Re Foundation, United Nations University-Institute
   for Environment and Human Security, and the International Centre for
   Climate Change and Development for salary support. XL acknowledges the
   Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant Nos. 71301165 and
   71522014. AJT is supported by Wellcome Trust Sustaining Health Grant
   (106866/Z/15/Z) and funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
   (OPP1106427, 1032350, OPP1134076, OPP1117016). LB was funded by the
   Swedish Research Council. Stephen Roddick helped to assemble the project
   team.
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NR 49
TC 41
Z9 42
U1 2
U2 33
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD OCT
PY 2016
VL 138
IS 3-4
BP 505
EP 519
DI 10.1007/s10584-016-1753-7
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA DW4LS
UT WOS:000383615200011
PM 32355373
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Meng, M
   Dabrowski, M
   Stead, D
AF Meng, Meng
   Dabrowski, Marcin
   Stead, Dominic
TI Governing Resilience Planning: Organizational Structures, Institutional
   Rules, and Fiscal Incentives in Guangzhou
SO LAND
LA English
DT Article
DE water management; urban planning; flood governance; climate adaptation;
   urban resilience
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; FLOOD RISK; MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE; PATH
   DEPENDENCE; CITIES; MANAGEMENT; WATER; CHALLENGES; POLITICS; BARRIERS
AB Researchers and policymakers have long called for a collaborative governance process for climate adaptation and flood resilience. However, this is usually challenging when urban planning is supposed to be integrated with water management. Using the Chinese city of Guangzhou as a case study, this study explores the long-term disadvantaged conditions of urban planning in flood governance and how this situation is shaped. The findings show that, in comparison to the increasingly dominant position of water management in flood affairs, the urban planning system has had weak powers, limited legitimate opportunities, and insufficient fiscal incentives from the 2000s to the late 2010s. Those conditions have been shaped by organizational structures, institutional rules, and financial allocation in urban governance, whose changes did not bring benefits to urban planning. The emergence of the Sponge City Program in China in 2017 and its implementation at the municipal level is deemed to be a new start for urban planning, considering the encouragement of nature-based solutions and regulatory tools in land use for flood resilience. Even so, the future of this program is still full of challenges and more efforts are needed.
C1 [Meng, Meng] South China Univ Technol, Fac Architecture, Dept Urban Planning, Guangzhou 510641, Peoples R China.
   [Meng, Meng] State Key Lab Subtrop Bldg Sci, Guangzhou 510641, Peoples R China.
   [Dabrowski, Marcin] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Architecture & Built Environm, Dept Urbanism, NL-2628 BL Delft, Netherlands.
   [Stead, Dominic] Aalto Univ, Sch Engn, Dept Built Environm, Espoo 02150, Finland.
C3 South China University of Technology; Delft University of Technology;
   Aalto University
RP Dabrowski, M (corresponding author), Delft Univ Technol, Fac Architecture & Built Environm, Dept Urbanism, NL-2628 BL Delft, Netherlands.
EM m.m.dabrowski@tudelft.nl
RI Meng, Meng/GPK-8447-2022
OI Stead, Dominic/0000-0002-8198-785X; meng, meng/0000-0002-7306-0544
FU National Youth Science Fund Project of the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China [52108050]; State Key Laboratory of Subtropical
   Building Science at South China University of Technology [2022ZB08];
   Guangzhou Science and Technology Program [202201010503]; China
   Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021M701238]
FX This research was funded by the National Youth Science Fund Project of
   the National Natural Science Foundation of China (52108050), the State
   Key Laboratory of Subtropical Building Science at South China University
   of Technology (2022ZB08), the Guangzhou Science and Technology Program
   (202201010503), and the fellowship of China Postdoctoral Science
   Foundation (2021M701238).
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TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 29
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-445X
J9 LAND-BASEL
JI Land
PD FEB
PY 2023
VL 12
IS 2
AR 417
DI 10.3390/land12020417
PG 18
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 9K7XA
UT WOS:000941075400001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Zoumaki, M
   Tzetzis, D
   Mansour, G
AF Zoumaki, M.
   Tzetzis, D.
   Mansour, G.
BE Nitu, EL
   Slatineanu, L
   Iordache, MD
   Plaiasu, AG
   Dodun, O
   Nagit, G
   Stanescu, ND
   Anghel, DC
   Rizea, AC
   Clenci, AC
   Oproescu, M
TI Development and characterization of starch - based nanocomposite
   materials
SO INNOVATIVE MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING AND ENERGY (IMANEE 2019) - 50 YEARS
   OF HIGHER TECHNICAL EDUCATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF PITESTI
SE IOP Conference Series-Materials Science and Engineering
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 23rd International Conference on Innovative Manufacturing Engineering
   and Energy (IManEE)
CY MAY 22-24, 2019
CL Univ Pitesti, Pitesti, ROMANIA
SP Grp Renault Romania, DMG Mori Romania, A & C International Road Cargo, Gold Plast Prod, Eliton Trans, Grupul Industrial Componente, Delta Rom Technologies, Faurecia Romania, Componente Auto Topoloveni
HO Univ Pitesti
ID MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES; CLAY NANOCOMPOSITES; PLASTICIZER
AB Nature has developed several biodegradable materials which can be used in architectural and civil engineering to address the challenges of a more sustainable construction and housing industry to mitigate and adapt to climate change. Nowadays, there is an increasing interest in using biodegradable polymers from renewable resources such as starch and cellulose derivatives in the global plastic industry in order to reduce the environmental pollution caused by the petroleum-based traditional synthetic plastic waste. In this study, conventional composite and nanocomposite films of plasticized corn starch were prepared with sodium montmorillonite clay by a solution mixing procedure with glycerol as a plasticizer. The obtained nanocomposite microstructures were ascertained by XRD and SEM techniques and the tensile properties were investigated as a function of clay and plasticizer contents, in order to analyze the mechanical properties of the films.
C1 [Zoumaki, M.; Mansour, G.] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Dept Mech Engn, Lab Machine Tools & Mfg Engn, Thessaloniki, Greece.
   [Tzetzis, D.] Int Hellen Univ, Sch Sci & Technol, Thessaloniki, Greece.
C3 Aristotle University of Thessaloniki; International Hellenic University
RP Zoumaki, M (corresponding author), Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Dept Mech Engn, Lab Machine Tools & Mfg Engn, Thessaloniki, Greece.
EM mariazita687@gmail.com
FU European Union (European Social Fund-ESF) through the Operational
   Program "Human Resources Development, Education and Lifelong Learning"
   [MIS-5000432]
FX This research is co-financed by Greece and the European Union (European
   Social Fund-ESF) through the Operational Program "Human Resources
   Development, Education and Lifelong Learning" in the context of the
   project "Strengthening Human Resources Research Potential via Doctorate
   Research" (MIS-5000432), implemented by the State Scholarships
   Foundation (IKY).
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NR 23
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 0
U2 1
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1757-8981
J9 IOP CONF SER-MAT SCI
PY 2019
VL 564
AR 012037
DI 10.1088/1757-899X/564/1/012037
PG 7
WC Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Manufacturing
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA BP7NC
UT WOS:000562599900037
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Apresian, SR
AF Apresian, Stanislaus Risadi
TI The Contestation of National Adaptation Policies in Indonesia
SO JOURNAL OF CURRENT SOUTHEAST ASIAN AFFAIRS
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Indonesia; climate change adaptation; polycentric governance;
   contestation; sectoral ego
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE POLICY; POLYCENTRIC GOVERNANCE; FOREST GOVERNANCE; REDD
   PLUS; POWER; CHALLENGES; COVID-19
AB Indonesia actively supports the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change to achieve the Global Goal on Adaptation by setting ambitious climate change adaptation pledges in its Nationally Determined Contributions. This paper explores the implementation of those adaptation commitments within a polycentric governance structure in Indonesia. There is a debate about whether polycentric institutions help or hinder the effectiveness of adaptation outcomes. The question remains, why is the implementation of climate change adaptation policies in Indonesia ineffective? This paper argues that the contestation between the National Development Planning Agency and the Ministry of Environment and Forestry, as two dominant ministries in adaptation, has beset the polycentric structure of adaptation governance in Indonesia and resulted in ineffective adaptation policy implementation. Moreover, the polycentric adaptation governance is ineffective because Indonesia is still facing problems in coordination, collaboration, policy learning, leadership, resource distribution, and dispersion of power.
C1 [Apresian, Stanislaus Risadi] Univ Leeds, Sch Polit & Int Studies, Leeds, England.
   [Apresian, Stanislaus Risadi] Parahyangan Catholic Univ, Int Relat Dept, Bandung, West Java, Indonesia.
C3 University of Leeds; Universitas Katolik Parahyangan
RP Apresian, SR (corresponding author), Parahyangan Catholic Univ, Int Relat Dept, Bandung, West Java, Indonesia.
EM risadi.apresian@unpar.ac.id
FU Indonesia Endowment Funds for Education (LPDP)
FX The author received financial support for the research from the
   Indonesia Endowment Funds for Education (LPDP).
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NR 71
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 4
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 1868-1034
EI 1868-4882
J9 J CURR SE ASIAN AFF
JI J. Curr. Southeast Asian Aff.
PD 2024 NOV 13
PY 2024
DI 10.1177/18681034241290815
EA NOV 2024
PG 30
WC Area Studies; International Relations; Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies; International Relations; Government & Law
GA L8S8O
UT WOS:001353374500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ali, A
   Erenstein, O
AF Ali, Akhter
   Erenstein, Olaf
TI Assessing farmer use of climate change adaptation practices and impacts
   on food security and poverty in Pakistan
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Food security; Propensity score matching; Poverty;
   Pakistan
ID PROPENSITY SCORE; LIVELIHOOD DIVERSIFICATION; DETERMINANTS; STRATEGIES;
   VULNERABILITY; ADOPTION; AGRICULTURE; TECHNOLOGY; RESPONSES
AB Climate change is set to be particularly disruptive in poor agricultural communities. We assess the factors influencing farmers' choice of climate change adaptation practices and associated impacts on household food security and poverty in Pakistan using comprehensive data from 950 farmers from its major provinces. A probit model was used to investigate the factors influencing the use of climate-change adaptation practices; the censored least absolute deviation (CLAD) was used to analyze the determinants of the number of adaptation practices used; and a propensity score matching (PSM) approach was employed to evaluate the impact of adaptation practices on food security and poverty levels. Adjustment in sowing time (22% households), use of drought tolerant varieties (15%) and shifting to new crops (25%) were the three major adaptation practices used by farmers in the study area. Results show that younger farmers and farmers with higher levels of education are more likely to use these adaptation practices, as do farmers that are wealthier, farm more land and have joint families. The number of adaptation practices used was found to be positively associated with education, male household heads, land size, household size, extension services, access to credit and wealth. Farmers adopting more adaptation practices had higher food security levels (8-13%) than those who did not, and experienced lower levels of poverty (3-6%). Climate change adaptation practices at farm level can thereby have significant development outcomes in addition to reducing exposure to weather risks. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license
C1 [Ali, Akhter] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, NARC, Pk Rd, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Erenstein, Olaf] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, Socioecon Program, Texcoco, Mexico.
C3 National Agricultural Research Council - Pakistan; CGIAR; International
   Maize & Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT); CGIAR; International Maize &
   Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT)
RP Ali, A (corresponding author), Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, NARC, Pk Rd, Islamabad, Pakistan.
EM akhter.ali@cgiar.org
OI Erenstein, Olaf/0000-0002-7491-5786
FU United States Agency for International Development (USAID) -
   Agricultural Innovation Program (AIP) for Pakistan; Consortium Research
   Program (CRP) on WHEAT and MAIZE
FX This study was made possible through the support provided by the United
   States Agency for International Development (USAID) funded Agricultural
   Innovation Program (AIP) for Pakistan. We also thank the Consortium
   Research Program (CRP) on WHEAT and MAIZE for supporting this study. The
   contents and opinions expressed herein are those of the author(s) and do
   not necessarily reflect the views of USAID, or the authors' institution,
   and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes.
   The usual disclaimer applies.
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NR 62
TC 383
Z9 402
U1 13
U2 139
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2017
VL 16
BP 183
EP 194
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2016.12.001
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA FB0RK
UT WOS:000405852000014
OA gold
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fünfgeld, H
AF Fuenfgeld, Hartmut
TI Facilitating local climate change adaptation through transnational
   municipal networks
SO CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
ID ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE; MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE; UNITED-STATES;
   PARTNERSHIPS; POLICY; CITIES; POLITICS; COOPERATION; MANAGEMENT;
   KNOWLEDGE
AB There is now a broad agreement that the majority of climate change adaptation efforts will need to take place at the local scale, making local government an important player in this field. In many developed countries, local governments have been leading local adaptation efforts and innovation. In the local government sector, transnational municipal networks (TMNs) have been particularly instrumental in advancing knowledge and methods for climate change mitigation at the local scale, but less is known about their catalytic potential for local adaptation planning and implementation. This paper reviews recent studies on the role of TMNs and discusses their potential for adaptation in light of experiences with TMN-driven mitigation programs.
C1 RMIT Univ, Ctr Urban Res, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia.
C3 Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT)
RP Fünfgeld, H (corresponding author), RMIT Univ, Ctr Urban Res, POB 2476, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia.
EM hartmut.fuenfgeld@rmit.edu.au
RI Fünfgeld, Hartmut/JEP-2181-2023; Funfgeld, Hartmut/C-5962-2011
OI Funfgeld, Hartmut/0000-0003-0359-8207
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NR 64
TC 120
Z9 131
U1 5
U2 51
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1877-3435
EI 1877-3443
J9 CURR OPIN ENV SUST
JI Curr. Opin. Environ. Sustain.
PD FEB
PY 2015
VL 12
BP 67
EP 73
DI 10.1016/j.cosust.2014.10.011
PG 7
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CA3XQ
UT WOS:000348838800012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Smart, LS
   Seekamp, E
   Van Berkel, D
   Vukomanovic, J
   Smith, JW
AF Smart, Lindsey S.
   Seekamp, Erin
   Van Berkel, Derek
   Vukomanovic, Jelena
   Smith, Jordan W.
TI Socio-spatial factors influence climate change adaptation decisions of
   rural coastal landowners
SO LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Sea level rise; Community resilience; Climate change adaptation; Stated
   preference experiment
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; FOREST MANAGEMENT; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; RISK
   PERCEPTION; FARMERS; PAYMENTS; FLOOD; PARTICIPATION; PREFERENCES;
   MITIGATION
AB ContextSea level rise will have unprecedented impacts on rural coastal communities. Adaptation will be a critical strategy to reduce community vulnerability, but requires a change in land management behaviors, the capacity for which is affected by a wide range of social-psychological factors.ObjectivesBecause much of the USA coastal landscape is privately owned, success of climate change adaptation strategies in communities depends on landowner support. We take a step in determining coastal community resilience by identifying the factors influencing landowners' adaptation decisions.MethodsWe used a stated preference experiment, administered via household survey in rural coastal North Carolina, USA, to elicit landowners' climate change adaptation intentions. We combined survey responses with spatial data on landowner- and landscape-characteristics to map adaptation support for the study area. We identified the set of scenarios resulting in the greatest adaptation benefit by overlaying models of sea level rise.ResultsWe found adaptation support was higher for forest landowners than agricultural landowners; both preferred programs with higher payments and shorter contract lengths. Adaptation by neighboring landowners increased support, regardless of payment level or contract length. Maps of adaptation support did not directly align with objective risk maps, highlighting the need to consider diverse socio-spatial characteristics driving decision-making.ConclusionsBy integrating social preference data with landscape models, we mapped the aggregate impacts of social processes on the location of intended adaptation. Results from this study can motivate resource managers to consider diverse social-psychological factors as they develop climate change adaptation incentives for long-term resilience.
C1 [Smart, Lindsey S.; Vukomanovic, Jelena] North Carolina State Univ, Ctr Geospatial Analyt, 2800 Faucette Dr, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
   [Seekamp, Erin; Vukomanovic, Jelena] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Pk Recreat & Tourism Management, 2800 Faucette Dr, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
   [Van Berkel, Derek] Univ Michigan, Sch Environm & Sustainabil, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Smith, Jordan W.] Utah State Univ, Dept Environm & Soc, Logan, UT 84322 USA.
C3 North Carolina State University; North Carolina State University;
   University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; Utah System of
   Higher Education; Utah State University
RP Smart, LS (corresponding author), North Carolina State Univ, Ctr Geospatial Analyt, 2800 Faucette Dr, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
EM lssmart@ncsu.edu
RI Smith, Jordan/GVU-3480-2022; Smart, Lindsey/ADN-3370-2022
OI Seekamp, Erin/0000-0001-5082-1921; Smart, Lindsey/0000-0002-1366-6528
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NR 84
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 13
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-2973
EI 1572-9761
J9 LANDSCAPE ECOL
JI Landsc. Ecol.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 38
IS 12
BP 4365
EP 4383
DI 10.1007/s10980-023-01734-7
EA JUL 2023
PG 19
WC Ecology; Geography, Physical; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography; Geology
GA GC5U4
UT WOS:001039254000002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Menike, LMCS
   Arachchi, AGPK
AF Menike, L. M. C. S.
   Arachchi, A. G. P. Keeragala
BE Walpita, CN
   Sorgeloos, P
   Karunasagar, I
   Ranaweera, KKDS
TI Adaptation to climate change by smallholder farmers in rural
   communities: Evidence from Sri Lanka
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF SABARAGAMUWA UNIVERSITY OF SRI LANKA 2015
   (ICSUSL 2015)
SE Procedia Food Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference of Sabaragamuwa-University-of-Sri Lanka
   (ICSUSL)
CY 2015
CL Sabaragamuwa Univ Sri Lanka, Colombo, SRI LANKA
HO Sabaragamuwa Univ Sri Lanka
DE Adaptation methods; climate change; logistic regression; smallholder
   farmers; Sri Lanka
AB The agricultural sector plays a key role in Sri Lankan economy, whose major source of livelihoods is smallholder farming in paddy and vegetable cultivation which is highly vulnerable to climate changes having negative impact on food security. To overcome the welfare losses, the smallholder farmers need to identify the changes in climatic variables and adjust to their farming practices to cope up with the climate change. Thus, this study examines how rural smallholder farmers in different agroecological zones in Sri Lanka perceive climate change and accordingly adapt to it in their agricultural practices. A questionnaire survey was conducted with a random sample of 125 farmer households distributed in most vulnerable four agro-ecological zones namely, Belihuloya, Ihala Galagama, Mulgama and Kosgama in up country inter mediate zone. The study shows that all the respondents have observed rising trends in temperature and winds and lack of adequate rainfall during last twenty years and in response they have grown short season crops as the main farming practice to adapt to minimize the potential losses on their yields. The results of the logistic regression revealed that social economic factors, environmental factors, institutional factors and the economic structure influence farmers' choice of adaptation methods to climate change. The size of the household, income, education, accessibility to climate information through television and radio, being a member in farmers' group, location of the land, crop variety, access to formal loans and distance to input markets had significantly affected adaptation. For instance the farmers who grow beans as the major crop to adapt to climate change has 94% probability with compared to those farmers who do not grow other crops whereas the farmers who come to know the changing patterns of the climate through television and radio have a higher probability (94%) of adaptation to the climate change than those who use other media. Sri Lankan government requires facilitating the smallholder farmers to overcome the constraints in which they face in using adaptation methods to climate change so that the welfare of the farmers and growth of the agricultural sector can be ensured. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Menike, L. M. C. S.] Sabaragamuwa Univ Sri Lanka, Dept Accountancy & Finance, POB 02, Belihuloya, Sri Lanka.
   [Arachchi, A. G. P. Keeragala] Sabaragamuwa Univ Sri Lanka, Dept Nat Resources, POB 02, Belihuloya, Sri Lanka.
C3 Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka; Sabaragamuwa University of Sri
   Lanka
RP Menike, LMCS (corresponding author), Sabaragamuwa Univ Sri Lanka, Dept Accountancy & Finance, POB 02, Belihuloya, Sri Lanka.
CR [Anonymous], APPL MICROIRRIGATION
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NR 7
TC 51
Z9 59
U1 1
U2 8
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2211-601X
J9 PROC FOOD SCI
PY 2016
VL 6
BP 288
EP 292
DI 10.1016/j.profoo.2016.02.057
PG 5
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences; Food Science & Technology
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Food Science
   & Technology
GA BG2NJ
UT WOS:000387491600056
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Arnell, NW
   Delaney, EK
AF Arnell, Nigel W.
   Delaney, E. Kate
TI Adapting to climate change: Public water supply in England and Wales
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID POTENTIAL IMPACTS; CHANGE SCENARIOS; RIVER FLOWS; ADAPTATION;
   VARIABILITY; RESOURCES; UK; VULNERABILITY; UNCERTAINTY; TERM
AB This paper describes an assessment of the ways in which water supply companies in England and Wales are adapting to climate change, evaluated in the context of a model of the adaptation process. The four components of the model are (i) awareness of and concern about the potential impacts of climate change, (ii) adaptation strategy, (iii) the concept of an adaptation space from which options are selected, and (iv) the notion that three groups of factors influence awareness, strategy and option selection: susceptibility to change, internal characteristics of the organisation, and regulatory and market context.
   Public water supply in England and Wales is provided by private sector companies, subject to environmental and economic regulation. Hydrological simulations suggest that climate change has the potential to reduce the reliability of supply sources over the next few decades. The industry in December 2004 completed a review of investment requirements over the next five years.
   Awareness of climate change is high in the water industry, but by developing assessment procedures and incorporating them into the investment review the regulators forced companies to consider explicitly the potential impacts of climate change in a consistent and rigorous manner. These analyses combined climate change with other pressures on water resources, and in practice companies did not attribute specific investment decisions or proposals to climate change or indeed any other individual drivers. The broad strategy adopted by all water supply companies - to maintain standards of service - is determined by regulatory controls and market considerations, but the degree of concern about the impacts of climate change and precise adaptation options necessary to address supply-demand imbalances varied between water supply companies, reflecting local geographic conditions. The water supply companies and regulators have different perspectives on the relative merits of supply-side and demand-side measures, reflecting different organisational priorities.
   The 2004 investment review determined that no specific actions were necessary to deal with future climate change, but that measures set in place - in terms of methodologies and investment in investigations into specific resource developments - provided a sound foundation for more specific actions in the next investment review in five years time. The paper concludes by summarising the factors assisting and constraining adaptation over the next few decades.
C1 Univ Southampton, Sch Geog, Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hants, England.
   Univ Southampton, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hants, England.
C3 University of Southampton; University of Southampton
RP Arnell, NW (corresponding author), Univ Southampton, Sch Geog, Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hants, England.
EM n.w.arnell@soton.ac.uk
RI Arnell, Nigel/AAC-7331-2020
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NR 62
TC 144
Z9 159
U1 1
U2 42
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD OCT
PY 2006
VL 78
IS 2-4
BP 227
EP 255
DI 10.1007/s10584-006-9067-9
PG 29
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 089RM
UT WOS:000240898300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Raven, PH
AF Raven, Peter H.
BA Volis, S
BF Volis, S
TI Plant Conservation The Role of Habitat Restoration Foreword
SO PLANT CONSERVATION: THE ROLE OF HABITAT RESTORATION
LA English
DT Editorial Material; Book Chapter
ID TROPICAL-RAIN-FOREST; SPECIES DISTRIBUTION MODELS; CLIMATE-CHANGE
   ADAPTATION; EX-SITU CONSERVATION; COARSE WOODY DEBRIS; TREE SEEDLING
   ESTABLISHMENT; ENDEMIC CENTAUREA-CORYMBOSA; LAND-USE HISTORY; CHANGE
   VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT; CONIFER ARAUCARIA-LAUBENFELSII
C1 [Raven, Peter H.] Missouri Bot Garden, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
C3 Missouri Botanical Gardens
RP Raven, PH (corresponding author), Missouri Bot Garden, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
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NR 1618
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 5
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA THE PITT BUILDING, TRUMPINGTON ST, CAMBRIDGE CB2 1RP, CAMBS, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-108-72733-4; 978-1-108-48037-6
PY 2019
BP XI
EP +
D2 10.1017/ 9781108648677
PG 118
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Plant Sciences; Ecology
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Plant Sciences; Environmental Sciences &
   Ecology
GA BQ4DH
UT WOS:000589136800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wamsler, C
   Wickenberg, B
   Hanson, H
   Olsson, JA
   Stålhammar, S
   Björn, H
   Falck, H
   Gerell, D
   Oskarsson, T
   Simonsson, E
   Torffvit, F
   Zelmerlow, F
AF Wamsler, C.
   Wickenberg, B.
   Hanson, H.
   Olsson, J. Alkan
   Stalhammar, S.
   Bjorn, H.
   Falck, H.
   Gerell, D.
   Oskarsson, T.
   Simonsson, E.
   Torffvit, F.
   Zelmerlow, F.
TI Environmental and climate policy integration: Targeted strategies for
   overcoming barriers to nature-based solutions and climate change
   adaptation
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Nature-based solutions; Ecosystem-based planning; Climate governance;
   Mainstreaming; Inner transformation; Adult development; Champions; Urban
   sustainability; Transformation
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES CONCEPT; GOVERNANCE; CHALLENGES; MANAGEMENT;
   FRAMEWORK; LESSONS; GREEN; RISK
AB Nature-based adaptation planning is a challenging endeavor, not least because it requires transdisciplinary approaches to unite different actors' efforts and capacities. However, empirical knowledge on associated governance processes is scarce and fragmented. Against this background, this paper examines the integration of nature-based approaches for climate change adaptation into municipalities' daily planning practices and associated governance. A city-to-city learning lab was established to systematically analyze selected urban development projects step-by-step, from the initial idea, to comprehensive and detailed planning, procurement, implementation, maintenance and follow-up. The results show the numerous constraints municipal staff face and how they use targeted strategies to overcome them and tap into existing drivers. We identify five, complementary strategies: i) targeted stakeholder collaboration; ii) strategic citizen involvement; iii) outsourcing; iv) the alteration of internal working structures; and v) concealed science-policy integration. Importantly, these strategies reveal an increasing need for relational approaches that, in turn, require individuals to develop the cognitive/ emotional capacity to establish trust, communicate inclusively and promote social learning, while at the same time dealing with an increasingly complex and uncertain working environment. We conclude that tapping into the potential of nature-based solutions for climate adaptation governance requires more financial and human resources, and capacity development to support personal development, systematic mainstreaming and, ultimately, more sustainable development. (C) 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Wamsler, C.; Stalhammar, S.] Lund Univ, Ctr Sustainabil Studies LUCSUS, Lund, Sweden.
   [Wickenberg, B.] Lund Univ, IIIEE, Lund, Sweden.
   [Hanson, H.; Olsson, J. Alkan] Lund Univ, Ctr Environm & Climate Res CEC, Lund, Sweden.
C3 Lund University; Lund University; Lund University
RP Wamsler, C (corresponding author), Box 170, SE-22100 Lund, Sweden.
EM christine.wamsler@lucsus.lu.se
OI Wickenberg, Bjorn/0000-0002-0838-9175; Stalhammar,
   Sanna/0000-0002-3398-2640
FU Mistra Urban Futures - Swedish Research Council FORMAS [2011-901]; EU;
   FORMAS
FX This research was conducted in the context of a project funded by Mistra
   Urban Futures to create a "City-to-City Learning Lab on Nature-Based
   Planning and Adaptation" and the "Sustainable Urban Transformation for
   Climate Change Adaptation" project (grant number 2011-901) financed by
   the Swedish Research Council FORMAS,. The research has also benefited
   from three of the authors' participation in the EU financed
   "Nature-Based Urban Innovation" (NATURVATION) project and other authors'
   participation in the FORMAS financed "Nature-based solutions for urban
   challenges" project. We thank all project participants for their
   constructive feedback and input.
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NR 73
TC 101
Z9 106
U1 4
U2 116
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD FEB 20
PY 2020
VL 247
AR 119154
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2019.119154
PG 10
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA KA3KC
UT WOS:000505696700071
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Broberg, L
AF Broberg, Len
TI Relative snowpack response to elevation, temperature and precipitation
   in the Crown of the Continent region of North America 1980-2013
SO PLOS ONE
LA English
DT Article
ID WESTERN UNITED-STATES; ROCKY-MOUNTAIN RIVERS; INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY;
   WATER EQUIVALENT; EXTREME SNOWFALL; SNOWMELT RUNOFF; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
   IMPACTS; TRENDS; ACCUMULATION
AB Water availability in western Canada and the United States is dependent on the accumulation of snowpack in the montane regions and threatened by increased winter temperature and more precipitation as rain linked to climate change. In order to make reasoned decisions to adapt to climate change managers require knowledge of the role of temperature and precipitation in SWE development and data to distinguish the relative retention response of snowpack regions to expected temperature and precipitation regime shifts at the watershed scale. Using the Daymet interpolated 1 km(2) dataset, effects of elevation, temperature (T-max, T-min and T-avg) and precipitation on April 1 SWE in the Crown of the Continent were tested by linear regression and Kendall correlation. Changes in Daymet estimated snow water equivalent (SWE) in response to increased temperatures and changes in precipitation were estimated in two ways: 1) comparing April 1SWE in the 11 warmest (mean T-max February) and driest (mean precipitation January to March) years with the 22 cooler/wetter years 1981-2013 and 2) SWE retention from April 1 to June 1 over the period 1980 to 2013 across 120 watersheds in a major continental headwater region, the Crown of the Continent of North America. Historical analysis of period warm year April 1 SWE was assumed to indicate the recent impact of warmer winter temperatures. Changes in snowpack April 1 to June 1 reflected likely effects on peak runoff and were, therefore, also relevant for future climate change adaptation considerations. Winter (JFM) precipitation proved more influential than temperature in shaping April 1 SWE response at the regional scale. Of the three factors, elevation was most positively associated with April 1 SWE at the watershed scale. Temperature and precipitation influenced SWE accumulation and persistence at the watershed scale, but higher precipitation was more closely associated with higher April 1 SWE retention. Ranking of watershed snowpack retention in warm and dry years, combined with spring snowpack retention offers data to assist identification of watersheds with greatest snowpack persistence in the face of anticipated climate change effects.
C1 [Broberg, Len] Univ Montana, Environm Studies Program, Missoula, MT 59812 USA.
C3 University of Montana System; University of Montana
RP Broberg, L (corresponding author), Univ Montana, Environm Studies Program, Missoula, MT 59812 USA.
EM len.broberg@umontana.edu
FU LB, Crown Managers Partnership
FX LB, Crown Managers Partnership, https://www.crownmanagers.org/.The
   funders assisted in GIS data collection.
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NR 80
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 4
PU PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA 1160 BATTERY STREET, STE 100, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111 USA
SN 1932-6203
J9 PLOS ONE
JI PLoS One
PD APR 13
PY 2021
VL 16
IS 4
AR e0248736
DI 10.1371/journal.pone.0248736
PG 19
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA RN5ED
UT WOS:000640373500001
PM 33848296
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vidal-Cuellar, CL
   Chicmana-Zapata, V
   Arotoma-Rojas, I
   Meza, G
   Ford, JD
   Ferruchi, HR
   De-La-Cruz, E
   Lancha-Rucoba, G
   Borjas-Cavero, DB
   Loarte, S
   Mamani, OA
   Palma, VIP
   Coronel-Altamirano, MG
   Benites, I
   Pinasco, G
   Valera, R
   Huaman, MM
   Urteaga-Villanueva, A
   Munayco, CV
   Zavaleta-Cortijo, C
AF Vidal-Cuellar, Claudia L.
   Chicmana-Zapata, Victoria
   Arotoma-Rojas, Ingrid
   Meza, Graciela
   Ford, James D.
   Rodriguez Ferruchi, Hugo
   De-La-Cruz, Elida
   Lancha-Rucoba, Guillermo
   Borjas-Cavero, Diego B.
   Loarte, Sonia
   Alencastre Mamani, Ofelia
   Pena Palma, Victoria I.
   Coronel-Altamirano, Maria G.
   Benites, Ivonne
   Pinasco, Giovanna
   Valera, Rosa
   Maguina Huaman, Marco
   Urteaga-Villanueva, Adolfo
   Munayco, Cesar V.
   Zavaleta-Cortijo, Carol
TI Pathways to strengthen the climate resilience of health systems in the
   Peruvian Amazon by working with Indigenous leaders, communities and
   health officers
SO BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
ID INUIT
AB Background Indigenous knowledge and responses were implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic to protect health, showcasing how Indigenous communities participation in health systems could be a pathway to increase resilience to emergent hazards like climate change. This study aimed to inform efforts to enhance climate change resilience in a health context by: (1) examining if and how adaptation to climate change is taking place within health systems in the Peruvian Amazon, (2) understanding how Indigenous communities and leaders' responses to climatic hazards are being articulated within the official health system and (3) to provide recommendations to increase the climate change resilience of Amazon health systems.
   Methods This study was conducted among two Peruvian Amazon healthcare networks in Junin and Loreto regions. A mixed methodology design was performed using a cross-sectional survey (13 healthcare facilities), semistructured interviews (27 official health system participants and 17 Indigenous participants) and two in-person workshops to validate and select key priorities (32 participants). We used a climate-resilient health system framework linked to the WHO health systems building blocks.
   Results Indigenous and official health systems in the Peruvian Amazon are adapting to climate change. Indigenous responses included the use of Indigenous knowledge on weather variability, vegetal medicine to manage health risks and networks to share food and resources. Official health responses included strategies for climate change and response platforms that acted mainly after the occurrence of climate hazards. Key pathways to articulate Indigenous and official health systems encompass incorporating Indigenous representations in climate and health governance, training the health work force, improving service delivery and access, strengthening the evidence to support Indigenous responses and increasing the budget for climate emergency responses.
   Conclusions Key resilience pathways call for a broader paradigm shift in health systems that recognises Indigenous resilience as valuable for health adaptation, moves towards a more participatory health system and broadens the vision of health as a dimension inherently tied to the environment.
C1 [Vidal-Cuellar, Claudia L.; Chicmana-Zapata, Victoria; Borjas-Cavero, Diego B.; Zavaleta-Cortijo, Carol] Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Fac Salud Publ & Adm, Unidad Ciudadania Intercultural & Salud Indigena, San Martin De Porres, Peru.
   [Arotoma-Rojas, Ingrid; Ford, James D.; Zavaleta-Cortijo, Carol] Univ Leeds, Priestley Ctr Climate Futures, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Meza, Graciela; Rodriguez Ferruchi, Hugo] Univ Nacl Amazonia Peruana, Fac Med, Iquitos, Peru.
   [De-La-Cruz, Elida] Org Mujeres Indigenas Amazon Ashaninkas Selva Cen, Satipo, Peru.
   [Lancha-Rucoba, Guillermo] Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Fac Salud Publ & Adm, Unidad Ciudadania Intercultural & Salud Indigena, Yurimaguas, Peru.
   [Loarte, Sonia] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Direcc Promoc Salud, Lima, Peru.
   [Alencastre Mamani, Ofelia] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Direcc Pueblos Indigenas Originarios, Lima, Peru.
   [Pena Palma, Victoria I.; Coronel-Altamirano, Maria G.] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Direcc Salud Mental, Lima, Peru.
   [Benites, Ivonne; Pinasco, Giovanna] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Direcc Gest Riesgos & Desastres DIGERD, Lima, Peru.
   [Valera, Rosa] Gerencia Reg Salud Loreto, Coordinadora Reg Salud Pueblos indigenas, Iquitos, Peru.
   [Maguina Huaman, Marco] Red Salud Satipo, Estrategia Pueblos Indigenas Originarios, Satipo, Peru.
   [Urteaga-Villanueva, Adolfo] Red Salud Satipo, Oficina Emergencias & Desastres, Satipo, Peru.
   [Munayco, Cesar V.] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Ctr Nacl Epidemiol Prevenc & Control Enfermedades, Lima, Peru.
C3 Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia; University of Leeds; Universidad
   Nacional de la Amazonia Peruana; Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia
RP Zavaleta-Cortijo, C (corresponding author), Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Fac Salud Publ & Adm, Unidad Ciudadania Intercultural & Salud Indigena, San Martin De Porres, Peru.; Zavaleta-Cortijo, C (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Priestley Ctr Climate Futures, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
EM carol.zavaleta.c@upch.pe
FU Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research (WHO) [2022/1249873-1];
   National Institute for Health Research (NIHR); Wellcome under the
   NIHR-Wellcome Partnership for Global Health Research [218743_Z_19_Z]; UK
   Research and Innovation (UKRI) agency under a Global Challenges Research
   Fund; Newton Fund Consolidation Account (GCNA) award, via the University
   of Leeds
FX The Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research (WHO
   contract-Reference 2022/1249873-1) was the main funder of this study.
   CZ-C was partially supported by the National Institute for Health
   Research (NIHR) (using the UK's Official Development Assistance (ODA)
   Funding) and Wellcome 218743_Z_19_Z under the NIHR-Wellcome Partnership
   for Global Health Research. The views expressed are those of the authors
   and not necessarily those of Wellcome, the NIHR or the Department of
   Health and Social Care. JF and CZC were partially supported with funds
   from UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) agency under a Global Challenges
   Research Fund and Newton Fund Consolidation Account (GCNA) award, via
   the University of Leeds, to complete the current research in Peru. Award
   number: N/A. Funders did not participate in the design, implementation,
   interpretation or in reporting of the results.
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NR 61
TC 0
Z9 0
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U2 1
PU BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
PI LONDON
PA BRITISH MED ASSOC HOUSE, TAVISTOCK SQUARE, LONDON WC1H 9JR, ENGLAND
SN 2059-7908
J9 BMJ GLOB HEALTH
JI BMJ Glob. Health
PD SEP
PY 2024
VL 8
SU 3
AR e014391
DI 10.1136/bmjgh-2023-014391
PG 17
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA G8X9A
UT WOS:001319412200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Haque, MM
   Bremer, S
   Bin Aziz, S
   van der Sluijs, JP
AF Haque, Mohammad Mahfujul
   Bremer, Scott
   Bin Aziz, Saifullah
   van der Sluijs, Jeroen P.
TI A critical assessment of knowledge quality for climate adaptation in
   Sylhet Division, Bangladesh
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate; Adaptation; Knowledge quality; Sylhet Division; Bangladesh
ID IMPACTS; SCIENCE
AB There are numerous challenges to mobilising high quality knowledge in support of climate adaptation. Urgent adaptive action often has to be taken on the basis of imperfect information, with the risk of maladaptive consequences. These issues of knowledge quality can be particularly acute in vulnerable developing countries like Bangladesh, where there can be less capacity for producing and using climate knowledge. This paper argues that climate change adaptation in places like Bangladesh would benefit from a more self-conscious critical review of the knowledge systems mobilised in support of action, and suggests that 'knowledge quality assessment' (KQA) tools can structure this review. It presents a desktop assessment of information used for climate change adaptation projects in Sylhet Division in Bangladesh, steered by the six themes of the 'Guidance for Uncertainty Assessment and Communication' KQA tool. The assessment found important differences in approaches to mobilising knowledge, particularly between governmental and non-governmental organisations (NGOs). It demonstrated that problem framing has an impact on project success; projects that adopt a narrow techno-scientific framing can lead to significant adverse side effects. Recognising this some projects are engaging stakeholders in framing adaptation. It found a lack of national policy Guidance on the use of indicators or appraisal of uncertainty, seeing government agencies fall back on their risk-based calculations, and NGOs attempt to identify indicators and uncertainties via community engagement, with mixed success. Moreover, the adaptation knowledge base is relatively disintegrated, despite tentative steps toward its consolidation and appraisal, potentially related to on-going friction impeding vertical communication within government, and horizontal communication between government, NGOs and stakeholders. This all suggests that the Bangladeshi practices at the adaptation science-policy interface can benefit from reflection on KQA criteria; reflection that could concretely be encouraged through revision of the national policy framework. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license
C1 [Haque, Mohammad Mahfujul; Bin Aziz, Saifullah] Bangladesh Agr Univ, Dept Aquaculture, Mymensingh, Bangladesh.
   [Bremer, Scott; van der Sluijs, Jeroen P.] Univ Bergen, Ctr Study Sci & Humanities, Bergen, Norway.
   [van der Sluijs, Jeroen P.] Univ Bergen, Dept Chem, Bergen, Norway.
   [van der Sluijs, Jeroen P.] Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Utrecht, Netherlands.
C3 Bangladesh Agricultural University (BAU); University of Bergen;
   University of Bergen; Utrecht University
RP Haque, MM (corresponding author), Bangladesh Agr Univ, Dept Aquaculture, Mymensingh, Bangladesh.
EM mmhaque1974@yahoo.com
RI Haque, Mohammad/LDG-2866-2024; van der Sluijs, Jeroen P./B-6302-2008;
   Bremer, Scott/Q-6524-2017
OI van der Sluijs, Jeroen P./0000-0002-1346-5953; Haque, Mohammad
   Mahfujul/0000-0001-5279-7371; Bremer, Scott/0000-0002-4505-9386
FU Research Council of Norway
FX This research was conducted under the auspices of the 'TRACKS' research
   project, funded by the Research Council of Norway. The authors want to
   thank the rest of the TRACKS project consortium for their support,
   especially Mathew Stiller-Reeve for his insights on the climate
   variability in northeast Bangladesh. Finally particular thanks must go
   to the numerous contacts at governmental and non-governmental
   organisations that helped in this review.
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NR 92
TC 33
Z9 36
U1 0
U2 5
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2017
VL 16
BP 43
EP 58
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2016.12.002
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA FB0RK
UT WOS:000405852000005
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Coelho, C
   Lima, M
   Alves, FM
   Roebeling, P
   Pais-Barbosa, J
   Marto, M
AF Coelho, Carlos
   Lima, Marcia
   Alves, Filipe M.
   Roebeling, Peter
   Pais-Barbosa, Joaquim
   Marto, Marco
TI Assessing Coastal Erosion and Climate Change Adaptation Measures: A
   Novel Participatory Approach
SO ENVIRONMENTS
LA English
DT Article
DE decision support; social impacts; environmental impacts; economic
   impacts; planning and management; costs and benefits; coastal measures
   database
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES; PATHWAYS; ZONE; DEFENSE;
   VULNERABILITY; MAGNITUDES; RESILIENCE; ECOSYSTEMS; PROTECTION
AB This work aims to provide a more complete characterization of coastal erosion mitigation and climate change adaptation measures by presenting a participatory approach that integrates medium- to long-term perspectives, considering simultaneously social, environmental, economic and engineering dimensions to help decision makers implement sustainable climate change adaptation (CCA) strategies. The work lists, explains and characterizes existing climate change mitigation and adaptation measures as well as their costs and positive and negative social, environmental and economic impacts, in three distinct databases. These databases are discussed, complemented and validated in participatory moments with local stakeholders of the Ovar Municipality, Portugal, which represents the case study to support the proposed methodology. Although Ovar is a pilot case, the integrated framework for resilient CCA has a global application with respect to methodologies and concepts. The proposed approach is useful to help coastal management entities to engage in more efficient, effective and beneficial planned action to mitigate coastal erosion and adapt to future climate change effects. The open-source databases and the participatory approach facilitate decision makers and coastal communities to navigate the complexity of solutions and build consensus around collective actions for coastal areas.
C1 [Coelho, Carlos; Lima, Marcia; Pais-Barbosa, Joaquim] Univ Aveiro, RISCO, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Coelho, Carlos; Lima, Marcia; Pais-Barbosa, Joaquim] Univ Aveiro, Dept Civil Engn, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Lima, Marcia] Lusofona Univ, Porto Univ Ctr CUP, P-4000098 Porto, Portugal.
   [Alves, Filipe M.] Univ Lisbon, Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes CE3C, Climate Change Impacts Adaptat & Modelling CCIAM, Fac Ciencias, P-1749016 Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Roebeling, Peter] Univ Aveiro, CESAM, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Roebeling, Peter] Univ Aveiro, Dept Environm & Planning DAO, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Pais-Barbosa, Joaquim] Univ Aveiro, CESAM, Campus Univ Santiago, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Pais-Barbosa, Joaquim] Univ Aveiro, Dept Phys, Campus Univ Santiago, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Marto, Marco] Univ Aveiro, GOVCOPP, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Marto, Marco] Univ Aveiro, Dept Social Polit & Terr Sci, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Aveiro; Universidade de Aveiro; Lusofona University;
   Universidade de Lisboa; Universidade de Aveiro; Universidade de Aveiro;
   Universidade de Aveiro; Universidade de Aveiro; Universidade de Aveiro;
   Universidade de Aveiro
RP Coelho, C (corresponding author), Univ Aveiro, RISCO, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.; Coelho, C (corresponding author), Univ Aveiro, Dept Civil Engn, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
EM ccoelho@ua.pt; marcia.lima@ua.pt; fmalves@ciencias.ulisboa.pt;
   peter.roebeling@ua.pt; joaquim.paisbarbosa@ua.pt; marcovmarto@ua.pt
RI Pais-Barbosa, Joaquim/AAT-8593-2021; marto, Marco/ABI-3559-2020; Lima,
   Márcia/O-1364-2018; Alves, Filipe/AFP-4882-2022; Marto,
   Marco/G-3549-2015; Roebeling, Peter/G-6233-2011; Coelho,
   Carlos/A-9896-2012
OI Pais-Barbosa, Joaquim/0000-0002-4314-013X; Marto,
   Marco/0000-0003-3855-9689; Lima, Marcia/0000-0002-8792-8607; Roebeling,
   Peter/0000-0002-2421-9299; Coelho, Carlos/0000-0001-7858-2272
FU project "Integrated Coastal Climate Change Adaptation for Resilient
   Communities" - FEDER [INCCAPOCI-01-0145-FEDER-030842]; FCT/MCTES
   [FCT/UIDB/ECI/04450/2020]; Foundation for Science and Technology
   (FCT)-Aveiro Research Centre for Risks and Sustainability in
   Construction (RISCO); Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal
   [UIDP/50017/2020+UIDB/50017/2020+LA/P/0094/2020]
FX This work was financially supported by the project "Integrated Coastal
   Climate Change Adaptation for Resilient Communities",
   INCCA-POCI-01-0145-FEDER-030842, funded by FEDER, through "Competividade
   e Internacionalizacao" in its FEDER/FNR component and by national funds
   (OE), through FCT/MCTES. It was also supported by the Foundation for
   Science and Technology (FCT)-Aveiro Research Centre for Risks and
   Sustainability in Construction (RISCO),Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal
   (FCT/UIDB/ECI/04450/2020). Finally, thanks are due for the financial
   support to CESAM by FCT/MCTES
   (UIDP/50017/2020+UIDB/50017/2020+LA/P/0094/2020),through national funds.
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NR 96
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 5
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2076-3298
J9 ENVIRONMENTS
JI Environments
PD JUL
PY 2023
VL 10
IS 7
AR 110
DI 10.3390/environments10070110
PG 22
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA N7IT7
UT WOS:001038711300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Do, HL
   Ho, TQ
AF Huu-Luat Do
   Thong Quoc Ho
TI Climate change adaptation strategies and shrimp aquaculture: Empirical
   evidence from the Mekong Delta of Vietnam
SO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Endogenous switching regression;
   Productivity; Shrimp farming; Mekong; Vietnam
ID FARMERS ADAPTATION; COASTAL REGION; RICE YIELD; BANGLADESH; IMPACTS;
   PRAWN; VULNERABILITY; AGRICULTURE; COMMUNITIES; PERSPECTIVE
AB Shrimp aquaculture is among the most vital sectors in the Mekong Delta of Vietnam regarding economic well- being, social aspects, and food security beyond the country boundary. Nevertheless, this sector has faced emerging challenges from increased climate variability during recent decades, negatively influencing its out-comes. This paper utilized farm-level data surveyed in 2019 to investigate the mechanisms behind households' decisions to adopt three primary climate change adaptation practices: upgrading pond dikes, lining ponds with plastic sheets, and having settling ponds. This study demonstrates the effects of adopting these strategies on shrimp farming performance. An endogenous switching regression model was employed to deal with potential selection bias and heterogeneity in the decision to adopt or not. We find that the adoption of upgrading pond dikes and having a settling pond result in higher productivity in shrimp farming, and both adopters and non- adopters of these strategies would benefit from the adaptation. As well, education of the farm operators and farmers' belief on changes in climatic conditions and their impacts on shrimp farming are the main drivers behind the adoption behavior. This study, therefore, provides empirical evidence for policymakers to promote specific climate change adaptation strategies that would improve the welfare of shrimp farmers.
C1 [Huu-Luat Do] Univ Econ Ho Chi Minh City UEH, Sch Econ, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
   [Thong Quoc Ho] Univ Econ Ho Chi Minh City UEH, Econ & Environm Partnership Southeast Asia EEPSEA, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
C3 Ho Chi Minh City University Economics; Ho Chi Minh City University
   Economics
RP Ho, TQ (corresponding author), 279 Nguyen Tri Phuong,Dist 10, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
EM luatdh@ueh.edu.vn; thonghq@ueh.edu.vn
RI Do, Luat/AIC-4730-2022; Ho, Thong/AAU-8696-2021
OI Ho, Thong/0000-0002-5398-2795; Do, Luat/0000-0001-5106-5398
FU National Foundation for Science and Technology Development (NAFOSTED)
   [502.01-2020.340]
FX This work was supported by the Vietnam National Foundation for Science
   and Technology Development (NAFOSTED) under Grant Number
   502.01-2020.340. The authors also thank the enumerator team of students
   from the University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City (UEH). The
   participation in the field surveys of the shrimp farmers from Ben Tre
   Province is also much appreciated. The authors would like to extend
   sincere thanks to anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments
   that helped improve this paper
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NR 54
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 9
U2 46
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-8009
EI 1873-6106
J9 ECOL ECON
JI Ecol. Econ.
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 196
AR 107411
DI 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2022.107411
EA MAR 2022
PG 12
WC Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics
GA 1B5HV
UT WOS:000792468700012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pienaar, A
   Coetzee, C
   Nemakonde, L
AF Pienaar, Anica
   Coetzee, Christo
   Nemakonde, Livhuwani
TI Ongoing climate crises and obstacles to adaptation: Observations from
   the Ditsobotla Local Municipality, South Africa
SO TD-THE JOURNAL FOR TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
LA English
DT Article
DE agricultural adaptation strategies; climate change adaptation; coping
   capacity; disaster risk reduction; resilience; sustainable agriculture;
   vulnerability
ID FARMERS PERCEPTION; AGRICULTURE; STRATEGIES; VULNERABILITY; VALUES
AB Adaptation is a key component for fostering resilience amongst farmers as they are exposed to the challenges caused by climate change. However, the implementation of adaptation strategies is not equal or easy for most farming communities and are influenced by a diverse range of socio-economic constraints. In this context, the study intended to explore the factors constraining the implementation of climate change adaptation strategies amongst commercial and subsistence farmers of the Local Municipality in the North West province, South Africa. An exploratory sequential mixed method design was used, allowing the utilisation of both qualitative and quantitative methods in a single study. A total of 50 farmers (25 farmers from each group) were identified through purposive homogeneous sampling and were given a questionnaire consisting of semi-structured and structured questions. The study established that some of the most prominent factors constraining adaptation amongst farmers in the Local Municipality are related to their physical environment, lack of market access, financial constraints and limited access to established social networks (such as farmers associations). Identifying barriers to adaptation through area-specific research or studies, such as this particular study, is crucial for the development of holistic climate change adaptation strategies that will allow sustainability in diverse agricultural systems.
C1 [Pienaar, Anica; Coetzee, Christo; Nemakonde, Livhuwani] North West Univ, Dept Nat & Agr Sci, Fac Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
C3 North West University - South Africa
RP Pienaar, A (corresponding author), North West Univ, Dept Nat & Agr Sci, Fac Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
EM anipienaar@gmail.com
RI Coetzee, Christo/M-7816-2017; Nemakonde, Livhuwani David/JOK-5197-2023
OI Coetzee, Christo/0000-0002-6460-1126; Nemakonde, Livhuwani
   David/0000-0002-3458-5575
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NR 61
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 9
PU AOSIS
PI Durbanville
PA Postnet Suite 110, Private Bag x 19, Durbanville, SOUTH AFRICA
SN 1817-4434
EI 2415-2005
J9 TD-J TRANSDISCIPL RE
JI TD-J. Transdiscipl. Res. South. Afr.
PD NOV 23
PY 2021
VL 17
IS 1
AR a1089
DI 10.4102/td.v17i1.1089
PG 10
WC Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA XP4NK
UT WOS:000730843500001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ahenkan, A
   Chutab, DN
   Boon, EK
AF Ahenkan, Albert
   Chutab, David Nawiene
   Boon, Emmanuel Kwesi
TI Mainstreaming climate change adaptation into pro-poor development
   initiatives: evidence from local economic development programmes in
   Ghana
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Local economic development; climate change adaptation; pro-poor
   development resilience
AB Climate change remains a serious threat to climate sensitive pro-poor development interventions in the Pru District of Ghana. This study examined how climate change impacts on Local Economic Development (LED) interventions, the extent to which climate change adaptation (CCA) initiatives are integrated into LED and the challenges associated with the mainstreaming process. Qualitative research design and purposive sampling was used to collect data from 28 respondents at the Pru District Assembly with an interview guide. The results show that climate change adversely affects the following LED programmes; beekeeping, micro-credit for agricultural development programme, and fishing net and outboard motor programmes. The findings further indicate that climate-smart Agriculture, aquaculture (Fish Cage Culture) and Sustainable natural resource utilization and management the CCA initiatives mainstreamed into pro-poor LED in the Pru District to reduce the inevitable impacts of climate change. The study identified multifaceted challenges militating against CCA mainstreaming in the District to include inadequate resources for CCA, inactive stakeholder and institutional collaboration, and lack of continuity of CCA programmes. This paper recommends strong government support for CCA programmes, commitment of adequate resources and effective stakeholder and institutional collaboration. The paper concludes that effective integration of CCA into pro-poor LED is a panacea to achieving sustainable local development.
C1 [Ahenkan, Albert; Chutab, David Nawiene] Univ Ghana, Dept Publ Adm & Hlth Serv Management, POB LG 78, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
   [Boon, Emmanuel Kwesi] Int Ctr Enterprise & Sustainable Dev ICED, Airport Accra, Ghana.
C3 University of Ghana
RP Chutab, DN (corresponding author), Univ Ghana, Dept Publ Adm & Hlth Serv Management, POB LG 78, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
EM dchutab@gmail.com
OI Chutab Nawiene, David/0000-0001-6714-9908
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NR 53
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 19
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD AUG 9
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 7
BP 603
EP 615
DI 10.1080/17565529.2020.1844611
EA DEC 2020
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA WB7DY
UT WOS:000603761100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Petr, M
   Boerboom, LGJ
   Ray, D
   van der Veen, A
AF Petr, Michal
   Boerboom, L. G. J.
   Ray, Duncan
   van der Veen, Anne
TI New climate change information modifies frames and decisions of decision
   makers: an exploratory study in forest planning
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Uncertainty; Ambiguity; Framing; Decision-making; Information; Climate
   change adaptation
ID VULNERABILITY; ALTERNATIVES; PREFERENCES; UNCERTAINTY; MANAGEMENT;
   FUTURE
AB Information helps decision makers to address and to decide about environmental problems. In the context of climate change adaptation, often knowledge is missing on how the available information from impact models affects the decision-making process. The main aim of this study was to explore the extent of ambiguity and how new climate change information influenced decision of forest planners. We investigated changes in decisions of planners about forestry actions representing species choice and forest tourism and expiry dates of these actions leading to environmental constraints in the provision of ecosystem services. Forest planners evaluated expiry dates using four forest ecosystem services: forest production, stand yield class, sequestered carbon, and potential tourism. Data were collected during workshops with eleven forest planners from three forest districts in Scotland. Presented climate change information modified the understanding and frames of planners about forestry actions assessed with accompanying expiry dates. Changes in the frames of planners often result in both earlier and later expiry dates. Ambiguity of planners was found to be dependent on diversity in frames and difficulty in evaluating multiple ecosystem services. These findings imply that due to ambiguity forest planners might find it hard to choose climate change adaptation measures and researchers can struggle to convince planners with new research findings.
C1 [Petr, Michal; Boerboom, L. G. J.; van der Veen, Anne] Univ Twente, Fac Geoinformat Sci & Earth Observat ITC, POB 217, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands.
   [Petr, Michal; Ray, Duncan] Forestry Commiss Roslin, No Res Stn, Forest Res, Roslin EH25 9SY, Midlothian, Scotland.
C3 University of Twente
RP Petr, M (corresponding author), Univ Twente, Fac Geoinformat Sci & Earth Observat ITC, POB 217, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands.; Petr, M (corresponding author), Forestry Commiss Roslin, No Res Stn, Forest Res, Roslin EH25 9SY, Midlothian, Scotland.
EM Michal.Petr@forestry.gsi.gov.uk; l.g.j.boerboom@utwente.nl;
   Duncan.Ray@forestry.gsi.gov.uk; A.vanderVeen@utwente.nl
RI Boerboom, Luc/K-2584-2018; Boerboom, Luc/D-3994-2009
OI Boerboom, Luc/0000-0001-8250-0102; Petr, Michal/0000-0002-6568-6459
FU ForeStClim project "Transnational Forestry Management Strategies in
   Response to Regional Climate Change Impacts'' in the INTERREG IVB
   programme in North-West Europe of the European Regional Development Fund
   (ERDF) [003A]
FX We thank the Forestry Commission staff who participated in the workshops
   and Chris Quine for comments to this manuscript. This research has been
   sponsored by the ForeStClim project "Transnational Forestry Management
   Strategies in Response to Regional Climate Change Impacts'' in the
   INTERREG IVB programme in North-West Europe of the European Regional
   Development Fund (ERDF), Project No. 003A. We are grateful to the editor
   and a reviewer for their valuable and constructive comments on an
   earlier version of the manuscript.
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NR 33
TC 9
Z9 10
U1 2
U2 22
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD APR
PY 2016
VL 16
IS 4
BP 1161
EP 1170
DI 10.1007/s10113-015-0827-9
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DI2FH
UT WOS:000373310600020
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Smith, ME
   Ortman, SG
   Lobo, J
AF Smith, Michael E.
   Ortman, Scott G.
   Lobo, Jose
TI Heritage sites, climate change, and urban science
SO URBAN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Heritage sites; Archaeology; Urban adaptation; Urban sustainability
AB We describe a new research perspective on the relationship between climate change and heritage sites around the world. Existing efforts focus mainly on either the climate-related damages to cultural heritage resources, or the role of local and indigenous communities in using and pre-serving heritage sites. We argue that heritage sites also provide an empirical record of past successes and failures in the ways that cities and settlements have responded to environmental shocks and stresses. The scientific analysis of the relevant archaeological remains can generate hypotheses on the range of factors that facilitated or hindered resilience and influenced successful and unsuccessful urban adaptations. This knowledge, in turn, may help illuminate the drivers of urban adaptations to climate change today. The consideration of heritage sites as sources of in-sights for urban science and urban climate science adds a new dimension to the nexus between climate change research and heritage sites; it does not substitute for existing approaches.
C1 [Smith, Michael E.] Arizona State Univ, Sch Human Evolut & Social Change, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA.
   [Ortman, Scott G.] Univ Colorado Boulder, Dept Anthropol, Boulder, CO USA.
   [Lobo, Jose] Arizona State Univ, Coll Global Futures, Sch Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ USA.
C3 Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Tempe; University of
   Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder; Arizona State
   University; Arizona State University-Tempe
RP Smith, ME (corresponding author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Human Evolut & Social Change, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA.
EM mesmith9@asu.edu
RI Smith, Michael/A-2935-2008
OI ORTMAN, SCOTT/0000-0003-0709-5287
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NR 22
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 7
U2 15
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0955
J9 URBAN CLIM
JI Urban CLim.
PD JAN
PY 2023
VL 47
AR 101371
DI 10.1016/j.uclim.2022.101371
EA DEC 2022
PG 4
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 7N9DP
UT WOS:000907635900002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barre, P
   Barillot, R
   Bourgoin, T
   Combes, D
   Durand, JL
   Gutierrez, AE
   Firmat, C
   Frak, E
   Ghesquiere, M
   Julier, B
   Keep, T
   Litrico, I
   Louarn, G
   Meilhac, J
   Sampoux, JP
   Surault, F
   Wolff, B
   Volaire, F
AF Barre, P.
   Barillot, R.
   Bourgoin, T.
   Combes, D.
   Durand, J. L.
   Escobar Gutierrez, A.
   Firmat, C.
   Frak, E.
   Ghesquiere, M.
   Julier, B.
   Keep, T.
   Litrico, I
   Louarn, G.
   Meilhac, J.
   Sampoux, J. P.
   Surault, F.
   Wolff, B.
   Volaire, F.
TI Using genetic diversity to help grasslands adapt to climate change
SO FOURRAGES
LA French
DT Article
DE genetic diversity; grasslands; varieties; mix of species
ID SUMMER DORMANCY; PERENNIAL GRASSES; DROUGHT; PERSISTENCE; TRAIT
AB Climate change is leading to more intense and more frequent water stress. Since existing forage varieties tend to do best under favourable conditions, new forage varieties are needed. A better understanding of a) the natural diversity of forage species within their distribution ranges and b) the genetics underlying different adaptation strategies could facilitate the creation of a range of varieties that combine sufficient yield with different levels of water stress resistance (growth maintenance) or tolerance (arrested growth and survival). It appears especially important to select for phenological traits (and therefore seasonal growth rates) that better correspond to climatic constraints. In an increasingly changing environment, species mixtures often allow for greater production stability. The attributes of the varieties in the mixture play an essential role in maintaining the balance among species. That said, it is still early days for methods that improve plant varieties with a view to increasing blend performance while maintaining species balance.
C1 [Barre, P.; Barillot, R.; Combes, D.; Durand, J. L.; Escobar Gutierrez, A.; Firmat, C.; Frak, E.; Ghesquiere, M.; Julier, B.; Keep, T.; Litrico, I; Louarn, G.; Meilhac, J.; Sampoux, J. P.; Surault, F.; Wolff, B.] INRAE, UR004, Unite Rech Prairies Plantes Fourrageres URP3F, CS80006, F-86600 Lusignan, France.
   [Bourgoin, T.] Agriobtentions, RD150, F-86600 Lusignan, France.
   [Volaire, F.] Univ Paul Valery Montpellier 3, Univ Montpellier, INRAE, CEFE,CNRS,EPHE,IRD, Montpellier, France.
C3 INRAE; INRAE; Universite PSL; Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE);
   Institut Agro; Montpellier SupAgro; CIRAD; Centre National de la
   Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Institut de Recherche pour le
   Developpement (IRD); Universite Paul-Valery; Universite de Montpellier
RP Barre, P (corresponding author), INRAE, UR004, Unite Rech Prairies Plantes Fourrageres URP3F, CS80006, F-86600 Lusignan, France.
EM philippe.barre@inrae.fr
RI Julier, Bernadette/L-4989-2019
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   Volaire F, 2014, QUANTITATIVE TRAITS, P41
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   Volaire F, 2018, ANN BOT-LONDON, V122, P325, DOI 10.1093/aob/mcy073
NR 39
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 22
PU ASSOC FRANCAISE PRODUCTION FOURRAGERE
PI PARIS CEDEX 12
PA  MAISON NATIONALE DES ELEVEURS -149 RUE DE BERCY, PARIS CEDEX 12, FRANCE
SN 0429-2766
J9 FOURRAGES
JI Fourrages
PD DEC 31
PY 2020
IS 244
BP 47
EP 53
PG 7
WC Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA QO6TY
UT WOS:000623275200008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Solaun, K
   Cerdá, E
AF Solaun, Kepa
   Cerda, Emilio
TI THE INFLUENCE OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON ELECTRICITY DEMAND. CASE STUDY IN THE
   BASQUE COUNTRY
SO DYNA
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate Change; Adaptation to Climate Change; Energy Demand; Energy
   Economics
ID WORLD MAP; TEMPERATURE; IMPACTS; LEVEL
AB This article analyzes the sensitivity of electricity demand by sector to temperature, in the context of climate change. The paper outlines a methodology to incorporate climate variables into energy decision making. This methodology is based on the evolution of the thermal distance on cold and warm days with respect to established thresholds (Heating Degree Days and Cooling Degree Days) and its influence on demand. This approach has been tested in the Basque Country. Results show that the residential sector is the most sensitive to these changes, and future demand is projected according to multiple climate change scenarios. Due to the greater statistical significance of temperature differences on cold days, and the current limited use of air conditioning, it is estimated that residential demand could fall by as much as 4%, which could translate to nearly 20 million euros in annual savings and emission reductions of around 30,000 t. of CO2 per year.
C1 [Solaun, Kepa] Univ Navarra, Sch Sci, Pamplona Campus, E-31080 Pamplona, Spain.
   [Solaun, Kepa] Factor CO2, Colon Larreategui 26,1 Floor, Bilbao 48009, Spain.
   [Cerda, Emilio] Univ Complutense Madrid, Complutense Inst Int Studies ICEI, Somosaguas Campus, Madrid 28223, Spain.
C3 University of Navarra; Complutense University of Madrid
RP Solaun, K (corresponding author), Univ Navarra, Sch Sci, Pamplona Campus, E-31080 Pamplona, Spain.; Solaun, K (corresponding author), Factor CO2, Colon Larreategui 26,1 Floor, Bilbao 48009, Spain.
EM ksolaun@factorco2.com; ecerdate@ccee.ucm.es
CR AEMET/IMP, ATL CLIM IB IB CLIM
   Ahenkorah A., 2011, IPCC SPECIAL REPORT
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NR 40
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 6
PU FEDERACION ASOCIACIONES INGENIEROS INDUSTRIALES ESPANA
PI BILBAO
PA ALAMEDA DE MAZARREDO, BILBAO, 69-48009, SPAIN
SN 0012-7361
EI 1989-1490
J9 DYNA-BILBAO
JI Dyna
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 95
IS 2
BP 163
EP +
DI 10.6036/9344
PG 15
WC Engineering, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering
GA KS6BF
UT WOS:000518391500018
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Currenti, R
   Pearce, T
   Salabogi, T
   Vuli, L
   Salabogi, K
   Doran, B
   Kitson, R
   Ford, J
AF Currenti, Renee
   Pearce, Tristan
   Salabogi, Teresia
   Vuli, Luke
   Salabogi, Kiniviliame
   Doran, Brendan
   Kitson, Roger
   Ford, James
TI Adaptation to Climate Change in an Interior Pacific Island Village: a
   Case Study of Nawairuku, Ra, Fiji
SO HUMAN ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Agriculture; Disaster; Livelihoods; Natural hazard; Climate change;
   Vulnerability; Fiji; Pacific Islands region
ID MULTIPLE STRESSORS; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; VULNERABILITY; FRAMEWORK; WILL
AB We examine how residents of Nawairuku, an interior village in Ra, Fiji, are experiencing and responding to recent social and ecological changes. An analysis of data collected using semi-structured interviews with 27 households reveals that household adaptability - the ability or capacity to adapt to the impacts of climatic variations - depends on access to livelihood assets. All households have access to social capital through familial networks, which lessens the burden of extreme weather events, namely cyclones and flooding. Households with access to tangible assets such as land and the equipment and resources to utilize it, together with intangible assets like motivation and knowledge are better positioned to adapt their agricultural practices to changing climatic conditions. Households headed by a capable individual were also better positioned to adapt. We conclude that remoteness promotes self-sufficiency and initiative, and access to livelihood assets influences household capacity to adapt.
C1 [Currenti, Renee; Pearce, Tristan; Doran, Brendan; Kitson, Roger] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr, 90 Sippy Downs Dr, Sippy Downs, Qld 4556, Australia.
   [Pearce, Tristan] Univ Guelph, Dept Geog, 50 Stone Rd East, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
   [Ford, James] Univ Leeds, Priestley Int Ctr Climate, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
C3 University of the Sunshine Coast; University of Guelph; University of
   Leeds
RP Pearce, T (corresponding author), Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr, 90 Sippy Downs Dr, Sippy Downs, Qld 4556, Australia.; Pearce, T (corresponding author), Univ Guelph, Dept Geog, 50 Stone Rd East, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
EM tpearce@usc.edu.au
RI Pearce, Tristan/L-9139-2019; Ford, James/A-4284-2013
OI Ford, James/0000-0002-2066-3456
FU Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship; University
   of the Sunshine Coast Fellowship program (Pearce)
FX This research was carried out with the aid of an Australian Government
   Research Training Program Scholarship awarded to Currenti and the
   University of the Sunshine Coast Fellowship program (Pearce).
CR [Anonymous], POLAR RECORD
   [Anonymous], CLIMATIC CHANGE
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NR 44
TC 18
Z9 21
U1 1
U2 37
PU SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
SN 0300-7839
EI 1572-9915
J9 HUM ECOL
JI Hum. Ecol.
PD FEB
PY 2019
VL 47
IS 1
BP 65
EP 80
DI 10.1007/s10745-019-0049-8
PG 16
WC Anthropology; Environmental Studies; Sociology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Anthropology; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Sociology
GA HO1TM
UT WOS:000460693800006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Heathcote, J
   Fluck, H
   Wiggins, M
AF Heathcote, Jen
   Fluck, Hannah
   Wiggins, Meredith
TI Predicting and Adapting to Climate Change: Challenges for the Historic
   Environment
SO HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT-POLICY & PRACTICE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; historic environment; risk management
AB Our changing climate poses risks to the historic environment but also brings opportunities for new discoveries and ways for people to engage with it. At Historic England, part of our responsibility is to understand what future changes we might expect and the impact these may have on our ability to protect historic buildings, archaeological remains and landscapes. This paper describes projects that have used spatial analysis to assess the risk and vulnerability of sites to flooding and coastal erosion. It summarises how we responded to the recent UK Climate Change Risk Assessment and outlines the research we believe is needed to strengthen the evidence base in time for the next cycle of reporting so that the historic environment is better served by the process. Finally, it outlines the adaptive measures that have been proposed to enable Historic England to address the risks and make the most of the opportunities created by climate change.
C1 [Heathcote, Jen; Fluck, Hannah; Wiggins, Meredith] Hist England, Engine House, Swindon, Wilts, England.
C3 English Heritage
RP Heathcote, J (corresponding author), Hist England, Engine House, Swindon, Wilts, England.
EM jen.heathcote@HistoricEngland.org.uk
OI Heathcote, Jen/0000-0003-1226-0822
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NR 18
TC 25
Z9 28
U1 0
U2 20
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-7505
EI 1756-7513
J9 HIST ENVIRON POLICY
JI Hist. Env.-Policy Pract.
PY 2017
VL 8
IS 2
BP 89
EP 100
DI 10.1080/17567505.2017.1317071
PG 12
WC Humanities, Multidisciplinary
WE Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Arts & Humanities - Other Topics
GA FH6MQ
UT WOS:000411291500002
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ahmed, N
   Diana, JS
AF Ahmed, Nesar
   Diana, James S.
TI Coastal to inland: Expansion of prawn farming for adaptation to climate
   change in Bangladesh
SO AQUACULTURE REPORTS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Prawn farming; Expansion; Adaptation; Bangladesh
ID SEA-LEVEL; SURFACE-TEMPERATURE; IMPACTS; PRODUCTIVITY; POLYCULTURE;
   DROUGHT; FLOODS; RISE
AB The practice of prawn (Macrobrachium rosenbergii) farming is widespread in coastal Bangladesh due to favorable biophysical resources. However, export-oriented prawn farming is particularly vulnerable to climate change in coastal Bangladesh. This study identified different climatic variables, including salinity, coastal flooding, cyclone, sea-level rise, water temperature, drought, and rainfall have profound effects on prawn farming in the Bagerhat area of southwest Bangladesh. Considering extreme vulnerability to the effects of climate change on prawn production, one of the adaptation strategies is to translocate prawn culture from coastal to inland (i.e., Bagerhat-Gopalganj) that appear less vulnerable to climate change. Although the prospects for prawn-carp polyculture and integrated prawn-fish-rice farming are positive in Gopalganj, a number of challenges were identified for the expansion of prawn culture. We suggest that institutional support would help to adopt prawn production. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
C1 [Ahmed, Nesar; Diana, James S.] Univ Michigan, Sch Nat Resources & Environm, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan
RP Ahmed, N (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Sch Nat Resources & Environm, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
EM nesara@umich.edu
OI Ahmed, Nesar/0000-0003-4133-697X
FU Fulbright Fellowship by the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship
   Board of the U.S. Government; Fulbright Fellowship Program at the School
   of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, USA
FX This study was supported through the Fulbright Fellowship by the J.
   William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board of the U.S. Government. The
   study was a part of the first author's research work under the Fulbright
   Fellowship Program at the School of Natural Resources and Environment,
   University of Michigan, USA. We are grateful to two anonymous reviewers
   for their helpful comments. The views and opinions expressed herein are
   solely those of the authors.
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NR 52
TC 37
Z9 40
U1 2
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2352-5134
J9 AQUACULT REP
JI Aquacult. Rep.
PD NOV
PY 2015
VL 2
BP 67
EP 76
DI 10.1016/j.aqrep.2015.08.001
PG 10
WC Fisheries
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Fisheries
GA VH2SF
UT WOS:000452074100012
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pearce, G
   Cooper, S
AF Pearce, Graham
   Cooper, Stuart
TI Sub-national Responses to Climate Change in England: Evidence from Local
   Area Agreements
SO LOCAL GOVERNMENT STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Local Area Agreements; measuring performance
ID GOVERNMENT; GOVERNANCE
AB The machinery of governance to address climate change at the sub-national level in England continues to evolve. Drawing on documentary evidence and the views of civil servants and local authority officials from the English West Midlands, this article explores the process through an examination of the inclusion of climate change indicators in the recent round of Local Area Agreements (LAAs), negotiated between central government and local authorities and Local Strategic Partnerships. Considerable popularity has been accorded these indicators nationally, but there are important variations in the pattern of take up. Moreover, significant uncertainties surround the contribution of local measures to reduce CO2 emissions and the targets attached to measures to adapt to climate change are seen as undemanding. Conversely, the impending Carbon Reduction Commitment will act as a powerful incentive for public bodies to cut CO2 emissions from their estates. Although potentially contributing to greater coherence in tackling climate change, achieving collective action through LAAs will prove problematic.
C1 [Pearce, Graham; Cooper, Stuart] Aston Univ, Aston Business Sch, Birmingham B4 7ET, W Midlands, England.
C3 Aston University
RP Pearce, G (corresponding author), Aston Univ, Aston Business Sch, Birmingham B4 7ET, W Midlands, England.
EM g.r.a.pearce@aston.ac.uk
OI Cooper, Stuart/0000-0002-7049-8292
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NR 37
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 6
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORDSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 0300-3930
J9 LOCAL GOV STUD
JI Local Gov. Stud.
PY 2011
VL 37
IS 2
BP 199
EP 217
AR PII 936379731
DI 10.1080/03003930.2011.554825
PG 19
WC Regional & Urban Planning; Political Science; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Government & Law
GA 750WR
UT WOS:000289579300004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dupuis, J
   Biesbroek, R
AF Dupuis, Johann
   Biesbroek, Robbert
TI Comparing apples and oranges: The dependent variable problem in
   comparing and evaluating climate change adaptation policies
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Dependent variable problem; Comparative policy analysis; Climate change
   adaptation; Adaptation policy; Governance
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; DISASTER RISK; PUBLIC-POLICY; VULNERABILITY;
   GOVERNANCE; LEVEL; FRAMEWORK; IMPACTS; STATE; IMPLEMENTATION
AB An increasing number of studies have compared climate change adaptation policies within and between different countries. In this paper we show that these comparative studies suffer from what is known as the "dependent variable problem' - the indistinctness of the phenomenon that is being measured, and disagreement on its scope and boundaries. This problem has been signaled in other scientific fields where it proved to hamper meaningful comparisons and policy evaluations, transnational learning, and policy transfer. This paper aims to raise consciousness of the dependent variable problem in comparative studies on climate change adaptation policy by exploring its origins and proposes ways to deal with it. Three main sources of the problem are discussed: (1) conceptual indistinctness of adaptation policy and the heterogeneity and lack of consistency of what is being compared between cases. (2) Inadequate research designs to compare cases. (3) Unclear indicators and explanatory variables to compare across cases. We propose a way to operationalize the concept of adaptation policy, provide a narrower description of the research designs for policy change or outcomes analysis, and finally discuss possible measurements concepts. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Dupuis, Johann] Umea Univ, Dept Geog & Econ Hist, SE-90187 Umea, Sweden.
   [Dupuis, Johann] Univ Lausanne, Swiss Grad Sch Publ Adm, IDHEAP, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
   [Biesbroek, Robbert] Wageningen Univ, Earth Syst Sci Grp, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Biesbroek, Robbert] Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Umea University; University of Lausanne; Wageningen University &
   Research; Wageningen University & Research
RP Dupuis, J (corresponding author), Univ Lausanne, Swiss Grad Sch Publ Adm, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
EM dupuis.johann@gmail.com
RI Biesbroek, Robbert/GZZ-4476-2022; Biesbroek, Robbert/I-2384-2013;
   Dupuis, Johann/P-6326-2014
OI Biesbroek, Robbert/0000-0002-2906-1419; Dupuis,
   Johann/0000-0001-5098-7956
FU Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
FX This paper has been presented at the Second Nordic International
   Conference on Climate Change Adaptation (Helsinki, 29-31 August 2012).
   We are grateful for the constructive comments by Carina Keskitalo,
   Daniel Mazmanian, Judith Klostermann, Sabina Stiller, Francois Bavaud
   and Eric Massey on earlier versions of this paper. The work by Johann
   Dupuis was funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). Any
   omissions remain our responsibility.
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NR 171
TC 198
Z9 237
U1 1
U2 107
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD DEC
PY 2013
VL 23
IS 6
SI SI
BP 1476
EP 1487
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2013.07.022
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA 292DB
UT WOS:000329881300012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Rigby, JM
   Preist, C
AF Rigby, Jacob M.
   Preist, Chris
GP ACM
TI Towards User-Centred Climate Services: the Role of Human-Computer
   Interaction
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2023 CHI CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS IN COMPUTING
   SYSTEMS, CHI 2023
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT CHI conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI)
CY APR 23-28, 2023
CL Hamburg, GERMANY
SP Assoc Comp Machinery, ACM SIGCHI, Google, Siemens, Bloomberg
DE Climate change; climate adaptation; decision making; development
ID GLOBAL FRAMEWORK; INFORMATION; ADAPTATION; USABILITY; KNOWLEDGE;
   WEATHER; SCIENCE; LEARN; NEEDS; HCI
AB Climate services are systems that provide climate and climate-related information to inform decision making around the world. Despite these systems featuring diverse interactions between technologies and a variety of user groups, and frequent calls in the literature for more a more user-centred focus, HCI researchers do not appear to have engaged much with this active research area. In this paper, we demonstrate this lack of interaction via a systematic literature search and offer possible explanations for this. We also map out opportunities for how HCI researchers can use their highly relevant skillsets to contribute to this research and aid climate change adaptation, notably around the user-facing elements of climate services. Finally, we offer some reasons why HCI researchers might want to engage, such as furthering existing HCI research avenues, and creating new ones through collaborations with researchers in disciplines such as climate science, development, and policy.
C1 [Rigby, Jacob M.; Preist, Chris] Univ Bristol, Dept Comp Sci, Bristol, Avon, England.
C3 University of Bristol
RP Rigby, JM (corresponding author), Univ Bristol, Dept Comp Sci, Bristol, Avon, England.
EM j.rigby@bristol.ac.uk; chris.preist@bristol.ac.uk
OI Preist, Chris/0000-0002-5094-5294
FU Horizon Europe Framework Programme [69550]
FX This research was supported by Horizon Europe Framework Programme grant
   69550.
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TC 1
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PU ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
PI NEW YORK
PA 1601 Broadway, 10th Floor, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
BN 978-1-4503-9421-5
PY 2023
DI 10.1145/3544548.3580663
PG 14
WC Computer Science, Information Systems; Computer Science, Theory &
   Methods; Robotics
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Computer Science; Robotics
GA BV4OO
UT WOS:001037809500027
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Cao, Y
   Pei, FS
   Xia, Y
   Zhong, R
   Jiang, LH
   Yan, Q
   Wang, HL
AF Cao, Yang
   Pei, Fengsong
   Xia, Yan
   Zhong, Rui
   Jiang, Lihua
   Yan, Qian
   Wang, Huaili
BE Wu, F
   Zhou, P
TI Assessing the differences between fossil fuel energy and bioenergy from
   crop residues in the Yangtze River Delta, China
SO ADVANCES IN ENERGY SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENT ENGINEERING III
SE AIP Conference Proceedings
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 3rd International Workshop on Advances in Energy Science and Environment
   Engineering (AESEE)
CY MAR 29-31, 2019
CL Suzhou, PEOPLES R CHINA
ID NET PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY
AB Bioenergy from crop residues is one of important components of clean energy to adapt climate change. However, it is still uncertain how bioenergy potential from crop residues changes, as well as what deficits exist when offsetting fossil energy consumption. Taking the Yangtze River Delta (YRD) in China as an instance, bioenergy potential of crop residue was estimated for the period 2001-2010. The deficits between bioenergy from crop residue and fossil energy consumption were assessed to examine their differences. We found that a large amount of cropland, approximately 15% of the total cropland in 2000, was encroached for other uses in this period. The cropland loss reduced the bioenergy of crop residues, at a rate of 4.05. 10(11)kJ.year(-1), approximately 1.62% of annual average bioenergy from crop residues. In this context, further research and policy are needed to advance sustainability in the YRD in future decades.
C1 [Cao, Yang; Pei, Fengsong; Xia, Yan; Zhong, Rui; Jiang, Lihua; Yan, Qian; Wang, Huaili] Jiangsu Normal Univ, Sch Geog Geomat & Planning, Xuzhou 221116, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
C3 Jiangsu Normal University
RP Pei, FS (corresponding author), Jiangsu Normal Univ, Sch Geog Geomat & Planning, Xuzhou 221116, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
EM fengsong.pei.jsnu@gmail.com
RI Cao, Yang/G-4386-2016; Pei, Fengsong/GVS-5972-2022
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41401438]; National
   Students' Project for Innovation Training Program of China
   [201810320020Z]
FX This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (Grant No. 41401438) and the National Students' Project for
   Innovation Training Program of China (Grant No. 201810320020Z).
CR [Anonymous], 2013, CLIMATE CHANGE 2013
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NR 22
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU AMER INST PHYSICS
PI MELVILLE
PA 2 HUNTINGTON QUADRANGLE, STE 1NO1, MELVILLE, NY 11747-4501 USA
SN 0094-243X
BN 978-0-7354-1838-7
J9 AIP CONF PROC
PY 2019
VL 2106
AR 020017
DI 10.1063/1.5109340
PG 9
WC Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Environmental
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA BN4CI
UT WOS:000481734200017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Munyasya, AN
   Koskei, K
   Zhou, R
   Liu, ST
   Indoshi, SN
   Wang, W
   Zhang, XC
   Cheruiyot, WK
   Mburu, DM
   Nyende, AB
   Xiong, YC
AF Munyasya, Alex Ndolo
   Koskei, Kiprotich
   Zhou, Rui
   Liu, Shu-Tong
   Indoshi, Sylvia Ngaira
   Wang, Wei
   Zhang, Xu-Cheng
   Cheruiyot, Wesly Kiprotich
   Mburu, David Mwehia
   Nyende, Aggrey Bernard
   Xiong, You-Cai
TI Integrated on-site & off-site rainwater-harvesting system boosts rainfed
   maize production for better adaptation to climate change
SO AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Ex-situ rain-harvesting; Ridge-furrow plastic-mulching; Supplemental
   irrigation; Maize productivity; Soil organic carbon
ID WATER-USE EFFICIENCY; ZEA-MAYS L.; RIDGE-FURROW; SUPPLEMENTAL
   IRRIGATION; PLASTIC-FILM; WINTER-WHEAT; LOESS PLATEAU; ADAPTIVE
   MANAGEMENT; YIELD COMPONENTS; OPTIMIZING WATER
AB Solving the disparity between rainwater supply and crop water demand is a fundamental issue in semiarid rainfed agriculture. Over the last decades, the ridge-furrow-plastic-mulching (RFM) farming system has been widely used as an on-site (in-situ) rain-harvesting farming strategy, providing a partial solution to the supply-demand mismatch of rainwater. The off-site rain-harvesting system (ex-situ water cistern) for supplemental irrigation has been little used. We established an integrated ex-situ rain-harvesting system incorporated into maize RFM in a semiarid site of northwest China from 2018 to 2019. Five treatments were designed as: (1) CK-1, flat planting without mulching and irrigation, (2) CK-2, RFM without irrigation, (3) RFM60, RFM with 60 mm irrigation, (4) RFM105, RFM with 105 mm irrigation, and (5) RFM150, RFM with 150 mm irrigation. We found that supplemental irrigation treatments significantly increased grain yield, total biomass, and crop water productivity compared to CK-1 and CK-2 (P < 0.05) across two growing seasons, suggesting that ex-situ rain-harvesting irrigation can significantly promote field productivity based on widely used RFM system. The differences mentioned above were the greatest in RFM105 and RFM150, significantly greater than those of RFM60. No significant difference was observed between RFM150 and RFM105. Greater output in RFM150 and RFM105 was closely associated with improved soil water storage and thermal state in two growing seasons. Particularly, RFM150 and RFM105 harvested the highest soil organic carbon and total nitrogen after the second fallow period. The highest economic benefit was found in RFM105, followed by RFM150 and RFM60, the least in the two control groups. Our findings provided a critical case to solve the rainfall supply-demand mismatch. The ex-situ rainwater-harvesting supplemental irrigation can act as a promising solution to upgrade the current widely-used RFM farming system for better adaptation to climate change in the semiarid region.
C1 [Munyasya, Alex Ndolo; Koskei, Kiprotich; Liu, Shu-Tong; Indoshi, Sylvia Ngaira; Wang, Wei; Cheruiyot, Wesly Kiprotich; Xiong, You-Cai] Lanzhou Univ, Sch Life Sci, Inst Arid Agroecol, State Key Lab Grassland Agroecosyst, Lanzhou 730000, Peoples R China.
   [Zhou, Rui] Yunnan Univ, Sch Ecol & Environm Sci, Kunming 650091, Yunnan, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Xu-Cheng] Gansu Acad Agr Sci, Dingxi Res Stn, Lanzhou 730070, Peoples R China.
   [Cheruiyot, Wesly Kiprotich; Mburu, David Mwehia; Nyende, Aggrey Bernard] Jomo Kenyatta Univ Agr & Technol, POB 62000, Nairobi 00200, Kenya.
C3 Lanzhou University; Yunnan University; Gansu Academy of Agricultural
   Sciences; Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture & Technology
RP Xiong, YC (corresponding author), Lanzhou Univ, Sch Life Sci, Inst Arid Agroecol, State Key Lab Grassland Agroecosyst, Lanzhou 730000, Peoples R China.
EM xiongye@lzu.edu.cn
RI 周, 睿/HOA-5317-2023; Xiong, You-Cai/HDL-8596-2022
OI Xiong, You-Cai/0000-0002-4394-8331
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [32161143012]; Fundamental
   Research Funds for the Central Universities [lzujbky-2022-kb07]; Open
   Funding Project of State Key Laboratory of Grassland Agro-ecosystems;
   Key Research and Development Program of Gansu Province [20YF8WA083]
FX We would like to thank Professor Neil C. Turner for his critical
   revision and contribution to this manuscript. This work was financially
   supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China
   (32161143012), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central
   Universities (lzujbky-2022-kb07), Open Funding Project of State Key
   Laboratory of Grassland Agro-ecosystems (Hosted by J.L. Xiong) and Key
   Research and Development Program of Gansu Province (20YF8WA083).
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NR 49
TC 24
Z9 24
U1 3
U2 64
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-3774
EI 1873-2283
J9 AGR WATER MANAGE
JI Agric. Water Manage.
PD JUL 1
PY 2022
VL 269
AR 107672
DI 10.1016/j.agwat.2022.107672
EA APR 2022
PG 10
WC Agronomy; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Water Resources
GA 4E8VX
UT WOS:000848099000004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gibbons, JM
   Ramsden, SJ
AF Gibbons, J. M.
   Ramsden, S. J.
TI Integrated modelling of farm adaptation to climate change in East
   Anglia, UK: Scaling and farmer decision making
SO AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; farmer adaptation; catchment modelling; integration of
   models; temporal scaling; spatial scaling
ID SOCIOECONOMIC CHANGE; IMPACTS; LEVEL; CO2; CROPS
AB We argue that an effective representation of farmer adaptation to climate change can only be achieved by integrating different modelling approaches that are spatially and temporally multi-scale and dynamic. We introduce a modelling framework that addresses these issues. To illustrate our approach, we simulate a group of farms representing a catchment in the East Anglian region of England, with and without water trading (spatially multi-scale). Different modelling approaches are used to represent weather (year-to-year variation) and climate effects (predicted crop yields for the 2020s and 2050s). Dynamics are introduced by (i) allowing the outcome of previous years' decisions to inform decision making in subsequent years and (ii) by modelling large investment decisions (buildings and irrigation), as longer term commitments. Variability and uncertainty are captured by running the framework multiple times with inputs drawn at random. Example results demonstrate that farm-level allocation of abstraction licences constrains water abstraction at the catchment level-with water trading summer water abstraction increased from 66.4% (compared to 62.2% with no trading) for the baseline period, through 75.6% (65.9%), for the 2020s, to 93.2% (72.5%) for the 2050s. Hence, modelling the catchment as a single unit would have over-estimated water abstraction. Under the model assumptions investment in winter abstraction capacity was not justified. Due to their high value, irrigation levels were maintained on potatoes (Solanum tuberosum L.), resulting in relatively stable crop areas over time; in contrast, for the lower value sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) yields and areas were more variable due to their dependence on variable weather and surplus water availability. There was no major shift from native cropping to exotic crops (oilseed rape [Brassica napus L.] to sunflowers [Helianthus annuus L.]) in either the 2020s or 2050s. We conclude that omitting farm-level constraints in regional models may overestimate the degree of adaptation possible and underestimate the negative effects of climate change. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Gibbons, J. M.] Bangor Univ, Sch Environm & Nat Resources, Bangor LL57 2UW, Gwynedd, Wales.
   [Ramsden, S. J.] Univ Nottingham, Sch Biosci, Div Agr & Environm Sci, Loughborough LE12 5RD, England.
C3 Bangor University; University of Nottingham
RP Gibbons, JM (corresponding author), Bangor Univ, Sch Environm & Nat Resources, Thoday Bldg,Deiniol Rd, Bangor LL57 2UW, Gwynedd, Wales.
EM j.gibbons@bangor.ac.uk
RI Gibbons, James/A-1143-2010
OI Gibbons, James/0000-0002-0083-9872; Ramsden, Stephen/0000-0001-5652-3749
CR Ackrill RW, 2001, EUR REV AGRIC ECON, V28, P207, DOI 10.1093/erae/28.2.207
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NR 32
TC 29
Z9 35
U1 2
U2 56
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0167-8809
J9 AGR ECOSYST ENVIRON
JI Agric. Ecosyst. Environ.
PD AUG
PY 2008
VL 127
IS 1-2
BP 126
EP 134
DI 10.1016/j.agee.2008.03.010
PG 9
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 324OO
UT WOS:000257528100016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Kruse, S
   Stiffler, M
   Baumgartner, D
   Pütz, M
AF Kruse, Sylvia
   Stiffler, Manuela
   Baumgartner, Daniel
   Puetz, Marco
BE SchmidtThome, P
   Greiving, S
TI Vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in the Alpine space: a
   case study on the adaptive capacity of the tourism sector
SO EUROPEAN CLIMATE VULNERABILITIES AND ADAPTATION: A SPATIAL PLANNING
   PERSPECTIVE
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID WINTER TOURISM; SWISS ALPS; SNOWMAKING
AB The objectives of this case study are to analyse the existing capacities of the tourism sector in the European Alps and to investigate opportunities for improving adaptation enacted by tourism stake-holders. Alpine tourism is expected to be among the economic sectors most affected by climate change effects. Because tourism development often requires mid- and long-term investments in infrastructure and services, early action is needed to build capacities to adapt to climate change and prevent economic losses to the regional economies. Up to now, only a few studies have considered both summer and winter tourism when evaluating the adaptive capacity and possible adaptations of the tourism sector. Two research questions are investigated: (i) what characterises the adaptive capacity of the tourism sector in the European Alps? and (ii) which adaptation activities have the potential to reduce the vulnerability of the tourism sector? By investigating these questions, the study endeavoured to characterise the adaptive capacity and identify current and potential adaptation activities for both summer and winter tourism in the European Alps. To measure the adaptive capacity of the tourism sector a semi-standardised questionnaire survey was administered to tourism stakeholders, that is, representatives of tourism organisations as well as public authorities for economic development, environmental agencies and spatial planning authorities at both the national and regional levels. The area of the study comprises all countries of the European Alps and is limited to the perimeter defined by the Alpine Convention. The results manifest a broad range of adaptation strategies and measures that are already being realised in Alpine tourism today. Concerning the currently realised adaptation strategies and the willingness to adapt in the future, the results show that adaptation activities within the tourism sector are primarily realised in an autonomous, private and local manner. In particular a broad range of corporate measures (e.g. providing snowmaking equipment) are actualised on a private basis without necessarily following a comprehensive and long-term strategy. Mostly short-and medium-term adaptation options are realised, which can be seen as no-regret or low-regret measures with benefits even without climate change. Further, the results show that, on the one hand, climate adaptation in the tourism sector is prompted by economic incentives. In general, tourism stakeholders are not motivated to take adaptive action to address climate change, but rather, strive to prepare for increasing losses in winter tourism and to improve tourism infrastructure and supply to meet future tourism demand. On the other hand, adaptation decisions are very complex and uncertain concerning their effects if they aim at long-term development and take into account a variety of social, institutional and political barriers.
C1 [Kruse, Sylvia; Stiffler, Manuela; Baumgartner, Daniel; Puetz, Marco] Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res WSL, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute
   for Forest, Snow & Landscape Research
RP Kruse, S (corresponding author), Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res WSL, Zurcherstr 111, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
RI Kruse, Sylvia/E-7096-2014; Pütz, Marco/B-8389-2016
OI Puetz, Marco/0000-0001-7868-6864
CR Abegg B., 2011, MAN ALP FUT 2 INSP D, V4, P268
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NR 46
TC 9
Z9 10
U1 0
U2 18
PU BLACKWELL SCIENCE PUBL
PI OXFORD
PA OSNEY MEAD, OXFORD OX2 0EL, ENGLAND
BN 978-0-470-97741-5
PY 2013
BP 273
EP 287
D2 10.1002/9781118474822
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BA1JJ
UT WOS:000332642900015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barrowman, HM
   Butler, JRA
AF Barrowman, Hannah M.
   Butler, James R. A.
TI Beyond Challenges in Community-Based Adaptation: Critical Insights from
   the Human Ecology Framework
SO HUMAN ECOLOGY REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation challenges; Climate Change Adaptation Project;
   community-based adaptation; human ecology framework; Indonesia
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; TENGGARA BARAT PROVINCE; PATHWAYS; CAPACITY;
   ISLANDS
AB Community-based adaptation (CBA) is a common policy response in international development yet often encounters challenges with implementation and longevity. Using a human ecology and systems thinking framework and data from the Climate Change Adaptation Project (CCAP), implemented in Akar Akar village, Indonesia, this study explores the drivers of challenges affecting CBA. Results demonstrate that challenges affecting CBA are numerous, interconnected, and can derive from the disconnect between the world views of implementors and the politics, social structures, and historical processes influencing local activities. Challenges encountered in the CCAP project, for example, were found to derive from the implementors' emphasis on agency, self-organization, and responsibilization of women as a way to alleviate community poverty and improve adaptive capacity and its failure to comprehend the sociopolitical position of women in Akar Akar. With these findings in hand, this study advocates the use of systems thinking in future CBA research and intervention design.
C1 [Barrowman, Hannah M.] Univ Canberra, Ctr Deliberat Democracy & Global Governance, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
   [Butler, James R. A.] Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org CSIRO, Sustainable Pathways Program Land & Water, Townsville, Qld, Australia.
C3 University of Canberra; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Barrowman, HM (corresponding author), Univ Canberra, Ctr Deliberat Democracy & Global Governance, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
EM hannah.barrowman@canberra.edu.au
RI Butler, James/D-7446-2011
OI Butler, James/0000-0001-8333-947X
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NR 41
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 4
U2 9
PU ANU PRESS
PI ACTON
PA RG MENZIES LIBRARY, BLDG 2, AUSTRALIAN NATL UNIV, ACTON, ACT 2601 AP,
   AUSTRALIA
SN 1074-4827
EI 2204-0919
J9 HUM ECOL REV
JI Hum. Ecol. Rev.
PY 2020
VL 26
IS 1
BP 73
EP 94
PG 22
WC Environmental Studies; Sociology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Sociology
GA RU3DQ
UT WOS:000645029800007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Suárez-Muñoz, M
   Bonet-García, FJ
   Navarro-Cerrillo, R
   Herrero, J
   Mina, M
AF Suarez-Munoz, M.
   Bonet-Garcia, F. J.
   Navarro-Cerrillo, R.
   Herrero, J.
   Mina, M.
TI Forest management scenarios drive future dynamics of Mediterranean
   planted pine forests under climate change
SO LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Diversification; Forest type change; LANDIS-II;
   Management scenarios; Mediterranean forests; Planted pine forests
ID DROUGHT; SIMULATION; PLANTATIONS; PROJECTIONS; RESILIENCE; GROWTH; NIGRA
AB Context Planted pine forests are highly abundant communities in the Mediterranean Basin. Being the result of past reforestation, these forests show high species and structural homogeneity. Diversification to conifer-broadleaved mixed forests is recommended to promote adaptation to climate change and increase their resilience to perturbations.
   Objectives This study aims at evaluating how these planted pine forests will develop in the future as a result of the combined impacts of management and climate.
   Methods We applied a forest landscape model (LANDIS-II) to simulate different climate scenarios and management strategies designed in cooperation with forest managers to assess their effects on the performance of planted pine forests and their change in terms of forest composition.
   Results Climate change scenarios caused a shift in the phenological growth pattern of planted pine forests by reducing forest growth during summer and increasing photosynthetic productivity in spring and fall, particularly under high emission scenarios. Biomass increased through time and more strongly under climate change, but this increase differs among species, resulting in changes of forest types across the landscape. Our results portray natural succession as the main driver of forest change, but intensive management accelerated this process by limiting pine growth and promoting growth of oak species.
   Conclusions Our results highlight the importance of active management on planted pine forests to favour mixed and climate-adapted ecosystems in shorter time scales than offered by succession alone. Moreover, our spatially explicit modelling approach helps to identify areas where lack of seed dispersal and/or competitive exclusion prevent natural diversification, providing useful recommendations for interventions. However, the modelling approach has some limitations since it does not consider natural disturbances.
   [GRAPHICS]
   .
C1 [Suarez-Munoz, M.; Bonet-Garcia, F. J.; Navarro-Cerrillo, R.] Univ Cordoba, Fac Sci, Dept Bot Ecol & Plant Physiol, Cordoba, Spain.
   [Navarro-Cerrillo, R.] Univ Cordoba, Fac Forest Engn, Silviculture & Climate Change Lab, ERSAF Res Grp, Cordoba, Spain.
   [Herrero, J.] kNOWater SL, Granada, Spain.
   [Mina, M.] Eurac Res, Inst Alpine Environm, Bolzano, Italy.
C3 Universidad de Cordoba; Universidad de Cordoba; European Academy of
   Bozen-Bolzano
RP Suárez-Muñoz, M (corresponding author), Univ Cordoba, Fac Sci, Dept Bot Ecol & Plant Physiol, Cordoba, Spain.
EM bv2sumum@uco.es
RI Mina, Marco/H-6047-2019; Bonet-García, Francisco/A-3551-2011
OI Mina, Marco/0000-0002-7489-7688
FU EVIDENCE [891671]; Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation; European
   Union [891671]; Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [891671] Funding Source:
   Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)
FX Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with
   Springer Nature. M.S.M. was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science
   and Innovation [FPU predoctoral grant]. M.M. acknowledges funding from
   the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under
   the Marie Sklodowska-Curie framework (Grant No. 891671, REINFORCE
   project).
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NR 57
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 10
U2 19
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-2973
EI 1572-9761
J9 LANDSCAPE ECOL
JI Landsc. Ecol.
PD AUG
PY 2023
VL 38
IS 8
BP 2069
EP 2084
DI 10.1007/s10980-023-01678-y
EA MAY 2023
PG 16
WC Ecology; Geography, Physical; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography; Geology
GA L1IO5
UT WOS:000998530900001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vizinho, A
   Príncipe, A
   Vasconcelos, AC
   Rebelo, R
   Branquinho, C
   Penha-Lopes, G
AF Vizinho, Andre
   Principe, Adriana
   Vasconcelos, Ana Catia
   Rebelo, Rui
   Branquinho, Cristina
   Penha-Lopes, Gil
TI Using and Creating Microclimates for Cork Oak Adaptation to Climate
   Change
SO LAND
LA English
DT Article
DE land degradation; landscape restoration; agroforestry; Quercus suber;
   Montado; Dehesa; shrubs; topography; farm adaptation
ID SUBER L. STANDS; QUERCUS-SUBER; CISTUS-LADANIFER; MANAGEMENT; FOREST;
   REGENERATION; AGROFORESTRY; FACILITATION; LANDSCAPE; PORTUGAL
AB In Mediterranean climate regions, climate change is increasing aridity and contributing to the mortality rate of Quercus suber, reducing the success of reforestation efforts. Using and creating microclimates is a recommended climate adaptation strategy that needs research. Our hypothesis is that planting Q. suber in north-facing slopes and water lines results in a higher survival rate than those that are planted in ridges and south-facing slopes. Secondly, our hypothesis is that existing shrubs (in this case, Cistus ladanifer) can be used to create microclimatic sheltering and increase the survival of Q. suber plantations. In experiment 1, we tested the survival of Q. suber plantations in four different topographic conditions. For that, 80 Q. suber plants were planted over four different topographic conditions, where soil probes were installed to monitor soil moisture and temperature. Two years after, the results show an increased survival rate in the north-facing slope and water line when compared to the ridge area (p = 0.032). In experiment 2, we tested if planting in the shade of rows of C. ladanifer increases the survival rate of Q. suber plantations. For that, 1200 Q. suber plants were planted; 600 in a Montado open area with no shade and 600 under the shade of rows of C. ladanifer shrubs. A total of 17 months after plantation, there was a significantly higher survival rate of the shaded plants (p = 0.027). We conclude that microclimates created by topography and shrubs can have a significant impact on the survival of Q. suber plantations and discuss the situations in which these can apply.
C1 [Vizinho, Andre] Univ Lisbon, cE3c Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes, Fac Ciencias, P-1749016 Lisbon, Portugal.
   Univ Lisbon, CHANGE Global Change & Sustainabil Inst, Fac Ciencias, P-1749016 Lisbon, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Lisboa; Universidade de Lisboa
RP Vizinho, A (corresponding author), Univ Lisbon, cE3c Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes, Fac Ciencias, P-1749016 Lisbon, Portugal.
EM andrevizinho@fc.ul.pt
RI Vizinho, André/JFA-6463-2023; Vasconcelos, Ana Carolina/JDV-8022-2023;
   Rebelo, Rui/D-7054-2013; Branquinho, Cristina/B-3670-2008
OI Rebelo, Rui/0000-0003-2544-1470; Vizinho, Andre/0000-0002-0503-3624;
   Branquinho, Cristina/0000-0001-8294-7924; Principe,
   Adriana/0000-0002-5147-835X
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NR 70
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 2
U2 13
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-445X
J9 LAND-BASEL
JI Land
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 12
IS 3
AR 531
DI 10.3390/land12030531
PG 15
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA A7ML0
UT WOS:000956921500001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Di Falco, S
   Sharma, S
AF Di Falco, Salvatore
   Sharma, Sindra
TI Investing in Climate Change Adaptation: Motivations and Green Incentives
   in the Fiji Islands
SO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Small Islands States; Adaptation; Investment; Theory of Planned
   Behavior; Experiment; Conditionality; Microloans; Framed Field
   Experiment; Psychology
ID PLANNED BEHAVIOR; DECISION-MAKING; INTENTIONS; ADOPTION; DETERMINANTS;
   MICROFINANCE; PSYCHOLOGY; FISHERIES; AMYGDALA; ATTITUDE
AB We investigate the interplay between individual's intrinsic motivation and green incentives on stated climate change adaptive behavior. Using experimental and survey data in the Fiji Islands, we find that intrinsic motivations favoring pro-environmental [beliefs) positively influence the intention to adapt. Moreover we find that green incentives crowd-in intrinsic pro-environmental motivations and further facilitate the uptake of adaptive investments. Demographic factors of ethnicity, occupation, participation in and access to credit also influence cognitive and behavioral constructs to varying degrees.
C1 [Di Falco, Salvatore] Univ Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Sharma, Sindra] Ramphal Inst, London, England.
C3 University of Geneva
RP Di Falco, S (corresponding author), Univ Geneva Switzerland, Inst Econ & Econometr, Blvd Pont Arve 40, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
EM Salvatore.difalco@unige.ch
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NR 92
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 3
U2 53
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-8009
EI 1873-6106
J9 ECOL ECON
JI Ecol. Econ.
PD DEC
PY 2018
VL 154
BP 394
EP 408
DI 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2018.08.015
PG 15
WC Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics
GA GV7DR
UT WOS:000446282700035
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hurlimann, A
   Moosavi, S
   Browne, GR
AF Hurlimann, Anna
   Moosavi, Sareh
   Browne, Geoffrey R.
TI Urban planning policy must do more to integrate climate change
   adaptation and mitigation actions
SO LAND USE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Integration; Adaptation; Mitigation; Urban planning; Sea level rise;
   Climate change; Government; Policy
ID SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; LOCAL-LEVEL; BARRIERS; CITIES; QUALITY; PLANS;
   IMPACTS; COASTAL; CARBON; DEAL
AB Well-designed urban planning policy can mitigate greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to anticipated climate change impacts. However, there has been limited analysis of the extent to which urban planning policy documents addresses climate change adaptation and or mitigation. There is a need to rapidly reduce greenhouse gas emissions to limit warming to 1.5 degrees C above pre-industrial levels by 2100, and to be well adapted to this change (in line with the Paris Agreement). Achieving this goal will assist in limiting damage and loss to humans and the natural environment. This paper presents a detailed qualitative and quantitative evaluation of urban planning documents (policy, regulation and law) in the state of Victoria, Australia, and the degree to which climate change mitigation and adaptation (with a focus on sea level rise) are addressed and integrated. Two scales of government (state and local) were analysed across three policy disciplines (urban planning, climate change and flood management). The evaluation framework contributes to the few tools for analyzing legislation, regulation and strategic policies for climate change adequacy. The findings reveal limited climate change adaptation and mitigation actions in urban planning documents. Additionally, there is limited integration of adaptation and mitigation actions. Important opportunities for better alignment of policies across disciplines and government levels in line Paris Agreement goals are identified, to ensure implementation in decisions made about land use and development. The analysis finds that urban planning policy must do more to include and integrate climate change adaptation and mitigation actions.
C1 [Hurlimann, Anna; Browne, Geoffrey R.] Univ Melbourne, Fac Architecture Bldg & Planning, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia.
   [Moosavi, Sareh] Univ Libre Bruxelles, Fac Architecture, Brussels, Belgium.
C3 University of Melbourne; Universite Libre de Bruxelles
RP Hurlimann, A (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Fac Architecture Bldg & Planning, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia.
EM anna.hurlimann@unimelb.edu.au; sareh.moosavi@ulb.ac.be;
   geoffrey.browne@unimelb.edu.au
RI Hurlimann, Anna/JYP-6108-2024; Browne, Geoffrey/ABA-3139-2020
OI Browne, Geoffrey R/0000-0003-1990-3050; Hurlimann,
   Anna/0000-0001-9110-9340; Moosavi, Sareh/0000-0002-4819-2772
FU Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning Strategic Research
   Initiative Grant 2018-2019 at the University of Melbourne, Australia
FX Funding for this research was provided by a Faculty of Architecture
   Building and Planning Strategic Research Initiative Grant 2018-2019 at
   the University of Melbourne, Australia.
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NR 74
TC 94
Z9 95
U1 40
U2 192
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-8377
EI 1873-5754
J9 LAND USE POLICY
JI Land Use Pol.
PD FEB
PY 2021
VL 101
AR 105188
DI 10.1016/j.landusepol.2020.105188
EA JAN 2021
PG 9
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA PQ8WG
UT WOS:000606823100007
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rogozhina, NG
AF Rogozhina, N. G.
TI SOCIO-ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS OF THE MEKONG DELTA IN VIETNAM
SO RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF VIETNAMESE STUDIES-VYETNAMSKIYE ISSLEDOVANIYA
LA English
DT Article
DE Vietnam; Mekong Delta; climate change; environmental problems;
   sustainable development
AB The article discusses the features of the socio-environmental situation in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam. The first part analyzes the causes of its degradation under the influence of factors related to the economic development of the river both in Vietnam and abroad and multiplied by the consequences of climate change. The destruction of the Mekong Delta ecosystem calls into question the sustainability of the region's future economic development and threatens the country's food security. The second part of the article analyzes the policy promoted by the state to minimize the environmental consequences of ongoing development projects and adaptation to climate change. The author comes to the conclusion that despite the existing difficulties in implementing the planned measures, the state is ready to create conditions for the transition to sustainable development in the Mekong Delta.
C1 [Rogozhina, N. G.] Russian Acad Sci, Primakov Natl Res Inst World Econ & Int Relat, Moscow, Russia.
C3 Russian Academy of Sciences; Primakov National Research Institute of
   World Economy & International Relations of the Russian Academy of
   Sciences
RP Rogozhina, NG (corresponding author), Russian Acad Sci, Primakov Natl Res Inst World Econ & Int Relat, Moscow, Russia.
EM ngrogozhina@mail.ru
RI rogozhina, nataliya/AAE-7718-2020
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NR 21
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 13
PU CENTER VIETNAM & ASEAN STUDIES
PI MOSCOW
PA INST FAR EASTERN STUDIES RUSSIAN ACAD SCIENCES-IFES RAS, 32, NAKHIMOVSKY
   PROSPECT, MOSCOW, 117997, RUSSIA
SN 2618-9453
J9 RUSS J VIETNAM STUD
JI Russ. J. Vietnam Stud.
PY 2022
IS 2
BP 37
EP 45
DI 10.54631/VS.2022.62-101585
PG 9
WC Area Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Area Studies
GA 2Z0BY
UT WOS:000826251900004
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Deenapanray, PNK
   Ramma, I
AF Deenapanray, Prakash N. K.
   Ramma, Indoomatee
GP Informat Resources Management Assoc
TI Adaptations to Climate Change and Climate Variability in the Agriculture
   Sector in Mauritius: Lessons from a Technical Needs Assessment
SO NATURAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT: CONCEPTS, METHODOLOGIES, TOOLS, AND
   APPLICATIONS
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
AB Like many Small Island Developing States (SIDS), Mauritius is highly vulnerable to the impacts of Climate Change (CC) and Climate Variability (CV). Particularly vulnerable are small-scale farmers who carry out rain-fed agriculture. While adaptation to CC and CV has taken place among small planters, the first methodological assessment of the technology needs for adaptation in the agriculture sector took place in Phase II of the global GEF-UNEP Technology Needs Assessment (TNA) project. In addition to providing a systematic approach for identifying and prioritizing adaptation technologies, the TNA project also sought to increase the preparedness of Mauritius for leveraging international climate financing and support for technology transfer. Since Mauritius was the only SIDS participating in Phase II of the TNA project, this chapter shares with other SIDS the methodology and lessons learned. The climate change-agriculture-food security nexus is also discussed.
C1 [Deenapanray, Prakash N. K.] Ecol Living Act Ltd ELIA, La Gaulette, Mauritius.
   [Ramma, Indoomatee] Food & Agr Res Council, Moka, Mauritius.
RP Deenapanray, PNK (corresponding author), Ecol Living Act Ltd ELIA, La Gaulette, Mauritius.
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NR 23
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 2
PU IGI GLOBAL
PI HERSEY
PA 701 E CHOCOLATE AVE, STE 200, HERSEY, PA 17033-1240 USA
BN 978-1-5225-0804-5; 978-1-5225-0803-8
PY 2017
BP 655
EP 680
DI 10.4018/978-1-5225-0803-8.ch030
D2 10.4018/978-1-5225-0803-8
PG 26
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA BN2WQ
UT WOS:000477803700031
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Diaz, HP
AF Diaz, Harry Polo
BE Filho, WL
   Musa, H
   Cavan, G
   OHare, P
   Seixas, J
TI A Conceptual Framework for Understanding Vulnerabilities to Extreme
   Climate Events
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION, RESILIENCE AND HAZARDS
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Climate change; Vulnerability; Extreme events; Americas
ID CAPACITY
AB Many regions of the world are experiencing impacts of climate change of increasing variability, including drought and flood events. Proactive adaptation to climate change builds resiliency and reduces vulnerability to extreme events, lessening their impact and also their classification as "disasters." Adaptive strategies need to address the changing climate, other exposures (i.e. globalization and neo-liberalism), and sensitivities (i.e. unequal access to economic capital or lack of human capital).
   This paper presents a research framework used by an international and interdisciplinary research project for assessing and building resiliency to climate change and extreme events of drought and flood in five countries of the Americas. The paper discusses how past, present, and future vulnerabilities are integrated into the research process, the complexities and nuances of dealing with local vulnerabilities to extreme climate events, and the incorporation of an adaptive governance assessment.
C1 [Diaz, Harry Polo] Univ Regina, Regina, SK S4S 0A2, Canada.
C3 University of Regina
RP Diaz, HP (corresponding author), Univ Regina, Regina, SK S4S 0A2, Canada.
EM harry.diaz@uregina.ca
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NR 48
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-39880-8; 978-3-319-39879-2
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2016
BP 143
EP 156
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-39880-8_9
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-39880-8
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Public, Environmental &
   Occupational Health; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Regional &
   Urban Planning
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Public Administration
GA BG3BE
UT WOS:000387844800010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Volaire, F
   Barre, P
   Béguier, V
   Bourgoin, T
   Durand, JL
   Ghesquière, M
   Jaubertie, JP
   Litrico, I
   Noël, D
AF Volaire, F.
   Barre, P.
   Beguier, V.
   Bourgoin, T.
   Durand, J. -L
   Ghesquiere, M.
   Jaubertie, J. -P.
   Litrico, I.
   Noel, D.
TI What forage plant ideotypes for grassland that is adapted to climate
   change?
SO FOURRAGES
LA French
DT Article
DE Carbon dioxyde; climatic change; climatic factor; cultivar breeding;
   drought; forage mixture; forage species; genetic variability; grass;
   grassland; inter-annual variations; legume; temperature
ID PERENNIAL GRASSES; PRODUCTIVITY; IMPACTS; CROP
AB Owing to climate change, the line of division between the two main forage producing areas in France (temperate north, south Mediterranean) is shifting rapidly upwards to the North. Adapting objectives when selecting species is indispensable. Available cultivars of Mediterranean perennial forage species that are adapted to a dry climate are rare (<2 %). In areas where the risk of drought is low, possible improvements may be achieved by making the most of longer growing seasons, selecting better adapted species and mixing species with diversified characteristics. For areas where the risk of drought is high, improvements include: developing forage plants with a high summer dormancy combined with higher productivity during rainy seasons, and looking for existing plant populations in semi-arid areas of the world.
C1 [Volaire, F.] CNRS, INRA, CEFE, F-34293 Montpellier, France.
   [Barre, P.; Durand, J. -L; Ghesquiere, M.; Litrico, I.] INRA, URP3F, F-86000 Lusignan, France.
   [Beguier, V.] Jouffray Drillaud, F-86000 St Sauvant, France.
   [Bourgoin, T.; Jaubertie, J. -P.] Agri Obtent, Chemin Petite Miniere, F-78820 Guyancourt, France.
   [Noel, D.] Negadis, Barenbrug Tourneur Rech, F-82600 Mas Grenier, France.
C3 INRAE; Universite PSL; Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE); Institut
   Agro; Montpellier SupAgro; CIRAD; Centre National de la Recherche
   Scientifique (CNRS); Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD);
   Universite Paul-Valery; Universite de Montpellier; INRAE
RP Volaire, F (corresponding author), CNRS, INRA, CEFE, 1919 Route Mende, F-34293 Montpellier, France.
EM florence.volaire@cefe.cnrs.ir
RI Bourgoin, Thierry/L-5146-2019
OI Bourgoin, Thierry/0000-0001-9277-2478
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NR 33
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 13
PU ASSOC FRANCAISE PRODUCTION FOURRAGERE
PI PARIS CEDEX 12
PA  MAISON NATIONALE DES ELEVEURS -149 RUE DE BERCY, PARIS CEDEX 12, FRANCE
SN 0429-2766
J9 FOURRAGES
JI Fourrages
PD JUN
PY 2013
IS 214
BP 119
EP 126
PG 8
WC Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA V38QS
UT WOS:000209358500005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nhliziyo, N
   Mushunje, A
AF Nhliziyo, Nobukhosi
   Mushunje, Abbyssinia
TI Determinants of Small-Scale Farmers' Participation in Social Capital
   Networks to Enhance Adoption of Climate Change Adaptation Strategies in
   OR Tambo District, South Africa
SO AGRICULTURE-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; participation; small-scale farmers; social
   capital network
ID AGRICULTURE; HOUSEHOLDS; WOMEN; MEMBERSHIP; VARIETIES; PROVINCE
AB Globally, climate change remains one of the most pressing challenges, and it is also an obstacle to the fundamental achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. The purpose of the study was to examine the determinants of small-scale farmers' participation in social capital networks to enhance adoption of climate change adaptation strategies. Multistage and purposive sampling were used to carry out the study. A cross-sectional research design was used to carry out the study and structured questionnaires were used as a data collection tool. The data collected were analyzed using descriptive statistics, the Binary Logit model, and the Ordered Logit model. The findings of the study show that gender, household size, age, marital status, education, and employment status affect a farmer's participation in social capital networks. The results also show that household size, employment status, and income level affect the extent of participation in social networks. As the paper is the first to look at the determinants of the participation of farmers in social capital networks in Eastern Cape, the results are of paramount importance to policy formulators in order to formulate policies that will encourage farmers to join localized farmer-based social capital networks to adopt climate change adaption measures.
C1 [Nhliziyo, Nobukhosi; Mushunje, Abbyssinia] Univ Ft Hare, Dept Agr Econ & Extens, Private Bag X1314, Alice, South Africa.
C3 University of Fort Hare
RP Nhliziyo, N (corresponding author), Univ Ft Hare, Dept Agr Econ & Extens, Private Bag X1314, Alice, South Africa.
EM nobunhliziyo@gmail.com; amushunje@ufh.ac.za
OI Mushunje, Abbyssinia/0000-0002-2183-785X
FU National Research Foundation
FX No Statement Available
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NR 57
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 6
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2077-0472
J9 AGRICULTURE-BASEL
JI Agriculture-Basel
PD MAR
PY 2024
VL 14
IS 3
AR 441
DI 10.3390/agriculture14030441
PG 18
WC Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA MC2T0
UT WOS:001191369600001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bond, S
   Barth, J
AF Bond, Sophie
   Barth, Jule
TI Care-full and just: Making a difference through climate change
   adaptation
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Ethic of care; Joan Tronto; Caring with; Climate change adaptation;
   Justice; Community engagement
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; JUSTICE; RESILIENCE; GEOGRAPHIES; POLITICS;
   ETHICS; VULNERABILITY; THINKING; IMPACTS; WORK
AB In the small city of Dunedin, on the south-east coast of Aotearoa New Zealand, sea-level rise and increased flood events are affecting communities. The potential for climate change impacts in South Dunedin to exacerbate existing inequalities is high. Floods in 2015 became a catalyst for a different way of 'doing' climate change adaptation suggesting more care-full and just intentions and practices. Drawing from both local authority and community actions, we document how care has become the basis for a meaningful way to bring justice to the forefront of the early stages of adaptation planning. We document how Tronto's (2013) caring with is demonstrated in a significant shift in the relationship between and within affected communities and the Council since the floods. The nature of this partnership work is evident through community initiatives and the Council's approach to community engagement, both of which are providing spaces in which adaptation discussions are becoming easier, the emotional dimensions of climate change impacts can be expressed, and where embodied care work is justice work. We argue that just adaptation invokes care, and that care and justice are co-constituted when the moral dimensions of caring with are institutionalised in both community and local authority adaptive practices.
C1 [Bond, Sophie; Barth, Jule] Univ Otago, Sch Geog, POB 56, Dunedin, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
C3 University of Otago
RP Bond, S (corresponding author), Univ Otago, Sch Geog, POB 56, Dunedin, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
EM sophie.bond@otago.ac.nz
FU Deep South National Science Challenge, Wellington, New Zealand
FX The research in this article is part of a larger project funded by the
   Deep South National Science Challenge, Wellington, New Zealand. The
   project is entitled 'Climate adaptation, vulnerability and community
   well-being' (see
   https://www.deepsouthchallenge.co.nz/projects/climate-adaptation-vulnera
   bility-and-community-well-being).
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NR 71
TC 23
Z9 24
U1 2
U2 33
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 102
AR 102734
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2020.102734
PG 11
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA LP8RR
UT WOS:000534585300003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Turner, GA
   de'Donato, F
   Hoeben, AD
   Nordeng, Z
   Coleman, S
   Otto, IM
   Hajat, S
   Kovats, S
AF Turner, Grace A.
   de'Donato, Francesca
   Hoeben, Annechien D.
   Nordeng, Zuzana
   Coleman, Samantha
   Otto, Ilona M.
   Hajat, Shakoor
   Kovats, Sari
TI Implementation of climate adaptation in the public health sector in
   Europe: qualitative thematic analysis
SO EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
AB Background Adaptation, to reduce the health impacts of climate change, is driven by political action, public support and events (extreme weather). National adaptation policies or strategies are limited in addressing human health risks and implementation of adaptation in the public health community is not well understood.Aim To identify key issues in climate change adaptation implementation for public health in Europe.Methods Key informant interviews with decision-makers in international, national and local city governments in 19 European countries. Participants were recruited if a senior decision-maker working in public health, environmental health or climate adaptation.Interviews addressed Barriers and levers for adaptation, policy alignment, networks and evidence needs.Results Thirty-two interviews were completed between June and October 2021 with 4 international, 5 national and 23 city/local government stakeholders. Respondents reported inadequate resources (funding, training and personnel) for health-adaptation implementation and the marginal role of health in adaptation policy. A clear mandate to act was key for implementation and resource allocation. Limited cross-departmental collaboration and poor understanding of the role of public health in climate policy were barriers to implementation.Conclusions Across Europe, progress is varied in implementation of climate adaptation in public health planning. Providing appropriate resources, training, knowledge mobilization and supporting cross-departmental collaboration and multi-level governance will facilitate adaptation to protect human health.
C1 [Turner, Grace A.; Coleman, Samantha; Hajat, Shakoor; Kovats, Sari] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Dept Publ Hlth Environm & Soc, 15-17 Tavistock Pl, London WC1H 9SH, England.
   [Turner, Grace A.; Hajat, Shakoor; Kovats, Sari] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, NIHR Hlth Protect Res Unit Environm Change & Hlth, London, England.
   [de'Donato, Francesca] ASL Roma 1, Dept Epidemiol, Lazio Reg Hlth Serv, Rome, Italy.
   [Hoeben, Annechien D.; Otto, Ilona M.] Karl Franzens Univ Graz, Wegener Ctr Climate & Global Change, Graz, Austria.
   [Hoeben, Annechien D.; Otto, Ilona M.] Karl Franzens Univ Graz, Inst Environm Syst Sci, Graz, Austria.
   [Nordeng, Zuzana] Norwegian Publ Hlth Inst, Dept Res Adm Support, Oslo, Norway.
C3 University of London; London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine;
   University of London; London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine;
   University of Graz; University of Graz
RP Turner, GA (corresponding author), London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Dept Publ Hlth Environm & Soc, 15-17 Tavistock Pl, London WC1H 9SH, England.
EM grace.turner@lshtm.ac.uk
RI Hoeben, Annechien Dirkje/JCD-9348-2023
OI Turner, Grace/0000-0001-7624-8633; Nordeng, Zuzana/0000-0002-2726-5952
FU ENBEL Project - European Union [101003966]; National Institute for
   Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Protection Research Unit in
   Environmental Change and Health (NIHR) [200909]; Met Office [PHSEZT6210]
FX The research was supported by the ENBEL Project, funded by the European
   Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant
   agreement number 101003966. S.K., S.H. and G.A.T. were also funded by
   the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health
   Protection Research Unit in Environmental Change and Health (NIHR
   200909), a partnership between UK Health Security Agency and between
   UKHSA and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), in
   collaboration with University College London and the Met Office (grant
   number PHSEZT6210). The views expressed are those of the author(s) and
   not necessarily those of the NIHR, UK Health Security Agency, London
   School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University College London, the
   Met Office or the Department of Health and Social Care.
CR ASPHER, 2022, MOV RIGHT HLTH ALL T
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NR 23
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 8
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 1101-1262
EI 1464-360X
J9 EUR J PUBLIC HEALTH
JI Eur. J. Public Health
PD DEC 14
PY 2023
VL 34
IS 3
BP 544
EP 549
DI 10.1093/eurpub/ckad218
EA DEC 2023
PG 6
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA TI5I9
UT WOS:001125889900001
PM 38099866
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Palik, BJ
   Clark, PW
   D'Amato, AW
   Swanston, C
   Nagel, L
AF Palik, Brian J.
   Clark, Peter W.
   D'Amato, Anthony W.
   Swanston, Chris
   Nagel, Linda
TI Operationalizing forest-assisted migration in the context of climate
   change adaptation: Examples from the eastern USA
SO ECOSPHERE
LA English
DT Article
DE ecosystem function; operational scale; regeneration; resilience;
   resistance; silviculture; transition
ID BLACK ASH WETLANDS; UNITED-STATES; MANAGEMENT; FRAMEWORK; FUTURE;
   CHALLENGES; STRATEGIES; MORTALITY; DEBATE; TREES
AB There is increasing momentum to implement conservation and management approaches that adapt forests to climate change so as to sustain ecosystem functions. These range from actions designed to increase the resistance of current composition and structure to negative impacts to those designed to transition forests to substantially different characteristics. A component of many adaptation approaches will likely include assisted migration of future climate-adapted tree species or genotypes. While forest-assisted migration (FAM) has been discussed conceptually and examined experimentally for almost a decade, operationalizing FAM (i.e., routine use in forest conservation and management projects) lags behind the acceptance of the need for climate adaptation. As the vulnerability of forest ecosystems in climate change increases, FAM may need to become an integral management tool to reduce long-term risks to ecosystem function, despite real and perceived barriers for its implementation. Here we discuss the concept of operational-scale FAM and why it remains a controversial, not yet widely adopted component of climate adaptation. We present three case studies of operational-scale FAM to illustrate how the practice can be approached pragmatically within an adaptation framework despite the barriers to acceptance. Finally, we discuss a path toward advancing the wide use of operational-scale FAM.
C1 [Palik, Brian J.] US Forest Serv, USDA, Northern Res Stn, Grand Rapids, MN 55744 USA.
   [Clark, Peter W.; D'Amato, Anthony W.] Univ Vermont, Rubenstein Sch Environm & Nat Resources, Burlington, VT USA.
   [Swanston, Chris] US Forest Serv, USDA, Northern Res Stn, Houghton, MI USA.
   [Nagel, Linda] Utah State Univ, Coll Nat Resources, Logan, UT 84322 USA.
C3 United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States Forest
   Service; University of Vermont; United States Department of Agriculture
   (USDA); United States Forest Service; Utah System of Higher Education;
   Utah State University
RP Palik, BJ (corresponding author), US Forest Serv, USDA, Northern Res Stn, Grand Rapids, MN 55744 USA.
EM brian.palik@usda.gov
RI D'Amato, Anthony/AAV-3245-2021
OI Palik, Brian/0000-0003-0300-9644; Clark, Peter W./0000-0001-8931-7271
FU Colorado State University, Department of Forest and Rangeland
   Stewardship; USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station; USDI
   Midwest Climate Adaptation Science Center; USDI Northeast Climate
   Adaptation Science Center; Utah State University, College of Natural
   Resources; University of Vermont, Rubenstein School of Environment and
   Natural Resources
FX Colorado State University, Department of Forest and Rangeland
   Stewardship; University of Vermont, Rubenstein School of Environment and
   Natural Resources; USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station; USDI
   Midwest Climate Adaptation Science Center; USDI Northeast Climate
   Adaptation Science Center; Utah State University, College of Natural
   Resources
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NR 72
TC 35
Z9 39
U1 2
U2 24
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 2150-8925
J9 ECOSPHERE
JI Ecosphere
PD OCT
PY 2022
VL 13
IS 10
AR e4260
DI 10.1002/ecs2.4260
PG 19
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 5E8HF
UT WOS:000865862600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Olaniyan, BS
   Govender, N
AF Olaniyan, Bolanle Susan
   Govender, Nadaraj
TI Responding to Climate Change: Indigenous knowledge lessons from Nigerian
   root and tuber farmers
SO ALTERNATIVE-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation strategies; Climate Change; Indigenous knowledge; responses;
   root and tuber farmers
ID EDUCATION; AFRICA
AB This study espoused lessons learnt from Indigenous root and tuber farmers' responses to Climate Change in Nigeria. Situated Learning Theory and Participatory Phenomenology framed the study. Data were generated using focus group discussions, in-depth interview and participant observation. An inductive thematic analysis was applied on the data. The experience of Climate Change by the farmers has been change in rainfall pattern and other indicators were identified. The farmers respond to Climate Change using their Indigenous knowledge of water conservation by making mounds, maintain soil fertility by practising crop rotation, use compost made from household wastes and sustainable use of natural resources. The farmers' preference for adapting to Climate Change using Indigenous knowledge was attributed to Indigenous knowledge being effective, easily accessible and inexpensive along with their apathy to scientific interventions. The study recommended possible ways of including the documented Indigenous knowledge into mainstream adaptation strategies and Agricultural Curriculum in Nigeria.
C1 [Olaniyan, Bolanle Susan; Govender, Nadaraj] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Durban, South Africa.
   [Olaniyan, Bolanle Susan] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Edgewood Campus Private Bag X03 Ashwood, ZA-3605 Durban, South Africa.
C3 University of Kwazulu Natal; University of Kwazulu Natal
RP Olaniyan, BS (corresponding author), Univ KwaZulu Natal, Edgewood Campus Private Bag X03 Ashwood, ZA-3605 Durban, South Africa.
EM b.solaniyan@gmail.com
OI Govender, Nadaraj/0000-0002-3406-0605
FU University of KwaZulu-Natal
FX The authors acknowledge the University of KwaZulu-Natal for the bursary
   for the PhD study from which this article was extracted and the
   Indigenous community in Kwara State for their support by availing the
   authors the privilege of engaging with them in their homes and farms.
   They also appreciate the sacrifices of the extension officers as well as
   the Director Extension Services, Kwara Agricultural Development
   Programme during the field study.
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NR 37
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 2
U2 10
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 1177-1801
EI 1174-1740
J9 ALTERNATIVE
JI Alternative
PD JUN
PY 2023
VL 19
IS 2
BP 314
EP 323
DI 10.1177/11771801231169051
EA MAY 2023
PG 10
WC Ethnic Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Ethnic Studies
GA I8BI9
UT WOS:000981191700001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU He, XJ
   Yan, JZ
   Cheng, X
AF He, Xinjun
   Yan, Jianzhong
   Cheng, Xian
TI Household perspective on cropland expansion on the Tibetan Plateau
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Cropland expansion; Cropland use decision; Household survey; The Tibetan
   Plateau
ID LAND-USE CHANGE; AGRICULTURAL LAND; DRIVING FORCES; SUSTAINABLE
   INTENSIFICATION; LIVELIHOOD DIVERSIFICATION; CROPPING INTENSITY; CHANGE
   DRIVERS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; FOOD SECURITY; RIVER-BASIN
AB Cropland expansion has become a prominent feature in developing countries and regions. A comprehensive clarification of the causes of cropland expansion is conducive to the adoption of appropriate actions to intervene and adapt to climate change, support rational land use, and balance ecosystem services. Using the Pumqu River Basin (PRB) in the Tibetan Plateau as the study area, we constructed a conceptual model that emphasizes the role of households and explored the causes of cropland expansion based on field survey data. Our results indicate that households' perception of climate change, families' non-agricultural income, the numbers of agricultural labor force, and the population pressure faced were the causes of cropland expansion in the PRB. Based on these findings, corresponding policy recommendations to limit the spontaneous cropland expansion behaviors of local households and reduce the ecological loss caused by cropland expansion are proposed.
C1 [He, Xinjun; Yan, Jianzhong; Cheng, Xian] Southwest Univ, Coll Resources & Environm, State Cultivat Base Ecoagr Southwest Mountainous, Chongqing 400715, Peoples R China.
C3 Southwest University - China
RP Cheng, X (corresponding author), Southwest Univ, Coll Resources & Environm, State Cultivat Base Ecoagr Southwest Mountainous, Chongqing 400715, Peoples R China.
EM chengxian@swu.edu.cn
RI He, Xinjun/GXV-2399-2022
FU Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research
   [2019QZKK0603]; National Natural Science Foundation of China
   [41761144081, 41601089]; Open Foundation of Hebei Key Laboratory of
   Wetland Ecology and Conservation [hklk201909]; Fundamental Research
   Funds for the Central Universities [SWU119037]
FX This work was supported by the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific
   Expedition and Research (No. 2019QZKK0603), the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China (No. 41761144081 and 41601089), the Open Foundation
   of Hebei Key Laboratory of Wetland Ecology and Conservation (No.
   hklk201909), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central
   Universities (No. SWU119037).
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NR 56
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 14
U2 100
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD FEB 11
PY 2021
VL 21
IS 1
AR 21
DI 10.1007/s10113-021-01752-8
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA QI7DK
UT WOS:000619140100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Porst, L
   Sakdapolrak, P
AF Porst, Luise
   Sakdapolrak, Patrick
TI Gendered translocal connectedness: Rural-urban migration, remittances,
   and social resilience in Thailand
SO POPULATION SPACE AND PLACE
LA English
DT Article
DE gender relations; remittances; rural-urban migration; social resilience;
   Thailand; translocality
ID NORTHEAST THAILAND; LABOR MIGRATION; LAND-USE; HOUSEHOLD; MIGRANTS;
   WOMEN; INTERSECTIONALITY; MOBILITY; IMPACT; TRANSFORMATION
AB Remittances play a central role in debates on migration and development as well as migration as adaptation to climate change. We seek to contribute to the growing body of literature that addresses the role of gender relations for remittance sending and usage. Based on multisited qualitative research on rural-urban migration in Thailand, we apply the concept of translocal social resilience to expound the multilocal and intersectional dimension of remittances and their impact on social resilience. Building on typical constellations of remittance transfer and usage, the paper accentuates how gender, generational relations, and the household's socio-economic status shape remittance practices and their effects on social resilience across space. We can thus conclude that addressing intersecting socio-spatial levels and axes of difference enhances the understanding of remittance potentials for resilience, which also enriches research that frames migration as a means of adaptation.
C1 [Porst, Luise] Univ Bonn, Dept Geog, Meckenheimer Allee 166, D-53115 Bonn, Germany.
   [Sakdapolrak, Patrick] Univ Vienna, Dept Geog & Reg Sci, Vienna, Austria.
C3 University of Bonn; University of Vienna
RP Porst, L (corresponding author), Univ Bonn, Dept Geog, Meckenheimer Allee 166, D-53115 Bonn, Germany.
EM lporst@uni-bonn.de
RI Sakdapolrak, Patrick/AAT-6359-2021
OI Sakdapolrak, Patrick/0000-0001-7137-1552; Porst,
   Luise/0000-0001-7153-1544
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NR 93
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 7
U2 39
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1544-8444
EI 1544-8452
J9 POPUL SPACE PLACE
JI Popul. Space Place.
PD MAY
PY 2020
VL 26
IS 4
AR e2314
DI 10.1002/psp.2314
PG 14
WC Demography; Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Demography; Geography
GA LM8KZ
UT WOS:000532499300004
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Jewell, WT
AF Jewell, Ward T.
GP IEEE
TI Electric Industry Infrastructure for Sustainability: Climate Change and
   Energy Storage
SO 2008 IEEE POWER & ENERGY SOCIETY GENERAL MEETING, VOLS 1-11
SE IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting PESGM
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT General Meeting of the IEEE-Power-and-Energy-Society
CY JUL 20-24, 2008
CL Pittsburgh, PA
SP IEEE Power & Energy Soc
DE Infrastructure; Climate Change; Global Warming; Energy Storage;
   Renewable Energy; Sustainability
AB Although the regulatory structure for limiting emission of greenhouse gases is uncertain in much of the world, limits will be in force soon in many parts. Infrastructure needs to implement those limits are technologies to remove carbon from electric generation emissions, technologies to dispose of the carbon removed, sensing systems to monitor carbon emissions, and market or regulatory structures to implement the limits. Adaptation to climate change will require upgrades and capacity increases in existing transmission and distribution systems, and increased capacity in new systems. Increased use of renewable energy can reduce industry carbon emissions. Higher penetrations of intermittent renewable resources, wind and solar, will be allowed if storage is available to allow full dispatch of those generators. Infrastructure needs for energy storage are efficient and cost-competitive technologies to store electricity power electronic interfaces between those dc technologies and the ac power system, and monitoring and control systems to control and dispatch the storage systems.
C1 Wichita State Univ, Wichita, KS 67220 USA.
C3 Wichita State University
RP Jewell, WT (corresponding author), Wichita State Univ, Wichita, KS 67220 USA.
EM wardj@ieee.org
CR APT J, 2006, CARBON CLIMATE ISSUE
   *EL STOR ASS, 2006, PUMP HYDR STOR
   *EUR UN, 2006, GREENH GAS EM TRAD S
   JEWELL W, 2007, P FRONT POW C STILLW
   Jewell Ward, 2004, P FRONT POW C
   KLARA S, 2006, TRACKING NEW COAL FI
   POONPUN P, IEEE T POWE IN PRESS
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   *US DOE, 2002, EN INF ANN EN REV
   2005, EPRI J           FAL
NR 11
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 6
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
SN 1944-9925
BN 978-1-4244-1905-0
J9 IEEE POW ENER SOC GE
PY 2008
BP 5064
EP 5066
PG 3
WC Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Electrical & Electronic
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA BJB22
UT WOS:000264403803080
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hajdu, T
   Hajdu, G
AF Hajdu, Tamas
   Hajdu, Gabor
TI Temperature, climate change, and human conception rates: evidence from
   Hungary
SO JOURNAL OF POPULATION ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Conception rate; Fertility; Temperature; Weather; Climate change
ID HEAT-STRESS; AMBIENT-TEMPERATURE; SEASONAL-VARIATION; SAUNA EXPOSURE;
   DNA-DAMAGE; IN-VIVO; PREGNANCY; HYPERTHERMIA; SPERMATOZOA; FERTILITY
AB In this paper, we examine the relationship between temperature and human conception rates and project the impacts of climate change by the mid-twenty-first century. Using complete administrative data on 6.8 million pregnancies between 1980 and 2015 in Hungary, we show that exposure to hot temperatures reduces the conception rate in the first few weeks following exposure, but a partial rebound is observed after that. We project that with absent adaptation, climate change will increase seasonal differences in conception rates and annual conception rates will decline. A change in the number of induced abortions and spontaneous fetal losses drives the decline in conception rates. The number of live births is unaffected. However, some newborns will experience a shift in the timing of conception that leads to changes in in utero temperature exposure and therefore might have further consequences.
C1 [Hajdu, Tamas] Ctr Econ & Reg Studies, Inst Econ, Budapest, Hungary.
   [Hajdu, Gabor] Ctr Social Sci, Inst Sociol, Budapest, Hungary.
C3 Hungarian Academy of Sciences; Hungarian Research Network; HUN-REN
   Centre for Economic & Regional Studies; Hungarian Research Network;
   Hungarian Academy of Sciences; HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences
RP Hajdu, T (corresponding author), Ctr Econ & Reg Studies, Inst Econ, Budapest, Hungary.
EM hajdu.tamas@krtk.mta.hu; hajdu.gabor@tk.mta.hu
RI Hajdu, Tamás/M-5315-2018; Hajdu, Gabor/S-6675-2018
OI Hajdu, Tamas/0000-0002-9533-7727; Hajdu, Gabor/0000-0002-7943-1668
FU ELKH Centre for Economic and Regional Studies; Hungarian National
   Research, Development and Innovation Office - NKFIH [FK 124310];
   Momentum ("Lendulet") Program of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
   [LP2018-2/2018]; Janos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian
   Academy of Sciences
FX Open access funding provided by ELKH Centre for Economic and Regional
   Studies. This work was supported by the Hungarian National Research,
   Development and Innovation Office - NKFIH (grant no. FK 124310). Tamas
   Hajdu was also supported by the Momentum ("Lendulet") Program of the
   Hungarian Academy of Sciences (grant no. LP2018-2/2018) and the Janos
   Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
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NR 65
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 4
U2 17
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0933-1433
EI 1432-1475
J9 J POPUL ECON
JI J. Popul. Econ.
PD OCT
PY 2022
VL 35
IS 4
BP 1751
EP 1776
DI 10.1007/s00148-020-00814-1
EA JAN 2021
PG 26
WC Demography; Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Demography; Business & Economics
GA 2Z3YN
UT WOS:000609093500001
OA Green Submitted, hybrid, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Flor, AG
   Flor, BG
AF Flor, Alexander G.
   Flor, Benjamina Gonzalez
BA Flor, AG
   Flor, BG
BF Flor, AG
   Flor, BG
TI Knowledge Management Strategy
SO INNOVATIVE STRATEGIES AND FRAMEWORKS IN CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION:
   EMERGING RESEARCH AND OPPORTUNITIES
SE Advances in Environmental Engineering and Green Technologies
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
AB The preceding chapters present a systematic argument for those within the climate change community to explore opportunities for interventions that would increase knowledge, change attitudes for the better, and lead to the practice of climate change adaptation. However, exploring these opportunities should be guided by a framework. In this chapter, we propose one such framework, a knowledge management strategy for climate change adaptation. This knowledge management strategy does not only belong under the cognitive domain as argued in Chapter 3. In fact, it straddles all three domains since the affective and psychomotor domains are also influenced by knowledge. Its major assumption is that climate change response (knowledge, attitudes, and practice) can be increased and enhanced through knowledge sharing and reuse.
C1 [Flor, Alexander G.] Univ Philippines Open Univ, Fac Informat & Commun Studies, Los Banos, Philippines.
   [Flor, Benjamina Gonzalez] Univ Philippines, Dev Commun, Los Banos, Philippines.
C3 University of the Philippines System; University of the Philippines Open
   University; University of the Philippines System; University of the
   Philippines Los Banos; University of the Philippines Open University
RP Flor, AG (corresponding author), Univ Philippines Open Univ, Fac Informat & Commun Studies, Los Banos, Philippines.
RI Flor, Alexander/I-8564-2019
CR Asian Institute of Development Studies Inc, 2013, TRAIN NEEDS ASS REP
   Cabagay T. B., 2013, CLIMATE CHANGE KNOWL
   Flor A. G., 2011, KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
   Flor B. G., 2013, CAPACITY BUILDING ST
   Liebmann M., 1999, KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
NR 5
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 5
PU IGI GLOBAL
PI HERSEY
PA 701 E CHOCOLATE AVE, STE 200, HERSEY, PA 17033-1240 USA
SN 2326-9162
EI 2326-9170
BN 978-1-5225-2768-8; 978-1-5225-2767-1
J9 ADV ENV ENG GREEN TE
PY 2018
BP 84
EP 97
DI 10.4018/978-1-5225-2767-1.ch007
D2 10.4018/978-1-5225-2767-1
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Social Issues
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Social Issues
GA BN8SU
UT WOS:000488295300008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Vázquez, LM
AF Maria Vazquez, Luz
BE Klepp, S
   ChavezRodriguez, L
TI Climate change adaptation narratives in the Gulf of Mexico
SO CRITICAL APPROACH TO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION: DISCOURSES, POLICIES,
   AND PRACTICES
SE Routledge Advances in Climate Change Research
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CRASSOSTREA-VIRGINICA; VULNERABILITY; RETHINKING; MANAGEMENT; POLITICS;
   REFUGEES
AB This chapter uses a case study on fishing communities in the Gulf of Mexico to analyse the potential challenges the that Mexican government may face when implementing climate change adaptation initiatives in the region. A narrative analysis approach shows how actors understand and frame problems. Discussion of two adaptation measures - community relocation and the establishment of protected areas - demonstrates how government climate change initiatives are not designed to address the structural factors that are determining people's vulnerabilities to climate change, such as poverty or lack of environmental planning. By ignoring such issues and focusing only on how to face impacts, government adaptation initiatives could exacerbate existing conflicts and reinforce inequalities.
C1 [Maria Vazquez, Luz] York Univ, Toronto, ON, Canada.
   [Maria Vazquez, Luz] Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Res Ctr, Mexico City, DF, Mexico.
C3 York University - Canada; Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
RP Vázquez, LM (corresponding author), York Univ, Toronto, ON, Canada.
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NR 57
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 5
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-315-16544-8; 978-1-138-05629-9
J9 ROUT ADV CLIMATE
PY 2018
BP 192
EP +
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies; Social
   Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA BL6RW
UT WOS:000454655200010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bianchi, P
   Machado, JCF
AF Bianchi, Patricia
   Machado, Joao Claudio Faria
TI CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION AND 'NO REGRETS' ACTIONS WITH THE POTENTIAL
   FOR A POSITIVE MULTIDIMENSIONAL EFFECT: THE CASE OF WATER RESOURCES IN
   THE METROPOLITAN REGION OF VALE DO PARAIBA
SO VEREDAS DO DIREITO
LA English
DT Article
DE ?no regrets? actions; climate change adaptation; local gover-nance;
   water resources
AB In view of the climate models adopted by the IPCC and the INPE that predict negative climate change impacts on water resources in the Metropolitan Region of Vale do Paraiba (RMVP), this research intends to analyze the legal-normative framework related to climate change adaptation from the perspective of municipal legislative and material competence. The objective is to identify climate change impacts on water resources, demonstrate how adaptation can be associated with the realization of matters of local interest that have a positive social, economic and environmental impact, and exemplify current regulations. As a means of investigation, the deductive method and documental research were adopted. Furthermore, the research has a basic nature and an exploratory objective. As a result, the research concluded that municipalities must play an important role in adapting water resources to climate change, especially in 'no regrets' measures. It was even possible to exemplify regulations in force in RMVP municipalities, related to: urban supply, protection and conservation of water producing areas, water quality monitoring, sewage collection and treatment, management and security of water resources, integrated planning and rationalization of use.
C1 [Bianchi, Patricia] Direito Ambiental Brasil APRODAB, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
   [Machado, Joao Claudio Faria] Univ Forca Aerea UNIFA, Aerosp Sci, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
RP Bianchi, P (corresponding author), Direito Ambiental Brasil APRODAB, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
EM patricianbianchi@gmail.com; joaocfmachado@gmail.com
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NR 34
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU ESCOLA SUPERIOR DOM HELDER CAMARA
PI BELO HORIZONTE
PA RUA ALVARES MACIEL 628, STA EFIGENIA, BELO HORIZONTE, MG 30150-250,
   BRAZIL
SN 1806-3845
EI 2179-8699
J9 VEREDAS DIREITO
JI Veredas Direito
PD MAY-AUG
PY 2022
VL 19
IS 44
BP 231
EP 255
DI 10.18623/rvd.v19i44.2311
PG 25
WC Law
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Government & Law
GA 8A3AW
UT WOS:000916115500009
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maganga, T
   Suso, CC
AF Maganga, Trymore
   Suso, Cathy Conrad
TI Human Mobility and Climate Change Adaptation in Small-Scale Fanning
   Areas in Eastern Zimbabwe
SO AFRICA REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE human mobility; climate change; food security; small-scale farmers;
   adaptation; livelihoods
ID MIGRATION; DISTRICT
AB This paper examines the role played by human mobility as a climate change adaptation strategy in Zimbabwe's small-scale farming areas. Livelihoods in Zimbabwe's small-scale farming areas are mostly agriculture-based and have long suffered from low levels of production. This is largely due to poor agroecological conditions and lack of agricultural investment, including income diversification projects from the central government. Recently, extreme climatic events in these areas have exacerbated food insecurity challenges, prompting many households to relocate. The findings of this study indicate that most households in the small-scale farming regions are resorting to either short- or long-term migration to areas that offer them food security. In these areas, poor households arc forced to work on large commercial farms where they are paid in maize grain or trade their products for food to support their families. This paper argues that, if properly used together with other climate change policies promoted in Zimbabwe, human mobility can be an effective climate change adaptation strategy in small-scale farming areas.
C1 [Maganga, Trymore; Suso, Cathy Conrad] St Marys Univ, Halifax, NS, Canada.
C3 Saint Marys University - Canada
RP Maganga, T (corresponding author), St Marys Univ, Halifax, NS, Canada.
EM trymore.maganga@smu.ca; cconrad@smu.ca
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NR 78
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 5
PU BRILL
PI LEIDEN
PA PLANTIJNSTRAAT 2, P O BOX 9000, 2300 PA LEIDEN, NETHERLANDS
SN 0974-4053
EI 0974-4061
J9 AFR REV-ABINGDON
JI Afr. Rev. Abingdon
PD MAR
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 1
BP 68
EP 97
DI 10.1163/09744061-20220127
PG 30
WC Area Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Area Studies
GA 1D8KH
UT WOS:000794044900003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lemessa, SD
   Watebaji, MD
   Yismaw, MA
AF Lemessa, Sisay Diriba
   Watebaji, Mulugeta Damie
   Yismaw, Molla Alemayehu
TI Climate change adaptation strategies in response to food insecurity: The
   paradox of improved potato varieties adoption in eastern Ethiopia
SO COGENT FOOD & AGRICULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; adaptation strategies; adoption; three-stage probit;
   food insecurity
ID SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; DURATION ANALYSIS; MAIZE; SECURITY; IMPACT;
   TECHNOLOGY; TRENDS; RISKS
AB The non-avoidable nature of climate change occurrences and their adverse effects on smallholder farmers' livelihood and food security status calls for urgent interventions. In this study, we used a cross-sectional survey method. Data were collected from 365 sampled households in eastern Ethiopia to identify different climate change adaptation strategies and the associated factors in response to food insecurity. Three-stage probit model was employed for data analysis. Three adaptation strategies, namely: adoption of improved varieties, irrigation usage and intercropping were identified. The study result shows that Shantam, an improved potato variety, is the most widely grown in the study area. Frost, known as wurchi/ amadey by its local name, was found to be the worst types of climate change incidence that severely affects potato production in the study area. The analysis of sociodemographic variables showed mixed results on each of the three adaptation strategies. Moreover, the regression revealed paradoxical results whereby irrigation usage and intercropping as climate change adaptation strategies recede the adoption of improved potato varieties.
C1 [Lemessa, Sisay Diriba; Watebaji, Mulugeta Damie; Yismaw, Molla Alemayehu] Haramaya Univ, Coll Business & Econ, Dept Econ, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia.
C3 Haramaya University
RP Lemessa, SD (corresponding author), Haramaya Univ, Coll Business & Econ, Dept Econ, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia.
EM sis.milly@gmail.com
RI Watabaji, Mulugeta/V-5722-2019
OI Watabaji, Mulugeta Damie/0000-0003-3512-2385
FU Office of the Vice President for Research Affairs at the Haramaya
   University
FX As mentioned earlier under the availability of data and materials, the
   Office of the Vice President for Research Affairs at the Haramaya
   University had provided the required funding data collection.
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NR 52
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 8
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
PI OSLO
PA KARL JOHANS GATE 5, NO-0154 OSLO, NORWAY
SN 2331-1932
J9 COGENT FOOD AGR
JI Cogent Food Agr.
PD JUL 6
PY 2019
VL 5
IS 1
AR 1640835
DI 10.1080/23311932.2019.1640835
PG 15
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA IK4IE
UT WOS:000476549700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Stephens, SL
   Westerling, AL
   Hurteau, MD
   Peery, MZ
   Schultz, CA
   Thompson, S
AF Stephens, Scott L.
   Westerling, A. LeRoy
   Hurteau, Matthew D.
   Peery, M. Zachariah
   Schultz, Courtney A.
   Thompson, Sally
TI Fire and climate change: conserving seasonally dry forests is still
   possible
SO FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID RESTORATION TREATMENTS; SIERRA-NEVADA; SEVERITY FIRE; MANAGEMENT;
   VEGETATION; IMPACTS; SCALE; FUELS; PYRODIVERSITY; WILDFIRES
AB The destructive wildfires that occurred recently in the western US starkly foreshadow the possible future of forest ecosystems and human communities in the region. With increases in the area burned by severe wildfire in seasonally dry forests expected to result from climate change, judicious, science-based fire and restoration strategies will be essential for improving the resilience of forest ecosystems. We argue that fire use treatments (including prescribed fires and managed wildfires) as well as restoration thinning strategies, rather than conflicting with existing environmental objectives, will provide numerous co-benefits, including enhanced biodiversity, increased water availability, greater long-term and more sustainable carbon storage, improved forest resilience and adaptation to climate change, and reduced air pollution. Timber production, however, may have to be better aligned with fire management goals to achieve these co-benefits. Taking immediate actions today to promote positive ecological outcomes in seasonally dry forests should be a primary focus of management, particularly in the western US.
C1 [Stephens, Scott L.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
   [Westerling, A. LeRoy] Univ Calif Merced, Dept Management Complex Syst, Merced, CA USA.
   [Hurteau, Matthew D.] Univ New Mexico, Dept Biol, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA.
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   [Thompson, Sally] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
   [Thompson, Sally] Univ Western Australia, Sch Engn, Crawley, Australia.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley;
   University of California System; University of California Merced;
   University of New Mexico; University of Wisconsin System; University of
   Wisconsin Madison; Colorado State University; University of California
   System; University of California Berkeley; University of Western
   Australia
RP Stephens, SL (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
EM sstephens@berkeley.edu
RI Stephens, Scott L./LZE-8966-2025; Westerling, Anthony/A-3012-2008;
   Hurteau, Matthew/D-2301-2009; Thompson, Sally/J-7615-2012
OI Thompson, Sally/0000-0003-4618-5066; Westerling,
   LeRoy/0000-0003-4573-0595
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NR 41
TC 113
Z9 121
U1 3
U2 60
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1540-9295
EI 1540-9309
J9 FRONT ECOL ENVIRON
JI Front. Ecol. Environ.
PD AUG
PY 2020
VL 18
IS 6
BP 354
EP 360
DI 10.1002/fee.2218
EA JUN 2020
PG 7
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA MT0QH
UT WOS:000538590300001
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Diniz, JAF
   Bini, LM
AF Felizola Diniz-Filho, Jose Alexandre
   Bini, Luis Mauricio
TI Will life find a way out? Evolutionary rescue and Darwinian adaptation
   to climate change
SO PERSPECTIVES IN ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Evolutionary rescue; Adaptation; Climate change; Simulation; Modeling;
   Warming
ID RANGE SHIFTS; BIODIVERSITY; RESPONSES; PLASTICITY; EXTINCTION; PATTERNS
AB Results from ecological niche models usually indicate a worrying scenario in terms of biodiversity loss. Continuous efforts to improve these models (e.g., allowing for dispersal limitation) have recently been updated to include the potential of species' persistence, in otherwise unsuitable regions, due to natural selection (a process called evolutionary rescue). Here we discuss the major challenges in incorporating evolutionary rescue in models evaluating the impacts of global changes on species distributions. We also highlight some alternatives to overcome these challenges using simulations. Based on the current available evidence, we conclude that the potential of evolutionary rescue is low. However, due to the paucity of data to feed evolutionary rescue models and the interaction with other factors (e.g. habitat fragmentation), we still do not know the potential of adaptation to rescue biodiversity from climate change. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Editora Ltda. on behalf of Associacao Brasileira de Ciencia Ecologica e Conservacao.
C1 [Felizola Diniz-Filho, Jose Alexandre; Bini, Luis Mauricio] Univ Fed Goias, Dept Ecol, Inst Ciencias Biol, Goiania, Go, Brazil.
C3 Universidade Federal de Goias
RP Diniz, JAF (corresponding author), Univ Fed Goias, Dept Ecol, Inst Ciencias Biol, Goiania, Go, Brazil.
EM diniz@ufg.br
RI Diniz, José/ABC-2060-2020; Bini, Luis Mauricio/D-5865-2013
OI Bini, Luis Mauricio/0000-0003-3398-9399
FU MCTIC/CNPq [465610/2014-5]; FAPEG [201810267000023]; CNPq; Brazilian
   Research Network on Climate Change (CNPq) [550022/2014]; Brazilian
   Research Network on Climate Change (FINEP) [01.13.0353.00]
FX We thank two anonymous reviewers for suggestions that improved initial
   versions of this manuscript. This opinion piece resulted from a working
   group on "Evolutionary Rescue" promoted by our National Institutes for
   Science and Technology (INCT) in Ecology, Evolution and Biodiversity
   Conservation, supported by MCTIC/CNPq (proc. 465610/2014-5) and FAPEG
   (proc. 201810267000023). Works by J.A.F.D.-F. and L.M.B. are also
   supported by CNPq productivity fellowships. J.A.F. D.-F. is also
   supported by the Brazilian Research Network on Climate Change (CNPq No.
   550022/2014 and FINEP No. 01.13.0353.00).
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NR 42
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 20
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 2530-0644
J9 PERSPECT ECOL CONSER
JI Perspect. Ecol. Conserv.
PD JUL-SEP
PY 2019
VL 17
IS 3
BP 117
EP 121
DI 10.1016/j.pecon.2019.06.001
PG 5
WC Biodiversity Conservation
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation
GA JD1XH
UT WOS:000489769200003
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Monprapussorn, S
AF Monprapussorn, Sathaporn
TI Impact of climate and land use change on ecosystem services: A case
   study of Samutsakorn province, Thailand
SO ECOLOGICAL INFORMATICS
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT 4th Spatial Ecology and Conservation (SEC) Conference
CY JUL 12-14, 2016
CL Univ Bristol, Bristol, ENGLAND
HO Univ Bristol
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; COASTAL; ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT
AB The capacity of delivering ecosystem services essential to social well-being is impeded by climate and land use change, causing a significant alteration in the quality of functions and services of many ecosystems. This paper focuses on how to project future services of coastal ecosystem in Samutsakorn province, Thailand. The 2050 climate layers are projected by using WorldClim database at 30 s resolution. Projection of land use change analysis in 2050 using a spatial allocation model is simulated by two scenarios; business as usual and sustain ability driven. Result revealed that an increase in sea level, temperature and precipitation, with an associated decrease in forest cover will ultimately degrade the function and service of coastal ecosystem and impede community resilience. There is thus an urgent need on scaling up and restoring mangrove ecosystems and effective coastal adaptation to climate change which heavily depends on engagement of stakeholders at the early stage.
C1 [Monprapussorn, Sathaporn] Srinakharinwirot Univ, Fac Social Sci, Dept Geog, 114 Sukhumvit 23, Bangkok 10110, Thailand.
C3 Srinakharinwirot University
RP Monprapussorn, S (corresponding author), Srinakharinwirot Univ, Fac Social Sci, Dept Geog, 114 Sukhumvit 23, Bangkok 10110, Thailand.
EM sathapom@swu.ac.th
RI Monprapussorn, Sathaporn/N-4657-2018
FU Higher Education Research Promotion (HERP) program, Office of the Higher
   Education Commission. Thailand [93256]
FX This research was supported by Higher Education Research Promotion
   (HERP) program under Project No. 93256, Office of the Higher Education
   Commission. Thailand.
CR [Anonymous], PHYSL PLANT ECOLOGY
   [Anonymous], 2014, 3 NATL COMMUNICATION
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   Epanchin-Niell R, 2017, OCEAN COAST MANAGE, V137, P118, DOI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2016.12.014
   Hao RF, 2017, SCI TOTAL ENVIRON, V579, P718, DOI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.11.036
   Horstman EM, 2013, CONT SHELF RES, V71, P52, DOI 10.1016/j.csr.2013.10.002
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   Luisetti T, 2011, OCEAN COAST MANAGE, V54, P212, DOI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2010.11.003
   Pamukcu P, 2016, ECOL INFORM, V36, P31, DOI 10.1016/j.ecoinf.2016.09.005
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NR 16
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 4
U2 43
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1574-9541
EI 1878-0512
J9 ECOL INFORM
JI Ecol. Inform.
PD SEP
PY 2018
VL 47
SI SI
BP 45
EP 49
DI 10.1016/j.ecoinf.2017.08.007
PG 5
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GV3GG
UT WOS:000445981800009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Junker, E
AF Junker, Eivind
TI Legal requirements for risk and vulnerability assessments in Norwegian
   land-use planning
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE land-use planning; adaptation; risk and vulnerability assessments;
   uncertainty; incentives
AB Land-use planning has been promoted as an important tool for adaptation to climate change. However, its success depends on effective communication between researchers and decision-makers. A "risk and vulnerability assessment" (RVA) is one method to facilitate the interaction between the groups. RVAs have been performed in Norwegian land-use planning for about 20 years, and been mandatory for new development the last few years. The first part of the article reviews the history and current legal regulation of RVAs in Norway. Continuing, the main part discusses the distribution of authority and responsibility for different parts of the process and result. The key finding is that significant decisions are deferred to municipal discretion, for example, the necessity (if doubtful) and scope of the assessments. Other topics (such as the burden of costs and eligible performers) are largely unregulated, prompting some arguments about the need for further legislative effort.
C1 [Junker, Eivind] Univ Oslo, Fac Law, Dept Publ & Int Law, Oslo, Norway.
C3 University of Oslo
RP Junker, E (corresponding author), Univ Oslo, Fac Law, Dept Publ & Int Law, Oslo, Norway.
EM eivind.junker@jus.uio.no
FU Norwegian Research Council
FX The article has been written as part of a PhD project funded by the
   Norwegian Research Council.
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NR 34
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 4
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PY 2015
VL 20
IS 4
SI SI
BP 474
EP 488
DI 10.1080/13549839.2013.852164
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA V79WX
UT WOS:000212146200006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lambert, JL
   Lindgren, J
   Bleicher, R
AF Lambert, Julie L.
   Lindgren, Joan
   Bleicher, Robert
TI Assessing Elementary Science Methods Students' Understanding About
   Global Climate Change
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SCIENCE EDUCATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Teacher education; Climate change education
ID HIGH-SCHOOL-STUDENTS; MIDDLE; MODELS
AB Global climate change, referred to as climate change in this paper, has become an important planetary issue, and given that K-12 students have numerous alternative conceptions or lack of prior knowledge, it is critical that teachers have an understanding of the fundamental science underlying climate change. Teachers need to understand the natural and human-induced factors affecting climate, and the potential consequences, and ways to mitigate and adapt to climate change. This study focusses on assessing preservice and inservice teachers' knowledge about climate change at the beginning and end of an instructional intervention embedded in an elementary science methods course. This paper describes the development of an instrument derived from the constructive modeling approach framework. The four components of this approach (the construct map, items design, outcome space, and measurement model) are discussed. In addition, the instructional intervention is described along with findings from the study and an analysis of the instrument.
C1 [Lambert, Julie L.; Lindgren, Joan] Florida Atlantic Univ, Dept Teaching & Learning, Boca Raton, FL 33431 USA.
   [Bleicher, Robert] Calif State Univ, Sch Educ, Camarillo, CA USA.
C3 State University System of Florida; Florida Atlantic University
RP Lambert, JL (corresponding author), Florida Atlantic Univ, Dept Teaching & Learning, 777 Glades Rd, Boca Raton, FL 33431 USA.
EM jlambert@fau.edu
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NR 25
TC 57
Z9 70
U1 5
U2 57
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0950-0693
EI 1464-5289
J9 INT J SCI EDUC
JI Int. J. Sci. Educ.
PY 2012
VL 34
IS 8
BP 1167
EP 1187
DI 10.1080/09500693.2011.633938
PG 21
WC Education & Educational Research
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Education & Educational Research
GA 942IU
UT WOS:000304038400002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cañizares, AO
   Cantos, JO
AF Canizares, Antonio Oliva
   Cantos, Jorge Olcina
TI Maritime storms, climate change and detailed mapping of the occupation
   of the coastal strip: Diagnosis in the south of the province of Alicante
SO DOCUMENTS D ANALISI GEOGRAFICA
LA Spanish
DT Article
DE climate change; maritime storms; Gloria squall; risk mapping; Maritime
   Terrestrial Public Domain (MTPD); Bajo Segura
AB Coastal Law 2/2013 extends the concessions of the constructions that occupy the Maritime Terrestrial Public Domain (MTPD) to a maximum of 75 years, which implies a lack of vision concerning the effects of climate change associated with the increase in sea levels and the greater recurrence of sea storms. This paper diagnoses the problem of the occupation of the coastal strip on the south coast of the province of Alicante. It analyses the effects of the Gloria squall (January 2020), the serious problem of beach regression and the risk of flooding in the dwellings occupying the MTPD. The results show that the beaches of Babilonia, La Mata, Las Villas and El Mojon are at serious risk of flooding. Proposals are made in different areas that would allow the recovery of beaches with a serious problem of regression and adaptation to climate change.
C1 [Canizares, Antonio Oliva; Cantos, Jorge Olcina] Univ Alicante, Dept Anal Geog Reg & Geog Fis, Alicante, Spain.
C3 Universitat d'Alacant
RP Cañizares, AO (corresponding author), Univ Alicante, Dept Anal Geog Reg & Geog Fis, Alicante, Spain.
EM antoniogeografia1@gmail.com; jorge.olcina@ua.es
RI Olcina, Jorge/H-2447-2015; Oliva, Antonio/JFB-1346-2023
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NR 28
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 0
PU UNIV AUTONOMA BARCELONA
PI CERDANYOLA DEL VALLES, BARCELONA
PA VICERECTORAT RELACIONS INSTITUCIONALS & CULTURA, UNIV VALENCIA,
   VICERECTORAT INVESTIGACIO, CERDANYOLA DEL VALLES, BARCELONA, 08193,
   SPAIN
SN 0212-1573
EI 2014-4512
J9 DOC ANAL GEOGR
JI Doc. Anal. Geogr.
PD JAN-APR
PY 2022
VL 68
IS 1
BP 107
EP 138
DI 10.5565/rev/dag.692
PG 32
WC Geography
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geography
GA ZG5AG
UT WOS:000760269900002
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jacobs, M
AF Jacobs, Michael
TI Reflections on COP26: International Diplomacy, Global Justice and the
   Greening of Capitalism
SO POLITICAL QUARTERLY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; COP26; climate justice; emissions reduction; climate
   finance; capitalism
AB The UN climate conference COP26 in November 2021 concluded with the agreement of the Glasgow Climate Pact. This article examines the key elements of the pact and their significance. Explaining the structure of the 2015 Paris Agreement, it shows why the requirement for countries to return with stronger emissions reduction commitments in 2022 was in practice the most the conference could have achieved to 'keep alive' the goal of limiting the global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees C. Developing countries won an increase in finance for adaptation to climate change, but their demand for developed countries to recognise 'climate justice' and compensate them for the loss and damage that climate change is causing was rebuffed. Noting the various sectoral commitments made at COP26 in areas such as deforestation and finance, the article argues that the underlying question posed by the conference is whether capitalism can be greened. An answer is suggested.
C1 [Jacobs, Michael] Univ Sheffield, Polit Econ, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
C3 University of Sheffield
RP Jacobs, M (corresponding author), Univ Sheffield, Polit Econ, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
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NR 15
TC 24
Z9 24
U1 3
U2 67
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0032-3179
EI 1467-923X
J9 POLIT QUART
JI Polit. Q.
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 93
IS 2
BP 270
EP 277
DI 10.1111/1467-923X.13083
EA DEC 2021
PG 8
WC Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law
GA 1T6LI
UT WOS:000730203400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fasting, S
   Bacudo, I
   Damen, B
   Dinesh, D
AF Fasting, Siw
   Bacudo, Imelda
   Damen, Beau
   Dinesh, Dhanush
TI Climate Governance and Agriculture in Southeast Asia: Learning From a
   Polycentric Approach
SO FRONTIERS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE ASEAN; polycentric governance; agriculture; global climate governance;
   UNFCCC
AB The global climate governance framework will need to empower a wide range of groups representing different geopolitical and sector-specific interests to engage in climate action. Learning from polycentric governance approaches could provide insight on how to foster more inclusive engagement and more effective outcomes from global efforts to fight climate change. The Paris Agreement has opened up room for this type of bottom-up, polycentric governance and new attention to important issues such as agriculture. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations Climate Resilience Network (ASEAN-CRN) is an example of a polycentric system to enhance resilience and adapt to climate change. The ASEAN Negotiating Group on Agriculture (ANGA) enables the region's agriculture sector to shape global climate governance frameworks. The case of ANGA highlights that opening up space for polycentric systems can foster climate action in relevant sectors. Supporting regions to navigate UNFCCC processes can further enable polycentric systems, enhancing climate resilience and adaptation.
C1 [Fasting, Siw; Dinesh, Dhanush] Wageningen Univ & Res WUR, CGIAR Res Program, Climate Change Agr & Food Secur CCAFS, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Bacudo, Imelda] Assoc Southeast Asian Nations Climate Resilience N, Jakarta, Indonesia.
   [Damen, Beau] Food & Agr Org United Nations FAO, Reg Off Asia & Pacific, Bangkok, Thailand.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Food & Agriculture Organization of the
   United Nations (FAO)
RP Fasting, S (corresponding author), Wageningen Univ & Res WUR, CGIAR Res Program, Climate Change Agr & Food Secur CCAFS, Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM s.fasting@cgiar.org
OI Dinesh, Dhanush/0000-0002-1976-0486
FU CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security
   (CCAFS)
FX SF and DD acknowledge support from the CGIAR Research Program on Climate
   Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), which is carried out with
   support from CGIAR Fund Donors and through bilateral funding agreements.
   For details, please visit https://ccafs.cgiar.org/donors. The views
   expressed in this paper cannot be taken to reflect the official opinions
   of these organizations.
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Z9 5
U1 7
U2 15
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2673-3145
J9 FRONT POLIT SCI
JI Front. Polit. Sci.
PD AUG 20
PY 2021
VL 3
AR 698431
DI 10.3389/fpos.2021.698431
PG 6
WC International Relations; Political Science
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC International Relations; Government & Law
GA H3JB4
UT WOS:000994951500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gardezi, M
   Arbuckle, JG
AF Gardezi, Maaz
   Arbuckle, J. Gordon
TI The Influence of Objective and Perceived Adaptive Capacity on Midwestern
   Farmers' Use of Cover Crops
SO WEATHER CLIMATE AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Social Science; Agriculture
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; COPING CAPACITY; ADOPTION; ADAPTATION; INSTITUTIONS;
   MODELS; OPPORTUNITIES; PERFORMANCE; INSURANCE; ADVISERS
AB Cover crops are grown between periods of regular crop production or planted into crops with the primary purpose of protecting and improving soil health. These crops possess several resilience-enhancing properties that are well suited to help farmers adapt to climate change. Through an "adaptive capacities framework," we examine how farmers' adaptive capacities-contextualized within institutional and environmental conditions-can influence their decision to use cover crops. We use generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) to examine the relative importance of (i) "internal" variables-farmers' perceived capacity to act; (ii) "external" or "objective" resources-assets and entitlements; and (iii) contextual variables-the institutional and environmental context within which adaptation occurs, as predictors of farmers' use of cover crops. Our results suggest that several objective and perceived adaptive capacities are positively associated with farmers' decisions to use cover crops, and formal institutions such as risk management subsidies are correlated with lower use of cover crops.
C1 [Gardezi, Maaz] South Dakota State Univ, Dept Sociol & Rural Studies, Brookings, SD 57007 USA.
   [Arbuckle, J. Gordon] Iowa State Univ, Dept Sociol, Ames, IA USA.
C3 South Dakota State University; Iowa State University
RP Gardezi, M (corresponding author), South Dakota State Univ, Dept Sociol & Rural Studies, Brookings, SD 57007 USA.
EM maaz.gardezi@sdstate.edu
RI Gardezi, Maaz/ABI-1528-2020; Arbuckle, J/P-2151-2016
OI Gardezi, Maaz/0000-0003-0915-2652
FU USDA-NIFA [2011-68002-30190]
FX This research is part of a collaborative project supported by the
   USDA-NIFA, Award 2011-68002-30190, "Cropping Systems Coordinated
   Agricultural Project: Climate Change, Mitigation, and Adaptation in
   Corn-based Cropping Systems'' (project website: sustainablecorn.org). We
   thank the anonymous reviewers whose comments and suggestions helped
   improve and clarify this manuscript.
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NR 65
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 17
PU AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
PI BOSTON
PA 45 BEACON ST, BOSTON, MA 02108-3693, UNITED STATES
SN 1948-8327
EI 1948-8335
J9 WEATHER CLIM SOC
JI Weather Clim. Soc.
PD JUL
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 3
BP 665
EP 679
DI 10.1175/WCAS-D-18-0086.1
PG 15
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA IK7HN
UT WOS:000476760200001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hanley, N
   Brennan, D
AF Hanley, Nick
   Brennan, Dervla
TI Economics of a low-carbon future
SO EARTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF
   EDINBURGH
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; cap-and-trade; carbon mitigation; carbon tax
ID EFFICIENCY; ENERGY
AB This paper sets out some of the economic factors underpinning Scotland's move to a low-carbon economy. Economics matters, since it addresses the costs of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, the costs of climate change impacts, and the economic factors that motivate individuals' behaviour and the behaviour of businesses. All of these are important in understanding the barriers to meeting targets and to successful adaptation, and in thinking about how these barriers can be lifted. We discuss the relative merits of market mechanisms such as carbon taxes and cap-and-trade, the cost of including additional targets, and the issue of counting carbon embedded in imported goods. An efficient way of achieving carbon reductions is to widen the scope of carbon trading to include forestry, transport and agriculture. Energy efficiency in businesses and households and adaptation to climate change are a priority, because the benefits will be felt in the short term and at the local level.
C1 [Hanley, Nick; Brennan, Dervla] Univ Stirling, Econ Div, Sch Management, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland.
C3 University of Stirling
RP Hanley, N (corresponding author), Univ Stirling, Econ Div, Sch Management, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland.
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NR 29
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 23
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-6910
EI 1755-6929
J9 EARTH ENV SCI T R SO
JI Earth Environ. Sci. Trans. R. Soc. Edinb.
PD JUL
PY 2012
VL 103
IS 2
SI SI
BP 149
EP 156
DI 10.1017/S1755691013000042
PG 8
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Paleontology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Paleontology
GA 235LG
UT WOS:000325719700004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schulze, K
AF Schulze, Kai
TI The soft channels of policy diffusion: Insights from local climate
   change adaptation policy
SO POLICY STUDIES JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; governance; local level; policy diffusion
   channels; scaling
ID TRANSNATIONAL MUNICIPAL NETWORKS; MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE; CITIES; STATE;
   FEDERALISM; INNOVATION; POLITICS; IMPACT; IMPLEMENTATION; PARTICIPATION
AB Diffusion has become both an important concept for studying policy spread and a popular governance approach, particularly where direct coercion is unavailable or undesirable. However, the prevailing mechanism-centered concept is difficult to measure and poorly captures the governance potential of policy diffusion. To address these issues, this article presents a new channel-centered framework that distinguishes between six soft policy diffusion channels: autonomous, collaborative, exemplary, persuasive, organized, and funded diffusion. The framework is probed by studying local climate change adaptation policy using original survey data collected from the administrations of 190 municipalities located in the central German state of Hessen. The regression results indicate that the local institutionalization of adaptation in Hessen is associated with several interventions by higher levels of government, including the provision of a policy model, a municipal climate network, and grant programs. However, the density of concrete adaptation measures is associated with noninstitutionalized exchanges between municipalities. External grants are also found to be more effective in institutionalizing adaptation in larger municipalities. These results demonstrate the usefulness of the framework for distinguishing and comparing different diffusion channels and suggest that different types of interventions may be required to effectively support adaptation policy development at the local level.
C1 [Schulze, Kai] Tech Univ Darmstadt, Inst Polit Sci, Darmstadt, Germany.
C3 Technical University of Darmstadt
RP Schulze, K (corresponding author), Tech Univ Darmstadt, Inst Polit Sci, Darmstadt, Germany.
EM schulze@pg.tu-darmstadt.de
RI Schulze, Kai/F-7534-2018
OI Schulze, Kai/0000-0001-8039-7295
FU Fritz Thyssen Foundation [10.19.1.024PO]
FX This work was supported by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation (Grant No.
   10.19.1.024PO).
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NR 125
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 9
U2 9
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0190-292X
EI 1541-0072
J9 POLICY STUD J
JI Policy Stud. J.
PD NOV
PY 2024
VL 52
IS 4
BP 881
EP 906
DI 10.1111/psj.12555
EA JUL 2024
PG 26
WC Political Science; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law; Public Administration
GA M5M4L
UT WOS:001279491400001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Williams, DS
   Celliers, L
   Unverzagt, K
   Videira, N
   Costa, MM
   Giordano, R
AF Williams, D. S.
   Celliers, L.
   Unverzagt, K.
   Videira, N.
   Costa, M. Manez
   Giordano, R.
TI A Method for Enhancing Capacity of Local Governance for Climate Change
   Adaptation
SO EARTHS FUTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Governance; Participation; Adaptation; Leverage points
ID FUZZY COGNITIVE MAPS; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; NATURAL-RESOURCE;
   DECISION-MAKING; RISK GOVERNANCE; VULNERABILITY; KNOWLEDGE; DYNAMICS;
   IDENTIFICATION; UNCERTAINTY
AB The lack of capacity for climate change adaptation at the subnational level has been highlighted as a key barrier to implementing the UNFCCC National Adaptation Plans. At the same time, the adaptive capacity of local governance is highly context sensitive, making a "one-size fits all" approach inappropriate. Thus, a versatile methodological approach for application in various local contexts is required. There are several indicator-based local governance assessment methods for evaluating the effectiveness of local governance for climate change adaptation. However, they fall short of identifying and prioritizing between key factors within local governance for enhancing adaptive capacity and driving positive change. Building on adaptation theory, the authors propose combining two methodological approaches, the Capital Approach Framework for evaluating the adaptive capacity of local governance and Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping for identifying leverage points, into one integrated modeling approach, which can be applied by local researchers. This paper describes the process and benefits of combining the methodological approaches, with an example provided assupporting information. Assisting decision-makers and policy planners from subnational governance in identifying leverage points to focus and maximize impact of capacity-enhancing measures would make a key contribution for successful implementation of the UNFCCC National Adaptation Plans.
C1 [Williams, D. S.; Celliers, L.; Costa, M. Manez] Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, Hamburg, Germany.
   [Unverzagt, K.] Humboldt Univ, Integrat Res Inst Transformat Human Environm Syst, Berlin, Germany.
   [Videira, N.] NOVA Univ Lisbon, Ctr Environm & Sustainabil Res, NOVA Sch Sci & Technol, CENSE, Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Giordano, R.] CNR, Water Res Inst, Bari, Italy.
C3 Helmholtz Association; Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon; Humboldt University of
   Berlin; Universidade Nova de Lisboa; Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche
   (CNR); Istituto di Ricerca sulle Acque (IRSA-CNR)
RP Williams, DS (corresponding author), Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, Hamburg, Germany.
EM david.williams@hzg.de
RI Videira, Nuno/M-5863-2013; GIORDANO, RAFFAELE/AAX-7089-2020; Celliers,
   Louis/GRO-6282-2022; Manez Costa, Maria/P-1225-2017
OI Manez Costa, Maria/0000-0001-5415-0811; /0000-0002-1418-589X; Videira,
   Nuno/0000-0002-4514-1996
FU Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia, I.P., Portugal
   [UID/AMB/04085/2019]
FX The authors would like to thank various colleagues within the Climate
   Service Center Germany (GERICS) for their time and valuable inputs
   contributing to the development of the methodological approach and the
   Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht (HZG) for covering publication fees. In
   addition, CENSE is financed by Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia,
   I.P., Portugal (UID/AMB/04085/2019). Finally, the authors would like to
   express their gratitude to the reviewers and editor, whose work has
   improved the paper significantly. The authors declare no conflict of
   interest.
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NR 117
TC 14
Z9 16
U1 4
U2 24
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
EI 2328-4277
J9 EARTHS FUTURE
JI Earth Future
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 8
IS 7
AR e2020EF001506
DI 10.1029/2020EF001506
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA MW2JO
UT WOS:000556870200002
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nurhidayah, L
   McIlgorm, A
AF Nurhidayah, Laely
   McIlgorm, Alistair
TI Coastal adaptation laws and the social justice of policies to address
   sea level rise: An Indonesian insight
SO OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Sea level rise; Climate justice
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION
AB Climate change and sea level rise (SLR) poses serious risks to coastal communities around the world requiring nations to apply adaptation laws and policies. Climate change will exacerbate the existing threats to vulnerable communities, such as the poor, and threaten the food security of populations in coastal areas through the effects of flooding due to coastal inundation. Indonesia is an Archipelagic State of over 17,000 islands and is vulnerable to climate change impacts in its coastal areas and especially in its highly populated low lying delta areas, such as Jakarta and Semarang, where vulnerability to sea level rise is evident. The adequacy of the legal adaptation framework in Indonesia to respond to this climate vulnerability is assessed and it is found to have limited consideration of the community burden arising from these climate and SLR uncertainties. A more inclusive social justice approach could assist government to respond to the impacts from these issues and to their implications for vulnerable groups. The nation can improve adaptive legal measures to address climate change impacts and increase the involvement of local people in climate change adaptation decision making. Funding is required to assist policy makers to further incorporate adaptation into decision making, and this could improve social justice outcomes for vulnerable Indonesian coastal communities.
C1 [Nurhidayah, Laely] Indonesian Inst Sci PMB LIPI, Res Ctr Soc & Culture, Gd Widya Graha Lt 6 Jl Gatot Subroto 10, Jakarta, Indonesia.
   [McIlgorm, Alistair] Univ Wollongong, ANCORS, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia.
C3 National Research & Innovation Agency of Indonesia (BRIN); Indonesian
   Institute of Sciences (LIPI); University of Wollongong
RP Nurhidayah, L (corresponding author), Indonesian Inst Sci PMB LIPI, Res Ctr Soc & Culture, Gd Widya Graha Lt 6 Jl Gatot Subroto 10, Jakarta, Indonesia.
EM lae1003@lipi.go.id
OI Nurhidayah, Laely/0000-0002-9903-0239; Mcilgorm,
   Alistair/0000-0001-6625-5573
FU Australian Government's Endeavour Research Fellowship 2017
FX This research was supported by Australian Government's Endeavour
   Research Fellowship 2017 with host institution at Australian National
   Centre for Ocean Resources and Security (ANCORS), The University of
   Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia.
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NR 47
TC 30
Z9 30
U1 10
U2 46
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-5691
EI 1873-524X
J9 OCEAN COAST MANAGE
JI Ocean Coastal Manage.
PD APR 1
PY 2019
VL 171
BP 11
EP 18
DI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2019.01.011
PG 8
WC Oceanography; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Oceanography; Water Resources
GA HP1CU
UT WOS:000461403800002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nalau, J
   Handmer, J
   Dalesa, M
   Foster, H
   Edwards, J
   Kauhiona, H
   Yates, L
   Welegtabit, S
AF Nalau, Johanna
   Handmer, John
   Dalesa, Malcolm
   Foster, Holly
   Edwards, Jill
   Kauhiona, Hudson
   Yates, Loti
   Welegtabit, Shadrack
TI The practice of integrating adaptation and disaster risk reduction in
   the south-west Pacific
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; disaster risk reduction; institutions; small
   island states; Australia; integration
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION
AB Disaster risk reduction (DRR) and emergency management (EM) efforts are integral to climate change adaptation (CCA). The integration of DRR with adaptation is globally recognized as a rational use of resources benefiting both areas. There is a substantial literature on the topic, but little on the practice of implementing such integration on the ground. This paper presents some of these experiences at national and agency levels in the south-west Pacific and outlines possible future directions to support policy and practice. Based on the perspectives of practitioners from Australia, Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands, it explores institutional changes with country examples, and the range of constraints and enabling factors in integrating adaptation with DRR and EM practices. The Australian aim of spreading responsibility for CCA and DRR integration through mainstreaming across departments and agencies was seen as effective in increasing whole-of-government approaches. However, in both Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands the concentration of information, responsibility and actions through a single focal point was more effective in reducing overlap and providing a clearer picture of what was being implemented, by whom and where. The findings demonstrate a need to consider the experiences arising from practical implementation of the integration agenda and to document the lessons from this experience in a way that can inform policy and practice.
C1 [Nalau, Johanna] Griffith Univ, Sch Environm, Climate Change Response Program, Gold Coast Campus, Southport, Qld 4222, Australia.
   [Nalau, Johanna] Griffith Univ, Griffith Inst Tourism, Gold Coast Campus, Southport, Qld 4222, Australia.
   [Handmer, John] RMIT Univ, Coll Sci Engn & Hlth, Ctr Risk & Community Safety, Sch Math & Geospatial Sci, GPO Box 2476, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia.
   [Dalesa, Malcolm] Govt Vanuatu, VMGD, Private Mail Bag 9054, Nambatu, Port Vila, Vanuatu.
   [Foster, Holly] Off Fire Serv Commissioner, Dept Justice, Level 26,121 Exhibit St, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia.
   [Edwards, Jill] Australasian Fire & Emergency Serv Author Council, Level 5,340 Albert St, East Melbourne, Vic 3002, Australia.
   [Kauhiona, Hudson] Govt Solomon Isl, Minist Environm Climate Change Disaster Managemen, Climate Change Div, POB 21, Honiara, Solomon Islands.
   [Yates, Loti] Govt Solomon Isl, Minist Environm Climate Change Disaster Managemen, Natl Disaster Management Off, POB 21, Honiara, Solomon Islands.
   [Welegtabit, Shadrack] Govt Vanuatu, Natl Disaster Management Off, Private Mail Bag 9054, Nambatu, Port Vila, Vanuatu.
   [Foster, Holly] Emergency Management Victoria, Level 26,121 Exhibit St, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia.
C3 Griffith University; Griffith University - Gold Coast Campus; Griffith
   University; Griffith University - Gold Coast Campus; Royal Melbourne
   Institute of Technology (RMIT)
RP Nalau, J (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Sch Environm, Climate Change Response Program, Gold Coast Campus, Southport, Qld 4222, Australia.; Nalau, J (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Griffith Inst Tourism, Gold Coast Campus, Southport, Qld 4222, Australia.
EM j.nalau@griffith.edu.au
RI Nalau, Johanna/V-5692-2018
OI Nalau, Johanna/0000-0001-6581-3967
FU National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility
FX This paper is based on a project funded by the National Climate Change
   Adaptation Research Facility.
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NR 20
TC 34
Z9 35
U1 0
U2 20
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 4
BP 365
EP 375
DI 10.1080/17565529.2015.1064809
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DS0HR
UT WOS:000380276700006
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tofa, AI
   Kamara, AY
   Babaji, BA
   Adnan, AA
   Ademulegun, TD
   Bebeley, JF
AF Tofa, Abdullahi, I
   Kamara, A. Y.
   Babaji, B. A.
   Adnan, A. A.
   Ademulegun, T. D.
   Bebeley, J. F.
TI Evaluating the use of nitrogen and phosphorous fertilization as crop
   management options for maize adaptation to climate change in the Nigeria
   savannas
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE DSSAT; CERES-Maize; nitrogen; phosphorus; Zea mays; climate change
ID DROUGHT-TOLERANT; MATURING MAIZE; CHANGE IMPACTS; YIELD; SOIL;
   INFESTATION; SIMULATION; EASTERN; AFRICA; MODEL
AB Poor soil fertility and climate variability are major constraints to maize production in the Nigeria savannas. The application of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) as adaptation strategy may enhance maize yield under climate change. In this study, the already calibrated and validated CERES-maize model in DSSAT was used to simulate the response of maize varieties to N and P in three agroecological zones. Similarly, the model, coupled with data for representative concentration pathways (RCP4.5 and RCP8.5) scenarios, was applied to simulate maize yields for mid-century and end-of-century periods and to estimate the effect of use of N and P as a strategy for maize adaptation to climate change. Results of a 30-year sensitivity analysis showed that the optimum grain yields were obtained with application of 150 kg N + 30 kg P ha(-1) to the two varieties in Kano and Zaria. In Abuja, the optimum grain yields were obtained with the application of 150 kg N ha(-1) + 30 kg P ha(-1) to SAMMAZ-15 and 120 kg N ha(-1) + 30 kg P ha(-1) to SAMMAZ-16. When P is not applied, the simulation results show that across all N rates, maize yield would decrease by 25%-52% and 32%-52% for the mid- and end-of-century, respectively, under RCP4.5 for both varieties. There would be a greater reduction under RCP8.5, with a decrease of 32%-59% and 52%-69% under mid- and end-of-century scenarios, respectively. When P is applied at 30 kg ha(-1), the reduction in yield due to climate change is lower. Under RCP4.5, the yield would decrease by 9%-15% and 11%-21% for the mid- and end-of-century, respectively. There would be a reduction of 12%-21% and 32%-41% for mid-century and end-of-century, respectively, under RCP8.5 scenario. This suggests that the application of optimum P could reduce the impact of yield loss due to climate change.
C1 [Tofa, Abdullahi, I; Kamara, A. Y.; Ademulegun, T. D.; Bebeley, J. F.] Int Inst Trop Agr IITA, PMB 5320,Oyo Rd, Ibadan 200211, Oyo, Nigeria.
   [Babaji, B. A.] Ahmadu Bello Univ, Dept Agron, PMB 1045, Zaria 810222, Kaduna, Nigeria.
   [Adnan, A. A.] Bayero Univ, Dept Agron, PMB 3011, Kano 700001, Kano, Nigeria.
   [Bebeley, J. F.] Bayero Univ Kano, Ctr Dryland Agr, Kano 700001, Nigeria.
C3 CGIAR; International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA); Ahmadu
   Bello University; Bayero University; Bayero University
RP Tofa, AI (corresponding author), Int Inst Trop Agr IITA, PMB 5320,Oyo Rd, Ibadan 200211, Oyo, Nigeria.
EM A.Tofa@cgiar.org
OI Tofa, Abdullahi Ibrahim/0000-0002-7617-4395
FU Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) [OPP1113374]
FX The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) supported this study under
   the Project "Taking Maize Agronomy to Scale in Africa(TAMASA),' Grant
   no. OPP1113374.
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NR 73
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 10
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 2515-7620
J9 ENVIRON RES COMMUN
JI Environ. Res. Commun.
PD MAY 1
PY 2023
VL 5
IS 5
AR 055001
DI 10.1088/2515-7620/accfed
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA F3FG9
UT WOS:000981231100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Marmorek, D
   Nelitz, M
   Eyzaguirre, J
   Murray, C
   Alexander, C
AF Marmorek, David
   Nelitz, Marc
   Eyzaguirre, Jimena
   Murray, Carol
   Alexander, Clint
TI Adaptive Management and Climate Change Adaptation: Two Mutually
   Beneficial Areas of Practice
SO JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptive management; climate change adaptation; climate variability;
   change; watershed management; aquatic ecology; fish; flooding
ID SALMON ONCORHYNCHUS-NERKA; WATER MANAGEMENT; BRITISH-COLUMBIA; OKANAGAN
   BASIN; RIVER; RESTORATION; SCALE; GOVERNANCE; FLOW; STATIONARITY
AB Adaptive management (AM) is a rigorous approach to implementing, monitoring, and evaluating actions, so as to learn and adjust those actions. Existing AM projects are at risk from climate change, and current AM guidance does not provide adequate methods to deal with this risk. Climate change adaptation (CCA) is an approach to plan and implement actions to reduce risks from climate variability and climate change, and to exploit beneficial opportunities. AM projects could be made more resilient to extreme climate events by applying the principles and procedures of CCA. To test this idea, we analyze the effects of extreme climatic events on five existing AM projects focused on ecosystem restoration and species recovery, in the Russian, Trinity, Okanagan, Platte, and Missouri River Basins. We examine these five case studies together to generate insights on how integrating CCA principles and practices into their design and implementation could improve their sustainability, despite significant technical and institutional challenges, particularly at larger scales. Although climate change brings substantial risks to AM projects, it may also provide opportunities, including creating new habitats, increasing the ability to quickly test flow-habitat hypotheses, stimulating improvements in watershed management and water conservation, expanding the use of real-time tools for flow management, and catalyzing creative application of CCA principles and procedures.
C1 [Marmorek, David; Nelitz, Marc; Murray, Carol; Alexander, Clint] ESSA Technol Ltd, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
   [Eyzaguirre, Jimena] ESSA Technol Ltd, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
RP Marmorek, D (corresponding author), ESSA Technol Ltd, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
EM dmarmorek@essa.com
RI Eyzaguirre, Jimena/IAM-6627-2023
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NR 117
TC 8
Z9 10
U1 3
U2 23
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1093-474X
EI 1752-1688
J9 J AM WATER RESOUR AS
JI J. Am. Water Resour. Assoc.
PD AUG
PY 2019
VL 55
IS 4
BP 881
EP 905
DI 10.1111/1752-1688.12774
EA JUL 2019
PG 25
WC Engineering, Environmental; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Water
   Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Engineering; Geology; Water Resources
GA IM4QH
UT WOS:000476186000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hegger, D
   Dieperink, C
AF Hegger, Dries
   Dieperink, Carel
TI Toward successful joint knowledge production for climate change
   adaptation: lessons from six regional projects in the Netherlands
SO ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE comparative case study analysis; constructivist approach; design
   principles; environmental governance; joint knowledge production;
   knowledge production for sustainable development; regional climate
   change adaptation; The Netherlands; typology
ID BOUNDARY ORGANIZATIONS; SCIENCE-POLICY; COPRODUCTION; MANAGEMENT; ROLES
AB In the domain of climate change adaptation, joint knowledge production (JKP) through intensive cooperation between scientists, policy-makers, and other actors is often proposed as a means to reconcile supply and demand for knowledge. Regional adaptation projects in the Netherlands form prominent examples of this. However, there is a lack of systematic empirical studies on how JKP can be done successfully. Here, we take the next step toward generating design principles for JKP. We do so by carrying out a comparative analysis of six Dutch adaptation projects using a previously developed assessment framework. Project documents were studied, and 30 semi-structured interviews were held with researchers, policy-makers, and financiers in the projects. Based on project comparisons, we derive and elaborate on two design principles for JKP. First, the most successful projects managed to create what we term a protected space for knowledge development while establishing connections with ongoing policy processes. Successful JKP seems to be more likely in cases in which actors make a conscious decision for the institutional location of the project on the research-policy nexus, whereby the coordinating entity has some characteristics of a boundary organization. Second, specific resources, including facilities, boundary objects, and specific competencies increase the chance for success.
C1 [Hegger, Dries; Dieperink, Carel] Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.
C3 Utrecht University
RP Hegger, D (corresponding author), Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.
RI Hegger, Dries/S-8727-2016; Dieperink, Carel/M-4458-2013; Hegger,
   Dries/L-9301-2013
OI Dieperink, Carel/0000-0002-1926-4642; Hegger, Dries/0000-0003-2721-3527
FU Dutch National Partnership for Sustainable Earth Research
FX This paper was prepared with the support of the Dutch National
   Partnership for Sustainable Earth Research. We thank the interviewees
   for their collaboration and their feedback on our analysis. We also
   thank Rene Kemp, Harro van Lente, Astrid Offermans, Jeanine Schreurs,
   Ron Corvers, Ymkje de Boer, the subject editors, and two anonymous
   reviewers for their constructive comments on earlier versions of this
   paper.
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NR 43
TC 47
Z9 54
U1 2
U2 25
PU Resilience Alliance
PI Dedham
PA 231 Bussey St., Beckwith and Brown, Dedham, Massachusetts, UNITED STATES
SN 1708-3087
J9 ECOL SOC
JI Ecol. Soc.
PY 2014
VL 19
IS 2
AR 34
DI 10.5751/ES-06453-190234
PG 15
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AK8XI
UT WOS:000338711600046
OA Green Submitted, gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Neff, MW
   Larson, BMH
AF Neff, Mark W.
   Larson, Brendon M. H.
TI Scientists, managers, and assisted colonization: Four contrasting
   perspectives entangle science and policy
SO BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Assisted colonization; Climate change adaptation; Q method;
   Science-policy interface; Wicked problems
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; CONSERVATION PROFESSIONALS; MIGRATION DEBATE;
   PARTICIPATION; RELOCATION
AB Assisted colonization is a contentious climate change adaptation strategy, but we have limited understanding of the bases of disagreement amongst scientists and far less has been done to understand the views of other stakeholders. To establish an initial empirical understanding of the terms of the debate, we conducted a Q method study of the views of scientists and resource managers, a key constituency because of their role in decision-making and implementation. We asked 24 forest managers in Ontario, Canada and 26 top-publishing ecologists and conservation biologists to evaluate their level of agreement with 33 statements about assisted colonization from the published literature and other relevant sources. The analysis revealed four main, contrasting perspectives, which we label Ecological Interventionist, Nativist Technocrat, Interventionist Technocrat, and Reluctant Interventionist; all but the Nativist Technocrats were open to assisted colonization. Disagreements between the four perspectives were defined by value-based and policy-strategic considerations at least as much as they were by varied understandings of technical issues. Assisted colonization as a climate adaptation strategy exists within the context of multiple competing and incompatible problem definitions even amongst these technical stakeholders. Based upon our findings and the relevant literature, we conclude that disputes surrounding assisted colonization will likely not be settled by additional scientific research. Rather, underlying non-technical considerations need to be brought to the fore and addressed. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Neff, Mark W.; Larson, Brendon M. H.] Univ Waterloo, Dept Environm & Resource Studies, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
C3 University of Waterloo
RP Neff, MW (corresponding author), Allegheny Coll, Dept Environm Sci, Box E,520 N Main St, Meadville, PA 16335 USA.
EM mneff@allegheny.edu; blarson@uwaterloo.ca
FU Standard Research Grant from the Social Science and Humanities Research
   Council of Canada (SSHRC)
FX We thank the scientists and managers who contributed to the study and
   appreciate research funding from a Standard Research Grant (B. Larson)
   from the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada
   (SSHRC). We are indebted to the reviewers and the editor of this journal
   for their insightful feedback on our work.
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NR 50
TC 25
Z9 27
U1 1
U2 88
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0006-3207
EI 1873-2917
J9 BIOL CONSERV
JI Biol. Conserv.
PD APR
PY 2014
VL 172
BP 1
EP 7
DI 10.1016/j.biocon.2014.02.001
PG 7
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AH7TK
UT WOS:000336337800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tuomenvirta, H
   Gregow, H
   Harjanne, A
   Luhtala, S
   Mäkelä, A
   Pilli-Sihvola, K
   Juhola, S
   Hildén, M
   Peltonen-Sainio, P
   Miettinen, IT
   Halonen, M
AF Tuomenvirta, Heikki
   Gregow, Hilppa
   Harjanne, Atte
   Luhtala, Sanna
   Makela, Antti
   Pilli-Sihvola, Karoliina
   Juhola, Sirkku
   Hilden, Mikael
   Peltonen-Sainio, Pirjo
   Miettinen, Ilkka T.
   Halonen, Mikko
TI Identifying Policy Actions Supporting Weather-Related Risk Management
   and Climate Change Adaptation in Finland
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; climate risks; weather risks; climate change adaptation;
   disaster risk management; national adaptation policy; policy
   implementation; policy recommendations; knowledge attributes
ID RELEVANCE; SCIENCE; CREDIBILITY; LEGITIMACY; KNOWLEDGE; MAKERS
AB Climate change adaptation (CCA) policies require scientific input to focus on relevant risks and opportunities, to promote effective and efficient measures and ensure implementation. This calls for policy relevant research to formulate salient policy recommendations. This article examines how CCA research may contribute to policy recommendations in the light of idealized set of knowledge production attributes for policy development in Finland. Using general background information on the evolution of CCA research and a case study, we specifically examine how the set of attributes have been manifested in research serving CCA and discuss how they have affected the resulting policy recommendations. We conclude that research serving CCA can be improved by more explicit reflection on the attributes that pay attention to the context of application, the methods of teamwork and a variety of participating organizations, transdisciplinarity of the research, reflexivity based on the values and labour ethos of scientists and novel forms of extended peer review. Such attributes can provide a necessary, although not sufficient, condition for knowledge production that strives to bridge the gap between research and policy.
C1 [Tuomenvirta, Heikki; Gregow, Hilppa; Harjanne, Atte; Luhtala, Sanna; Makela, Antti; Pilli-Sihvola, Karoliina] Finnish Meteorol Inst, POB 503, FI-00101 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Juhola, Sirkku] Univ Helsinki, Ecosyst & Environm Res Program, POB 65, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Juhola, Sirkku] Univ Helsinki, Helsinki Inst Sustainabil Sci HELSUS, POB 65, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Hilden, Mikael] Finnish Environm Inst SYKE, Latokartanonkaari 11, FI-00790 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Peltonen-Sainio, Pirjo] Nat Resources Inst Finland Luke, Latokartanonkaari 9, FI-00790 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Miettinen, Ilkka T.] Natl Inst Hlth & Welf THL, POB 95, FI-70701 Kuopio, Finland.
   [Halonen, Mikko] Gaia Consulting Oy, FI-00120 Helsinki, Finland.
C3 Finnish Meteorological Institute; University of Helsinki; University of
   Helsinki; Finnish Environment Institute; Natural Resources Institute
   Finland (Luke); Finland National Institute for Health & Welfare
RP Tuomenvirta, H (corresponding author), Finnish Meteorol Inst, POB 503, FI-00101 Helsinki, Finland.
EM heikki.tuomenvirta@fmi.fi
RI Juhola, Sirkku/IXW-8093-2023; Mäkelä, Antti/GOP-0320-2022; Tuomenvirta,
   Heikki/JFS-2998-2023; Gregow, Hilppa/AAI-5864-2021
OI Juhola, Sirkku/0000-0003-0095-2282; Tuomenvirta,
   Heikki/0009-0001-6349-4605; Peltonen-Sainio, Pirjo/0000-0002-1083-2201
FU Government of Finland's analysis, assessment and research activities for
   2015; Jenny and Antti Wihuri Foundation
FX This research was funded by the Government of Finland's analysis,
   assessment and research activities for 2015. AH was supported by the
   Jenny and Antti Wihuri Foundation.
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NR 50
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 6
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
SN 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUL 1
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 13
AR 3661
DI 10.3390/su11133661
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA IL1IB
UT WOS:000477051900156
OA gold, Green Published, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mall, RK
   Srivastava, RK
   Banerjee, T
   Mishra, OP
   Bhatt, D
   Sonkar, G
AF Mall, Rajesh K.
   Srivastava, Ravindra K.
   Banerjee, Tirthankar
   Mishra, Om Prakash
   Bhatt, Diva
   Sonkar, Geetika
TI Disaster Risk Reduction Including Climate Change Adaptation Over South
   Asia: Challenges and Ways Forward
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Climate change adaptation; Disaster risk reduction;
   SAARC; South Asia
AB South Asia is vulnerable to a variety of hydrometeorological hazards, which are often cross-boundary in nature. Climate change is expected to influence many of these hazards. Thus, climate-related risks over South Asia make disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) key policy goals. Recently there is an increasing consensus that DRR including CCA should be embedded in development planning. Disaster risk reduction including CCA has progressively gained importance in global governance. Across South Asia, however, such integration is only in a preliminary stage. This review was to assess the existing status and scope of DRR including CCA in development projects across South Asia, so that an effective and achievable deliberation may be made to regional policymakers. A total of 371 projects relevant to CCA and DRR were reviewed. The project inventory was diverse in nature with respect to location, scale, sectoral focus, and strategic importance. Bangladesh, India, and Bhutan were observed to be proactive in implementing DRR- and CCA-related projects. Meta-analysis of the project inventory suggests an urgent need for an individual and collaborative convergence of processes for DRR and CCA through policies, plans, strategies, and programs.
C1 [Mall, Rajesh K.; Srivastava, Ravindra K.; Banerjee, Tirthankar; Bhatt, Diva; Sonkar, Geetika] Banaras Hindu Univ, Inst Environm & Sustainable Dev, Varanasi 221005, Uttar Pradesh, India.
   [Mall, Rajesh K.; Srivastava, Ravindra K.; Banerjee, Tirthankar; Sonkar, Geetika] Banaras Hindu Univ, DST Mahamana Ctr Excellence Climate Change Res, Varanasi 221005, Uttar Pradesh, India.
   [Srivastava, Ravindra K.] Minist Home Affairs, New Delhi 110001, India.
   [Mishra, Om Prakash] Minist Earth Sci, New Delhi 110003, India.
C3 Banaras Hindu University (BHU); Banaras Hindu University (BHU); Ministry
   of Earth Sciences (MoES) - India
RP Mall, RK (corresponding author), Banaras Hindu Univ, Inst Environm & Sustainable Dev, Varanasi 221005, Uttar Pradesh, India.; Mall, RK (corresponding author), Banaras Hindu Univ, DST Mahamana Ctr Excellence Climate Change Res, Varanasi 221005, Uttar Pradesh, India.
EM mall_raj@rediffmail.com
RI Banerjee, Tirthankar/A-6197-2010; mall, rajesh/AAG-2989-2020; SONKAR,
   GEETIKA/AAD-6081-2019
OI SONKAR, GEETIKA/0000-0002-0481-818X; Mall, R K/0000-0002-3118-096X
FU SAARC Disaster Management Centre, New Delhi; United Nations
   International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR); Climate Change
   Programme, Department of Science and Technology, New Delhi, India
FX The authors are thankful to the SAARC Disaster Management Centre, New
   Delhi; the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction
   (UNISDR); and the Climate Change Programme, Department of Science and
   Technology, New Delhi, India for support to this study. However, all the
   views expressed in this article are solely of the authors. The authors
   also highly appreciate the Associate Editor Professor Ilan Kelman and
   anonymous reviewers for their professional and pertinent comments, which
   were greatly helpful in improving the manuscript.
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NR 47
TC 55
Z9 55
U1 3
U2 38
PU SPRINGEROPEN
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 2095-0055
EI 2192-6395
J9 INT J DISAST RISK SC
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Sci.
PD MAR
PY 2019
VL 10
IS 1
BP 14
EP 27
DI 10.1007/s13753-018-0210-9
PG 14
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA HH7OK
UT WOS:000455920000002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhou, QQ
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, K
AF Zhou, Qianqian
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten
TI Uncertainty Assessment of Climate Change Adaptation Options Using an
   Economic Pluvial Flood Risk Framework
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE flood risk assessment; decision-making; uncertainty; sensitivity;
   climate change adaptation; urban drainage management
ID DURATION-FREQUENCY CURVES; URBAN; DAMAGE; RAINFALL; WATER
AB Identifying what, when, and how much adaptation is needed to account for increased pluvial flood risk is inherently uncertain. This presents a challenge to decision makers when trying to identify robust measures. This paper presents an integrated uncertainty analysis to quantify not only the overall uncertainty of individual adaptation scenarios, but also the net uncertainty between adaptation alternatives for a direct comparison of their efficiency. Further, a sensitivity analysis is used to assess the relative contribution of inherent uncertainties in the assessment. A Danish case study shows that the uncertainties in relation to assessing the present hazards and vulnerabilities (e.g., input runoff volume, threshold for damage, and costing of floods) are important to the overall uncertainty, thus contributing substantially to the overall uncertainty in relation to decisions on action or in-action. Once a decision of action has been taken, the uncertainty of the hazards under the current climate, and also the magnitude of future climate change, are less important than other uncertainties such as discount rate and the cost of implementing the adaptation measures. The proposed methodology is an important tool for achieving an explicit uncertainty description of climate adaptation strategies and provides a guide for further efforts (e.g., field data collection) to improve decision-making in relation to climate change.
C1 [Zhou, Qianqian] Guangdong Univ Technol, Sch Civil & Transportat Engn, Waihuan Xi Rd, Guangzhou 510006, Guangdong, Peoples R China.
   [Zhou, Qianqian; Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten] Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Environm Engn, Urban Water Syst Sect, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
C3 Guangdong University of Technology; Technical University of Denmark
RP Arnbjerg-Nielsen, K (corresponding author), Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Environm Engn, Urban Water Syst Sect, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
EM qiaz@foxmail.com; karn@env.dtu.dk
RI Zhou, Qianqian/GXG-4345-2022; Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten/J-7792-2012
OI Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten/0000-0002-6221-9505; Zhou,
   Qianqian/0000-0003-3692-9498
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NR 43
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 21
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
SN 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD DEC
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 12
AR 1877
DI 10.3390/w10121877
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA HG9GB
UT WOS:000455314300172
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Henriques, G
   Lamanna, L
   Kotowski, D
   Hlomani, H
   Stacey, D
   Baker, P
AF Henriques, Gabriela
   Lamanna, Laura
   Kotowski, Daniel
   Hlomani, Hlomani
   Stacey, Deborah
   Baker, Philip
BE Zhang, C
   Joshi, J
   Bertino, E
   Thuraisingham, B
TI An Ontology-driven Approach to Mobile Data Collection Applications for
   the Health-Care Industry
SO 2012 IEEE 13TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION REUSE AND
   INTEGRATION (IRI)
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 13th IEEE International Conference on Information Reuse and Integration
   (IEEE IRI) / DIM / WICSOC / IEEE EM- RITE / IRI-HI
CY AUG 08-10, 2012
CL Las Vegas, NV
SP IEEE Syst Man & Cybernet Soc (IEEE SMC), Soc Informat Reuse & Integrat (SIRI), IEEE
DE Ontology; software engineering; health care; data transfer; data
   collection
AB Technology has more often been associated with improvements in many domains. This is particularly true in the medical and health-care industry. This is a field where data collection is performed on a daily basis. With the advent of mobile technology, several methodologies for data collection have been adopted reducing the cost and time expanded to data collection. The focus of this paper is a proposed ontology-based framework that has the ability of building a shared repository of surveys that can be used for data collection. The paper discusses iCollect, a first instantiation of the framework in the form of a survey application built for the Indigenous Health Adaptation to Climate Change (IHACC) project.
C1 [Henriques, Gabriela; Lamanna, Laura; Kotowski, Daniel; Hlomani, Hlomani; Stacey, Deborah] Univ Guelph, 50 Stone Rd E, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
   [Baker, Philip] Publ Hlth Canada, Guelph, ON N1G 4P6, Canada.
C3 University of Guelph
RP Henriques, G (corresponding author), Univ Guelph, 50 Stone Rd E, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
EM ghenriqu@uoguelph.ca; llamanna@uoguelph.ca; dkotowsk@uoguelph.ca;
   hhlomani@uoguelph.ca; dastacey@uoguelph.ca; bakerp@uoguelph.ca
RI Hlomani, Hlomani/KMY-0857-2024
OI Hlomani, Hlomani/0000-0002-6961-5906; Stacey,
   Deborah/0000-0002-2019-9905
FU IHACC
FX iCollect development was funded by the IHACC project. The software is
   open source.
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NR 13
TC 1
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 1
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
BN 978-1-4673-2284-3
PY 2012
BP 578
EP 583
PG 6
WC Computer Science, Theory & Methods; Engineering, Electrical & Electronic
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Computer Science; Engineering
GA BDC08
UT WOS:000312540300083
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mumtaz, H
   Theophilopoulou, A
AF Mumtaz, Haroon
   Theophilopoulou, Angeliki
TI The distributional effects of climate change. An empirical analysis
SO EUROPEAN ECONOMIC REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate shock; Income inequality; Economic growth; growth Frequency
   domain identification; Panel VAR
ID WEATHER; IMPACTS
AB The role of climate change on output has been studied extensively in the empirical literature. However, its distributional implications have received little attention. This paper attempts to fill this gap by investigating if climate shocks affect income inequality. Using a Vector Autoregression for a large cross-country panel, we identify the climate shock in the frequency domain as the shock that explains the bulk of the variance of climate variables in the long- run. An adverse climate shock is associated with an increase in measures of income inequality, affecting mostly low income households. The impact of the shock is larger in magnitude for low income, hot countries with a significant agricultural sector and low degree of adaptation to climate change.
C1 [Mumtaz, Haroon] Queen Mary Univ London, London, England.
   [Theophilopoulou, Angeliki] Brunel Univ London, London, England.
C3 University of London; Queen Mary University London; Brunel University
RP Mumtaz, H (corresponding author), Queen Mary Univ London, London, England.
EM h.mumtaz@qmul.ac.uk
OI Theophilopoulou, Angeliki/0000-0001-5828-928X
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NR 29
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 5
U2 5
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0014-2921
EI 1873-572X
J9 EUR ECON REV
JI Eur. Econ. Rev.
PD OCT
PY 2024
VL 169
AR 104828
DI 10.1016/j.euroecorev.2024.104828
EA AUG 2024
PG 12
WC Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA E2O8F
UT WOS:001301454600001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Robinson, S
   Willenbockel, D
   Strzepek, K
AF Robinson, Sherman
   Willenbockel, Dirk
   Strzepek, Kenneth
TI A Dynamic General Equilibrium Analysis of Adaptation to Climate Change
   in Ethiopia
SO REVIEW OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
AB This study links a multisectoral, regionalized, dynamic, computable general equilibrium (CGE) model of Ethiopia with a system country-specific hydrology, crop, road, and hydropower engineering models to simulate the economic impacts of climate change scenarios from global circulation models (GCMs) to 2050. In the absence of externally funded, policy-driven adaptation investments, Ethiopia's GDP in 2050 will be up to 10% below the counterfactual no climate change (historical climate) baseline. Suitably designed adaptation investments could restore aggregate welfare to baseline levels at a cost that is substantially lower than the welfare losses as a result of climate change. Such investments, even if funded from domestic resources, have benefits that greatly exceed their costs, and are largely consistent with Ethiopia's long-run development strategy.
C1 [Robinson, Sherman] IFPRI, Washington, DC 20006 USA.
   [Willenbockel, Dirk] Univ Sussex, Inst Dev Studies, Brighton BN1 9RE, E Sussex, England.
   [Strzepek, Kenneth] MIT, Joint Program Sci & Policy Global Change, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
C3 CGIAR; International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI); University
   of Sussex; Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
RP Robinson, S (corresponding author), IFPRI, 2033 K St NW, Washington, DC 20006 USA.
EM d.willenbockel@ids.ac.uk
RI Willenbockel, Dirk/AAC-2191-2021
OI Willenbockel, Dirk/0000-0002-6840-0954
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NR 16
TC 40
Z9 42
U1 2
U2 35
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1363-6669
EI 1467-9361
J9 REV DEV ECON
JI Rev. Dev. Econ.
PD AUG
PY 2012
VL 16
IS 3
SI SI
BP 489
EP 502
DI 10.1111/j.1467-9361.2012.00676.x
PG 14
WC Development Studies; Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Business & Economics
GA 973LQ
UT WOS:000306362000009
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Romero-Lankao, P
   Smith, JB
   Davidson, DJ
   Diffenbaugh, NS
   Kinney, PL
   Kirshen, P
   Kovacs, P
   Ruiz, LV
   Anderegg, W
   Carr, J
   Cheng, A
   Dickinson, T
   Douglas, E
   Eakin, H
   Gnatz, DM
   Hayden, M
   Viniegra, MEI
   Cisneros, BEJ
   de Loë, R
   Meyer, MD
   Ngo, C
   Nori-Sarma, A
   Oulahen, G
   Pape, D
   del Valle, AP
   Pulwarty, R
   Quinn, A
   Sosa-Rodriguez, FS
   Runfola, D
   Peña, LS
   Udall, BH
   Warren, F
   Weinberger, K
   Wilbanks, T
AF Romero-Lankao, Patricia
   Smith, Joel B.
   Davidson, Debra J.
   Diffenbaugh, Noah S.
   Kinney, Patrick L.
   Kirshen, Paul
   Kovacs, Paul
   Villers Ruiz, Lourdes
   Anderegg, William
   Carr, Jessie
   Cheng, Anthony
   Dickinson, Thea
   Douglas, Ellen
   Eakin, Hallie
   Gnatz, Daniel M.
   Hayden, Mary
   Ibarraran Viniegra, Maria Eugenia
   Jimenez Cisneros, Blanca E.
   de Loe, Rob
   Meyer, Michael D.
   Ngo, Catherine
   Nori-Sarma, Amrutasri
   Oulahen, Greg
   Pape, Diana
   Pena del Valle, Ana
   Pulwarty, Roger
   Quinn, Ashlinn
   Sosa-Rodriguez, Fabiola S.
   Runfola, Daniel
   Sanchez Pena, Landy
   Udall, Bradley H.
   Warren, Fiona
   Weinberger, Kate
   Wilbanks, Tom
BE Barros, VR
   Field, CB
   Dokken, DJ
   Mastrandrea, MD
   Mach, KJ
   Bilir, TB
   Chatterjee, M
   Ebi, KL
   Estrada, YO
   Genova, RC
   Girma, B
   Kissel, ES
   Levy, AN
   MacCracken, S
   Mastrandrea, PR
   White, LL
TI North America
SO CLIMATE CHANGE 2014: IMPACTS, ADAPTATION, AND VULNERABILITY, PT B:
   REGIONAL ASPECTS: WORKING GROUP II CONTRIBUTION TO THE FIFTH ASSESSMENT
   REPORT OF THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SEA-LEVEL RISE; MOUNTAIN PINE-BEETLE; RAGWEED
   AMBROSIA-ARTEMISIIFOLIA; WILDLAND-URBAN INTERFACE; WATERBORNE DISEASE
   OUTBREAKS; UNITED-STATES IMPLICATIONS; EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS;
   MOSQUITO-BORNE DISEASE; LONG-TERM PERSISTENCE
RI Runfola, Daniel/AAI-7868-2020; Diffenbaugh, Noah/I-5920-2014;
   Romero-Lankao, Patricia/Q-3341-2017
OI Diffenbaugh, Noah/0000-0002-8856-4964; Romero-Lankao,
   Patricia/0000-0001-9533-2363
CR Abramson DM, 2012, DISASTER MED PUBLIC, V6, P328, DOI 10.1001/dmp.2012.76
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NR 787
TC 159
Z9 212
U1 1
U2 18
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA THE PITT BUILDING, TRUMPINGTON ST, CAMBRIDGE CB2 1RP, CAMBS, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-107-68386-0; 978-1-107-05816-3
PY 2014
BP 1439
EP 1498
PG 60
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BE1UB
UT WOS:000368536000006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Koslov, L
AF Koslov, Liz
TI Avoiding Climate Change: "Agnostic Adaptation" and the Politics of
   Public Silence
SO ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOGRAPHERS
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; denial; disaster; environmental politics
AB What does it mean to adapt to climate change without talking about climate change? The term agnostic adaptation has emerged to refer to actions that address climate change's effects without acknowledging its existence or human causes. Although prevalent, agnostic adaptation has yet to be the focus of significant empirical research. Most studies of climate silence and denial examine the absence of action rather than its paradoxical presence. This article, by contrast, explores how action and silence coexist and even serve to reinforce each other. It draws on fieldwork in Staten Island, New York City's most politically conservative and only predominantly white borough, where residents mobilized after Hurricane Sandy in favor of government buyouts of their damaged homes that would pay them to relocate rather than rebuild in place. The areas that received buyouts have been lauded from afar as exemplary sites of community-led climate adaptation in one of its most radical forms, managed retreat. On the ground, however, those who participated in the push for retreat were largely silent on the topic of climate change, which was not seen as politically enabling or efficacious to discuss. Agnostic adaptation minimized conflict, made for more tractable claims, and maintained relations of power but in so doing offered protection to only a select few. These findings point to the practical effects of climate silence as it exists in relation to climate talk, both of which share omissions, erasures, and forms of agnosticism that narrow the space for transformative action.
C1 [Koslov, Liz] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Urban Planning, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
   [Koslov, Liz] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Inst Environm & Sustainabil, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Los Angeles;
   University of California System; University of California Los Angeles
RP Koslov, L (corresponding author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Urban Planning, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.; Koslov, L (corresponding author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Inst Environm & Sustainabil, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
EM koslov@ucla.edu
FU Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowship; New York University's
   Institute for Public Knowledge and Department of Media, Culture, and
   Communication; Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Humanities at the
   Massachusetts Institute of Technology
FX Funding for this research was provided by a Mellon/ACLS Dissertation
   Completion Fellowship and by New York University's Institute for Public
   Knowledge and Department of Media, Culture, and Communication. The
   writing was supported by a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship in the
   Humanities at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. See
   https://shass.mit.edu/academics/graduate/mellon/post-doctoral-fellows
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NR 40
TC 42
Z9 52
U1 0
U2 14
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 2469-4452
EI 2469-4460
J9 ANN AM ASSOC GEOGR
JI Ann. Am. Assoc. Geogr.
PD MAR 4
PY 2019
VL 109
IS 2
SI SI
BP 568
EP 580
DI 10.1080/24694452.2018.1549472
PG 13
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA HP7UF
UT WOS:000461894800024
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU De Noia, I
   Casellia, B
   Kemperman, A
   Rossetti, S
   van der Waerden, P
AF De Noia, Ilaria
   Casellia, Barbara
   Kemperman, Astrid
   Rossetti, Silvia
   van der Waerden, Peter
TI Towards participatory urban planning: insights from citizens. Results of
   a surveyonthe local effects of climate change in Parma
SO TEMA-JOURNAL OF LAND USE MOBILITY AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban planning; Citizens' perception; Desealing; Climate change
   adaptation; Survey
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; TOP-DOWN; DESIGN
AB Citizens'involvement in urban transition processes has been gaining recognition within the scientific literature and urban transformation initiatives. Co-design and co-planning, in both top-down and bottom-up urban transformation processes, allow stakeholders to collaborate in defining the future of citiesin a climate change adaptation framework that encompasses interventions such as soil desealing. In this framework, surveyshave emerged as valuable instruments to solicit citizens' insights into participatory processes, as an aid to orient urban planning and transformation scenarios towards their needs and vulnerabilities. After tracing the outline of a local bottom-up project (named "Green in Parma"), this contribution will present and discuss the outcomes of a surveythat investigated the perception of the citizens of Parma regardingclimate change and its local effects. Univariate and bivariate analyses, including Chi-square tests and factor analyses, were conducted on data collected from a sample of1,352 participants. The findings provided insights linked to the city and to the neighbourhoods, allowing to localise the quantitative data and to qualitatively associate them with theneighbourhoods socio-environmental characteristics, fostering the envisioning of climate change adaptation strategies. The analyses reveal the potential of surveysand citizens' involvement in shaping urban planning scenarios, acknowledging thecitizens'role as bearers of knowledge and active stakeholders.
C1 [De Noia, Ilaria; Casellia, Barbara; Rossetti, Silvia] Dept Engn & Architecture, Universityof Parma, Parma, Italy.
   [Kemperman, Astrid; van der Waerden, Peter] Eindhoven Univ Technol, Dept Built Environm, Eindhoven, Netherlands.
C3 Eindhoven University of Technology
RP De Noia, I (corresponding author), Dept Engn & Architecture, Universityof Parma, Parma, Italy.
EM ilaria.denoia@unipr.it; barbara.caselli@unipr.it;
   a.d.a.m.kemperman@tue.nl; silvia.rossetti@unipr.it;
   p.j.h.j.v.d.Waerden@tue.nl
RI Rossetti, Silvia/AAD-7494-2019
FX AcknowledgementsThe questionnaire analysis was carried out in the
   framework of the visiting research period of the Ph.D. Student Eng.
   Arch. Ilaria De Noia at Eindhoven University of Technology TU/e (the
   Netherlands) , under the guidance of Prof. A. Kemperman and dr. ing. P.
   van der Waerden. I.D.N.'s PhD programme is funded by the National
   Operational Programme on Research and Innovation 2014-2020 (CCI
   2014IT16M2OP005) , FSE REACT-EU funds, Action IV.4 "PhD programmes and
   research contracts on innovation" and Action IV.5 "PhDprogrammes on
   green related topics". CUP: D91B21004730007; scholarship code and
   number: DOT1321814 n. 6.Supervisor: Prof. M. Zazzi.
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NR 57
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU UNIV STUDI NAPOLI FEDERICO II, DIPT PIANIFICAZIONE & SCIENZA TERRITORIO
PI NAPLES
PA PIAZZALE TECCHIO 80, NAPLES, 80125, ITALY
SN 1970-9889
EI 1970-9870
J9 TEMA
JI TeMA
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 17
IS 2
DI 10.6093/1970-9870/10836
PG 25
WC Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA E6Z1E
UT WOS:001304458400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kutyauripo, I
   Masamha, B
   Maringe, P
AF Kutyauripo, Innocent
   Masamha, Blessing
   Maringe, Peter
TI Exploring climate change adaptation strategies in maize (<i>Zea
   mays</i>) postharvest management practices among smallholder farmers
SO OUTLOOK ON AGRICULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; maize; postharvest handling; smallholder
   farmers
ID LOSSES REDUCTION; FOOD LOSSES; DETERMINANTS; STORAGE
AB Climate change has negative effects on postharvest management of cereals. However, much emphasis is placed on climate change adaptation (CCA) in crop production whilst not adequately addressing the CCA in postharvest management of maize. A cross-sectional survey was conducted among smallholder farmers. Key informant interviews, observations and structured interviews on 280 household heads were done. Binary logistic regression was used to analyse determinants of use of postharvest CCA practices whilst multinomial logistic regression was used to analyse determinants of use of postharvest storage facilities. Farmers used grain protectants (40.4%) and minimised the duration of the harvesting process (34.3%) as their major CCA practices in maize postharvest management. There was a significant difference in postharvest maize loss quantities (p <= 0.05) between users and non-users of CCA practices. The choice and use of climate-resilient postharvest strategies were significantly influenced by location, cultivated land, access to radio and membership to farmer club. Choice of a postharvest storage facility was significantly influenced by training and membership to farmers' club. Smallholder farmers are using some conventional maize postharvest management practices like grain protectants to adapt to the effects of climate change. The use of maize postharvest CCA strategies significantly reduced postharvest losses.
C1 [Kutyauripo, Innocent; Maringe, Peter] Bindura Univ Sci Educ, Dept Agr Econ Educ & Extens, Bindura, Zimbabwe.
   [Masamha, Blessing] Africa Inst South Africa AISA, Human Sci Res Council HSRC, P Bag X41, ZA-0001 Pretoria, South Africa.
   [Masamha, Blessing] Bindura Univ Sci Educ, Dept Nat Resources Management, Bindura, Zimbabwe.
C3 Human Sciences Research Council-South Africa
RP Masamha, B (corresponding author), Africa Inst South Africa AISA, Human Sci Res Council HSRC, P Bag X41, ZA-0001 Pretoria, South Africa.
EM blemasamha@gmail.com
RI Kutyauripo, Innocent/AAV-4723-2020
OI Kutyauripo, Innocent/0000-0003-3148-7096
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NR 32
TC 2
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 40
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0030-7270
EI 2043-6866
J9 OUTLOOK AGR
JI Outlook Agric.
PD JUN
PY 2021
VL 50
IS 2
BP 148
EP 157
AR 00307270211001666
DI 10.1177/00307270211001666
EA APR 2021
PG 10
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA TO4HB
UT WOS:000638959300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McNamara, KE
   Buggy, L
AF McNamara, Karen Elizabeth
   Buggy, Lisa
TI Community-based climate change adaptation: a review of academic
   literature
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; climate change; community; governance; learning
ID DISASTER RISK REDUCTION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; LEVEL ADAPTATION;
   VULNERABILITY; STRATEGIES; RESPONSES; IMPACTS; FARMERS; FOREST; ISLAND
AB The focus on climate change adaptation, rather than mitigation, has become more prominent since the turn of the century. Given this, it is important to consider what has been achieved so far, particularly community-based approaches which have become the resolve for practitioners and donor agencies working in the sector. This review of 128 publications on community-based climate change adaptation, identified through a systematic database search, follows the development of this body of work in the academic literature. Commencing in the early 2000s, the literature detailed the emergence of community-based adaptation (CBA), driven by a number of factors: recognition of the human dimensions of changes; appreciation of the role of local knowledge for strengthening adaptive capacity; and a push to focus on the scale at which impacts are felt and link this action with pro-poor development outcomes. A more substantial body of work emerged in the literature from 2010 onwards, defining a series of key enablers for effective CBA, which included: use participatory approaches; recognise that adaptation is a social process; and support CBA at multiple scales. More recently, there has been a growing emphasis in the literature to re-conceptualise CBA, which will require focusing on innovation, learning and multi-sectoral approaches.
C1 [McNamara, Karen Elizabeth; Buggy, Lisa] Univ Queensland, Sch Geog Planning & Environm Management, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
C3 University of Queensland
RP McNamara, KE (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Geog Planning & Environm Management, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
EM karen.mcnamara@uq.edu.au
RI McNamara, Karen/D-7322-2013
OI McNamara, Karen/0000-0002-4511-8403
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NR 91
TC 100
Z9 110
U1 3
U2 67
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PY 2017
VL 22
IS 4
BP 443
EP 460
DI 10.1080/13549839.2016.1216954
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA EO3VM
UT WOS:000396622500004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ramyar, R
   Zarghami, E
AF Ramyar, R.
   Zarghami, E.
TI GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE CONTRIBUTION FOR CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION IN URBAN
   LANDSCAPE CONTEXT
SO APPLIED ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE ecosystem services; multi-scale approcach; landscape planning; urban
   ecology
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; RESILIENCE
AB Green infrastructure is strategic and spatial approach to landscape and environment planning, applying key principles of landscape ecology to urban environments, and specifically planning in multi-scale approach. It is adopted and developed as a result of the opportunities it has provided in various disciplines to meet ecological, environmental, social challenges of landscape planning. Multi use of green infrastructure has the potential of contributing to climate change adaptation in various scales and regions. Climate change as a result of historical emissions of greenhouse gases would jeopardize cities. The deficiency of existing urban systems to cope with the risks resulting from these changes such as floods, droughts and extreme temperatures (intensification of the urban island heat effect), render residents of cities vulnerable to these changes. Green infrastructure by providing a range of ecosystem services has a significant role to play in helping to combat climate change. In this paper, it is investigated how and in what function and services, Green infrastructure strategy can help us in adopting to climate change in urban landscape context. At the first step, we classified the methods, principle and impacts on these two strategies (climate change adaptation and green infrastructure) to compare them. Then through this comparison, a conceptual model is developed clarifying their complementarity and relationship.
C1 [Ramyar, R.; Zarghami, E.] Shahid Rajaee Teacher Training Univ, Fac Architecture & Urban Planning, Tehran, Iran.
C3 Shahid Rajaee Teacher Training University (SRTTU)
RP Zarghami, E (corresponding author), Shahid Rajaee Teacher Training Univ, Fac Architecture & Urban Planning, Tehran, Iran.
EM Reza.Ramyar@gmail.com; es.zarghami@gmail.com
RI ramyar, reza/AAF-4864-2019
OI Ramyar, Reza/0000-0003-1847-5891; Zarghami, Esmaeil/0000-0002-2398-3041
CR [Anonymous], THESIS
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NR 28
TC 23
Z9 25
U1 8
U2 81
PU CORVINUS UNIV BUDAPEST
PI BUDAPEST
PA VILLANYI UT 29/43, BUDAPEST, H-1118, HUNGARY
SN 1589-1623
EI 1785-0037
J9 APPL ECOL ENV RES
JI Appl. Ecol. Environ. Res.
PY 2017
VL 15
IS 3
BP 1193
EP 1209
DI 10.15666/aeer/1503_11931209
PG 17
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EY2PN
UT WOS:000403811200086
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Bratu, I
AF Bratu, Iulian
GP SGEM
TI USING GIS FOR SUSTAINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT IN RASINARI DISTRICT, SIBIU
   COUNTY, ROMANIA
SO INFORMATICS, GEOINFORMATICS AND REMOTE SENSING CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS,
   SGEM 2016, VOL III
SE International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference-SGEM
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 16th International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference (SGEM
   2016)
CY JUN 30-JUL 06, 2016
CL Albena, BULGARIA
SP Bulgarian Acad Sci, Acad Sci Czech Republ, Latvian Acad Sci, Polish Acad Sci, Russian Acad Sci, Serbian Acad Sci & Arts, Slovak Acad Sci, Natl Acad Sci Ukraine, Inst Water Problem & Hydropower NAS KR, Natl Acad Sci Armenia, Sci Council Japan, World Acad Sci, European Acad Sci Arts & Lett, Acad Sci Moldova, Montenegrin Acad Sci & Arts, Croatian Acad Sci & Arts, Georgian Natl Acad Sci, Acad Fine Arts & Design Bratislava, Turkish Acad Sci, Bulgarian Ind Assoc, Bulgarian Minist Environm & Water
DE sustainable forest management; climate change; GIS
ID PUBLIC-PARTICIPATION
AB The role of civil society in decision-making at central and local level, is becoming more active. Sustainable management implies the involvement of all stakeholders: specialists, operators, beneficiaries of forest resource, owners, forest managers and civil society alike. The currently material aims to provide decision makers GIS tools to facilitate sustainable forest management (SFM). Implementation of management plans, the forest management plans, matched to the needs of beneficiaries and stimulating ecological functions of the forest, with their adaptation to climate change, can rely on Free Open Source Software for GIS (FOSS4G) and the use of technologies based on global positioning systems (GPS). However, the presence of protected natural areas will cause more attention and imposing special measures for protection and conservation, so that forest managers have at their disposal appropriate tools to implement sustainable forest management.
C1 [Bratu, Iulian] Lucian Blaga Univ Sibiu, Fac Agr Sci Food Ind & Environm Protect, Sibiu, Romania.
C3 Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu
RP Bratu, I (corresponding author), Lucian Blaga Univ Sibiu, Fac Agr Sci Food Ind & Environm Protect, Sibiu, Romania.
RI Bratu, Iulian Alexandru/U-8287-2017
OI Bratu, Iulian Alexandru/0000-0002-8557-4008
CR Bratu I., 2013, J HORTICULTURE FORES, V17
   Cantiani MG, 2012, IFOREST, V5, P72, DOI 10.3832/ifor0602-009
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NR 7
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 10
PU STEF92 TECHNOLOGY LTD
PI SOFIA
PA 1 ANDREY LYAPCHEV BLVD, SOFIA, 1797, BULGARIA
SN 1314-2704
BN 978-619-7105-60-5
J9 INT MULTI SCI GEOCO
PY 2016
BP 615
EP 622
PG 8
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Geology
GA BH0LP
UT WOS:000395499600078
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Trærup, S
   Stephan, J
AF Traerup, Sara
   Stephan, Jean
TI Technologies for adaptation to climate change. Examples from the
   agricultural and water sectors in Lebanon
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID EMISSIONS
AB Increasing attention is being given to climate technologies on the international climate change agenda, not least in the agricultural sector and water sectors, and to technologies for adaptation. However investments in technology-based adaptation (seeds, dams, irrigation, etc.) are complicated by the fact that it remains difficult to predict future climate change impacts, especially on a local scale. In addition, evidence for the costs and benefits of implementing adaptation technologies is relatively limited. The analysis presented in this paper shows that there is a large potential for integrating adaptation technologies into the planning and implementation of on-going and future projects. Based on local-level data from a technology needs assessment project in Lebanon, this paper presents two examples of the economic feasibility of implementing adaptation technologies in the agricultural and water sectors. The results show that the technologies can be applied at low cost and with relatively little effort.
C1 [Traerup, Sara] Tech Univ Denmark, UNEP Risoe Ctr, UN City, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Stephan, Jean] Lebanese Univ, Fac Sci 2, Dept Earth & Life Sci, Fanar, Lebanon.
C3 Technical University of Denmark; Lebanese University
RP Trærup, S (corresponding author), Tech Univ Denmark, UNEP Risoe Ctr, UN City, Copenhagen, Denmark.
EM slmt@dtu.dk; dr.jeanstephan@gmail.com
OI Stephan, Jean/0000-0002-7377-8089; Traerup, Sara Laerke
   Meltofte/0000-0001-6419-9862
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NR 25
TC 17
Z9 19
U1 1
U2 22
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD AUG
PY 2015
VL 131
IS 3
BP 435
EP 449
DI 10.1007/s10584-014-1158-4
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA CN1KO
UT WOS:000358179100006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Di Falco, S
   Sharma-Khushal, S
AF Di Falco, Salvatore
   Sharma-Khushal, Sindra
TI Cognitive drivers, and the effect of information on climate change
   adaptive behaviour in Fiji Islands
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Small Islands States; Adaptation; Investment; Theory of planned
   behaviour; Experiment; Random assignment
ID PLANNED BEHAVIOR; ADAPTATION; EFFICACY; IDENTITY; DETERMINANTS;
   INTENTIONS; YOUTH; NORMS
AB This study investigates the role of cognitive processes and information on climate change adaptive investment choice. Using experimental surrey data from the Fiji Islands we found that attitudes, subjective norms, and perceived behavioural control moderated intentions which in turn affected investment stated behaviour. We also found that the correlation between intention and behaviour to be significant only in the presence of information. In addition for those in receipt of information, intention accounted for a greater amount of variance than in the absence of information.
C1 [Di Falco, Salvatore] Univ Geneva Switzerland, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Sharma-Khushal, Sindra] Ramphal Inst, London, England.
RP Di Falco, S (corresponding author), Univ Geneva Switzerland, Inst Econ & Econometr, UNIMAL, Blvd Pont Arve 40, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
EM Salvatore.difalco@unige.ch
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NR 48
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 3
U2 17
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD FEB
PY 2019
VL 92
BP 245
EP 254
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.11.019
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HJ9HI
UT WOS:000457509100027
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Light, A
   Taraska, G
AF Light, Andrew
   Taraska, Gwynne
TI Climate Change, Adaptation, and Climate-Ready Development Assistance
SO ENVIRONMENTAL VALUES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; development assistance; Millennium
   Development Goals; Sustainable Development Goals; methodological
   pragmatism
AB Traditional justifications for state-to-state development assistance include charity, basic rights and self-interest. Except in unusual cases such as war-reparations agreements, development assistance has typically been justified for reasons such as the above, without reference to any history of injury that holds between the states. We argue that climate change creates relationships of harm that can be cited to supplement and strengthen the traditional claims for development assistance. Finally, to demonstrate the utility of this analysis, we offer a brief application of our reasoning to the emerging conflict in the United Nations over the future post-2015 development agenda.
C1 [Light, Andrew; Taraska, Gwynne] George Mason Univ, Inst Philosophy & Publ Policy, Fairfax, VA 22030 USA.
C3 George Mason University
RP Light, A (corresponding author), George Mason Univ, Inst Philosophy & Publ Policy, 4400 Univ Dr,3F1, Fairfax, VA 22030 USA.
EM alight1@gmu.edu; gtaraska@gmu.edu
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NR 38
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 15
PU WHITE HORSE PRESS
PI ISLE OF HARRIS
PA 1 STROND, ISLE OF HARRIS HS5 3UD, ENGLAND
SN 0963-2719
EI 1752-7015
J9 ENVIRON VALUE
JI Environ. Values
PD APR
PY 2014
VL 23
IS 2
BP 129
EP 147
DI 10.3197/096327114X13894344179086
PG 19
WC Ethics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AD8VT
UT WOS:000333544500002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Galway, LP
   Parkes, MW
   Corbett, KK
   Allen, DM
   Takaro, TK
AF Galway, Lindsay P.
   Parkes, Margot W.
   Corbett, Kitty K.
   Allen, Diana M.
   Takaro, Timothy K.
BE Filho, WL
   Musa, H
   Cavan, G
   OHare, P
   Seixas, J
TI Climate Change Frames in Public Health and Water Resource Management:
   Towards Intersectoral Climate Change Adaptation
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION, RESILIENCE AND HAZARDS
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Framing; Public health; Water resource
   management; Interdisciplinary; Intersectoral collaboration
ID VULNERABILITY; IMPACT
AB Effective and appropriate climate change adaptation requires a greater understanding and appreciation of the diverse ways in which the issue of climate change is constructed and understood. The ways in which an issue is framed should not be overlooked in interdisciplinary and intersectoral efforts given that implicit and divergent frames often impede the processes of knowledge integration and collaboration and therefore, can hinder adaptation processes. This study used frame analysis to identify and summarize the climate change frames in public health and water resource management texts. Five frames emerged from the analysis of the public health texts: Preventing direct and indirect health impacts, promoting health and sustainability, climate change as a complex problem, strengthening the evidence base, and health equity in a changing climate. Three frames emerged from the analysis of water resource management texts: planning and decision-making under uncertainty, managing multiple drivers of water insecurity, and understanding impacts on complex systems. Drawing on insights from this work, we assert that the notion of frames and the process of frame-reflection are useful tools to foster integration and intersectoral collaboration and an opportunity to foster enabling conditions for climate change adaptation.
C1 [Galway, Lindsay P.] Lakehead Univ, Dept Hlth Sci, 955 Oliver Rd, Thunder Bay, ON, Canada.
   [Parkes, Margot W.] Univ Northern British Columbia, Sch Hlth Sci, Prince George, BC, Canada.
   [Corbett, Kitty K.] Univ Waterloo, Sch Publ Hlth & Hlth Syst, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
   [Allen, Diana M.] Simon Fraser Univ, Dept Earth Sci, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
   [Takaro, Timothy K.] Simon Fraser Univ, Fac Hlth Sci, 8888 Univ Dr, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
C3 Lakehead University; University of Northern British Columbia; University
   of Waterloo; Simon Fraser University; Simon Fraser University
RP Galway, LP (corresponding author), Lakehead Univ, Dept Hlth Sci, 955 Oliver Rd, Thunder Bay, ON, Canada.
EM lgalway@lakeheadu.ca
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NR 49
TC 1
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 9
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-39880-8; 978-3-319-39879-2
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2016
BP 35
EP 48
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-39880-8_3
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-39880-8
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Public, Environmental &
   Occupational Health; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Regional &
   Urban Planning
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Public Administration
GA BG3BE
UT WOS:000387844800004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Troccoli
AF Troccoli
BE Troccoli, A
TI WEATHER/CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT FOR THE ENERGY SECTOR: WORKSHOP
   RECOMMENDATIONS
SO MANAGEMENT OF WEATHER AND CLIMATE RISK IN THE ENERGY INDUSTRY
SE NATO Science for Peace and Security Series C-Environmental Security
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Weather/Climate Risk Management for
   the Energy Sector
CY OCT 06-10, 2008
CL Santa Maria di Leuca, ITALY
SP NATO
DE Weather; climate; energy; risk management; adaptation; policy
AB Three working groups (WGs) were formed to address the five objectives of the Workshop. These objectives were: (A) To identify vulnerabilities of energy sector to extreme weather events in the context of climate change adaptation; (B) To identify impediments to the use of weather/climate information for the energy sector in the context of climate change adaptation; (C) To suggest ways to improve and/or facilitate the transfer of knowledge between weather/climate scientists and the energy experts to allow an optimal use of climate risk management; (D) To outline proposals to improve the way in which weather/climate information is used for modelling demand and to provide warnings for potential disruptions on energy operations and infrastructure; (E) To discuss possible contributions of the weather/climate scientists and the energy experts to climate change adaptation policies for energy security. All three WGs addressed the first two objectives in their early phases of discussion and then each of them went into greater detail in discussing C (WG1), D (WG2), E (WG3). Thus objectives C, D and E are the distinguishing attributes of the three WGs. The main recommendations of each WG are presented in this chapter. See also Troccoli et al. (2009).
RI Troccoli, Alberto/A-1477-2012
CR TROCCOLI A, 2009, B AM METEOROL SOC
NR 1
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1871-4668
BN 978-90-481-3690-2
J9 NATO SCI PEACE SEC C
PY 2010
BP 327
EP 332
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BOY26
UT WOS:000278024700022
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tendall, DM
   Gaillard, G
AF Tendall, Danielle M.
   Gaillard, Gerard
TI Environmental consequences of adaptation to climate change in Swiss
   agriculture: An analysis at farm level
SO AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Agricultural adaptation; Life cycle assessment; Impact
   mitigation; Water use; Crop model
ID LIFE-CYCLE ASSESSMENT; WATER-CONSUMPTION; IMPACT; MANAGEMENT; SCENARIOS;
   SYSTEMS; UNCERTAINTY; INDICATORS; TOXICITY; THREATS
AB Climate change is expected to affect agricultural production in the coming decades, to which agriculture must adapt in order to maintain productivity and profitability. The effect of such changes on environmental impacts must be assessed, if the environmental goals of agriculture are also to be achieved in the future. We therefore assess the environmental impacts of adaptation scenarios previously developed with a purely economic perspective, for two case study regions in Switzerland. We use life cycle assessment at the whole-farm level, which enables the consideration of multiple environmental impact indicators, allowing us to identify potential trade-offs. We assess a simulated mixed livestock and arable crop farm representative of average farms in the two case study regions. The simulated farm is economically optimized for a reference scenario (current situation) and four future scenarios combining a climate change scenario representing a "worst case" change signal, and various price and policy scenarios. Results show that environmental impacts tend to increase in the future climate. Farms tend to extensify production, leading to a decrease in eco-efficiency, even more so if a decrease in agricultural product prices is assumed: socio-economic conditions may have even more influence than climate change, suggesting that there is a high potential for policy-makers to influence and mitigate the effects of climate change on agricultural productivity and the associated environmental impacts. The impacts of irrigation water use on aquatic biodiversity are revealed to be an important trade-off with farm economic optimization in the future. It is therefore recommended that aquatic biodiversity impacts be considered in assessments of agricultural adaptation to climate change. Policies directly targeting restriction of water use do not resolve this trade-off, although they do reduce impacts on aquatic biodiversity. Broader and more integrative policies are therefore required to support agricultural adaptation to the future climate while mitigating environmental impacts. In addition, different regions are found to react in a different way, suggesting that differentiated policies may be required for specific regions. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Tendall, Danielle M.; Gaillard, Gerard] Agroscope Reckenholz Tanikon Res Stn ART, CH-8046 Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Tendall, Danielle M.] ETHZ, Swiss Fed Inst Technol Zurich, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
C3 Swiss Federal Research Station Agroscope; Swiss Federal Research Station
   for Agroecology & Agriculture; Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
   Domain; ETH Zurich
RP Tendall, DM (corresponding author), ETHZ, Swiss Fed Inst Technol Zurich, Tannenstr 1, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
EM danielle.tendall@usys.ethz.ch
FU Swiss National Foundation [406140_125957/1]; Swiss National Science
   Foundation (SNF) [406140_125957] Funding Source: Swiss National Science
   Foundation (SNF)
FX We thank Niklaus Lehmann for giving access to the simulated farm
   scenario data for this study, two anonymous reviewers for their helpful
   comments, and Stefanie Hellweg from ETH Zurich for funding a part of
   this research. This study was otherwise funded by the Swiss National
   Foundation in the framework of the National Research Program 61, "AGWAM"
   project (No. 406140_125957/1).
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NR 80
TC 28
Z9 29
U1 4
U2 94
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0308-521X
EI 1873-2267
J9 AGR SYST
JI Agric. Syst.
PD JAN
PY 2015
VL 132
BP 40
EP 51
DI 10.1016/j.agsy.2014.09.006
PG 12
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA AY1OX
UT WOS:000347363200005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kirono, DGC
   Larson, S
   Tjandraatmadja, G
   Leitch, A
   Neumann, L
   Maheepala, S
   Barkey, R
   Achmad, A
   Selintung, M
AF Kirono, Dewi G. C.
   Larson, Silva
   Tjandraatmadja, Grace
   Leitch, Anne
   Neumann, Luis
   Maheepala, Shiroma
   Barkey, Roland
   Achmad, Amran
   Selintung, Mary
TI Adapting to climate change through urban water management: a
   participatory case study in Indonesia
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; Integrated urban water management; Makassar;
   Stakeholder engagement; Urban areas; Water security
ID TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH; CHANGE VULNERABILITY; ADAPTATION;
   ASSESSMENTS; FRAMEWORK; IMPACTS; KNOWLEDGE; SCIENCE; POLICY
AB The benefits of integrated approaches to climate risk and adaptation studies are increasingly recognised. Thus, there is an increasing need for practical examples of such work in the literature. This paper describes a practical application of an integrated framework for climate change impacts on regional surface water resources and the urban water system in the Mamminasata metropolitan region, Indonesia. Two main features of the framework are: the integration of both climate and other physical and social considerations in the assessment; and the high stakeholder involvement before, during and after project implementation. Although the study is concerned with the Mamminasata region, the overall methodology is transferable to any region in Indonesia or internationally. Key outcomes from this study are: (1) creation of information for Mamminasata planners and water resources managers for when, and under what conditions, the water supply may or may not meet the demand; (2) a clear consensus and shared learning of the problems facing the region among cross-institutional stakeholders; and (3) identification of adaptation options for the urban water system and knowledge gaps and strategies for their implementation. Results of stakeholders' surveys conducted at the mid-point and at the end of the study indicate that these outputs will provide valuable guidance for future planning and management of Mamminasata regional water resources.
C1 [Kirono, Dewi G. C.] CSIRO Marine & Atmospher Res, Climate Adaptat Flagship, Aspendale, Vic 3195, Australia.
   [Larson, Silva; Leitch, Anne] CSIRO Ecosyst Sci, Climate Adaptat Flagship, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Larson, Silva] James Cook Univ, Sch Business, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Tjandraatmadja, Grace; Neumann, Luis; Maheepala, Shiroma] CSIRO Land & Water, Climate Adaptat Flagship, Highett, Vic 3190, Australia.
   [Barkey, Roland; Achmad, Amran; Selintung, Mary] Hasanuddin Univ, Makassar, Indonesia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   James Cook University; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO); Universitas Hasanuddin
RP Kirono, DGC (corresponding author), CSIRO Marine & Atmospher Res, Climate Adaptat Flagship, Aspendale, Vic 3195, Australia.
EM dewi.kirono@csiro.au; silvalarson@aqua-energie.com;
   Grace.Tjandra@csiro.au; Anne.Leitch@csiro.au; Luis.Neumann@csiro.au;
   Shiroma.Maheepala@csiro.au; rolandbarkey@gmail.com; amhutan@yahoo.com;
   mary.selintung@yahoo.com
RI Selintung, Mary/AAS-1400-2020; Achmad, Amran/JVE-4510-2024; Neumann,
   Luis/E-8333-2011; Leitch, Anne/D-3033-2011
OI Selintung, Mary/0000-0002-3598-7226; Leitch, Anne/0000-0002-7597-0007;
   Kirono, Dewi/0000-0002-9142-3572
FU AusAID CSIRO Research for Development Alliance
FX The research was funded by the AusAID CSIRO Research for Development
   Alliance (www.rfdalliance.com.au). It was a collaborative effort among
   the CSIRO, Australia, Hasanuddin University (UNHAS); State Ministry of
   Environment-the Ecoregion Management Center for SUMAPAPUA (PPE); Bureau
   of Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics (BMKG); Makassar's PDAM; the
   Makassar Public Work Agency (DPU) and Environmental Agency (BLHD);
   Mamminasata Board; and AusAID-Indonesian Post. We acknowledge
   significant contribution from all stakeholders and UNHAS students
   involved in all the project activities. Figure 1 was drawn by Muh N
   Iman. We thank James Butler, Marie Ekstrom, Brenda Lin, the editors and
   three anonymous reviewers for their positive comments on the earlier
   version of the paper.
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NR 45
TC 20
Z9 24
U1 1
U2 43
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD FEB
PY 2014
VL 14
IS 1
SI SI
BP 355
EP 367
DI 10.1007/s10113-013-0498-3
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AD4ZV
UT WOS:000333261900029
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Longo, A
   Zardo, L
   Maragno, D
   Musco, F
   Burkhard, B
AF Longo, Alessandra
   Zardo, Linda
   Maragno, Denis
   Musco, Francesco
   Burkhard, Benjamin
TI Let's Do It for Real: Making the Ecosystem Service Concept Operational
   in Regional Planning for Climate Change Adaptation
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE science-policy interface; adaptive planning; land cover analysis;
   decision-support tools
ID KNOWLEDGE; SUPPORT
AB The application of ecosystem service (ES) knowledge to planning processes and decision-making can lead to more effective climate change adaptation. Despite the increased attention given to the ES concept, its degree of integration and use in spatial planning processes are still below the expectations of those who are promoting this concept. Barriers hindering its operationalisation cover a span of aspects ranging from theoretical to procedural and methodological issues. Overall, there is a general lack of guidance on how and at what point ES knowledge should be integrated into planning processes. This study aims to promote the inclusion of ES knowledge into spatial planning practices and decision-making processes to enhance climate change adaptation. A replicable GIS-based methodology is proposed. First, the potential supply of ESs that can support climate change adaptation (ESCCAs) is defined, mapped, and quantified. Then, a need for an ESCCA supply is identified, and territorial capacities to respond to the expected climate change impacts on natural and socio-economic sectors are assessed. The methodology is applied to the Friuli Venezia Giulia Autonomous Region (Italy) as an illustrative case study. The results reveal that areas with similar geomorphological characteristics tend to respond similarly. Forest ecosystems, inland wetlands and specifically salt marshes can potentially supply a greater variety of ESCCAs. In the case study area, about 62% of the supplied ESCCAs can contribute to reducing the impacts in more than 50% of the impacted sectors. The territory of the study site generally shows good preparedness for expected impacts in most of the analysed sectors; less prepared areas are characterised by agricultural ecosystems. This reading approach based on land cover analyses can thus assist in developing policies to enhance different territorial capacities, ultimately leading to better and more sustainable decision-making.
C1 [Longo, Alessandra; Zardo, Linda; Maragno, Denis; Musco, Francesco] Univ Iuav Venezia, Dept Architecture & Arts, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
   [Burkhard, Benjamin] Leibniz Univ Hannover, Inst Phys Geog & Landscape Ecol, Schneiderberg 50, D-30167 Hannover, Germany.
C3 IUAV University Venice; Leibniz University Hannover
RP Longo, A (corresponding author), Univ Iuav Venezia, Dept Architecture & Arts, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
EM alongo@iuav.it; lzardo@iuav.it; dmaragno@iuav.it;
   francesco.musco@iuav.it; burkhard@phygeo.uni-hannover.de
RI Maragno, Denis/AHE-1762-2022; Burkhard, Benjamin/ABF-1090-2021
OI Burkhard, Benjamin/0000-0001-8636-9009; Maragno,
   Denis/0000-0002-9489-7538
FU Regione Autonoma Friuli Venezia Giulia; Friuli Venezia Giulia Autonomous
   Region
FX Alessandra Longo would like to acknowledge the funding given to this
   research by the Friuli Venezia Giulia Autonomous Region through a PhD
   project. The authors would also like to thank the regional staff
   involved in the revision of the planning tool for setting the groundwork
   for this piece of work.
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NR 80
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 3
U2 7
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JAN
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 2
AR 483
DI 10.3390/su16020483
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GF9C7
UT WOS:001151358500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Lin, SH
   Chen, SM
AF Lin, Shu-hui
   Chen, Shi-ming
GP DEStech Publicat Inc
TI The Localization of Actions for Climate Change Adaptation: A Case Study
   of Post-Morakot Reconstruction in Coastal Taiwan
SO 2016 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTATIONAL MODELING, SIMULATION AND
   APPLIED MATHEMATICS (CMSAM 2016)
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference on Computational Modeling, Simulation and
   Applied Mathematics (CMSAM)
CY JUL 24-25, 2016
CL Bangkok, THAILAND
DE Adaptation; Partnerships; Local knowledge; Climate change
AB This study examined the post-disaster adaptation since 2009 of a fishing harbor Linbian in southern Taiwan. This study found that locals have developed adaptation plans different from the expert planning after participating in the call for adaptation action plans, technology actant inventions, and decision-making with locally inherited wisdom to re-define action plans for climate change adaptation. Local adaptation actions responding to climate change not only require the involvement of local knowledge covering history, culture, and the environment, but also needs modern knowledge capital similar to community building and public affair participation experiences to stimulate each other, accomplish one another's goals, and empower mobilization, thus bringing locale-specific characteristics, and creating value for local actions.
C1 [Lin, Shu-hui] 212-1,Fengnian St, Pingtung, Taiwan.
   [Chen, Shi-ming] 1Univ Rd, Tainan 701, Taiwan.
RP Lin, SH (corresponding author), 212-1,Fengnian St, Pingtung, Taiwan.
RI Chen, Shiming/ISV-0270-2023
CR [Anonymous], 1990, The Sociological Review, DOI DOI 10.1111/J.1467-954X.1990.TB03350.X
   Collins HM, 2002, SOC STUD SCI, V32, P235, DOI 10.1177/0306312702032002003
   Corburn J., 2005, STREET SCI
   Geertz C., 1985, LOCAL KNOWLEDGE, V2nd
   LinShu-Hui, 2011, 2 INT C MULT TECHN I
   Weida Fang, 2006, CONSTRUCTION N UNPUB
   Zen YangHung, 2014, MAKING COMMUNITY WOR
NR 7
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 4
PU DESTECH PUBLICATIONS, INC
PI LANCASTER
PA 439 DUKE STREET, LANCASTER, PA 17602-4967 USA
BN 978-1-60595-385-4
PY 2016
BP 379
EP 385
PG 7
WC Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Engineering,
   Multidisciplinary; Mathematics, Applied
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Computer Science; Engineering; Mathematics
GA BG5UD
UT WOS:000389763200071
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Scyphers, SB
   Beck, M
   Furman, KL
   Haner, J
   Josephs, LI
   Lynskey, R
   Keeler, AG
   Landry, CE
   Powers, SP
   Webb, BM
   Grabowski, JH
AF Scyphers, Steven B.
   Beck, MichaelW.
   Furman, Kelsi L.
   Haner, Judy
   Josephs, Lauren I.
   Lynskey, Rebecca
   Keeler, Andrew G.
   Landry, Craig E.
   Powers, Sean P.
   Webb, Bret M.
   Grabowski, Jonathan H.
TI A Waterfront View of Coastal Hazards: Contextualizing Relationships
   among Geographic Exposure, Shoreline Type, and Hazard Concerns among
   Coastal Residents
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE coastal hazards; stakeholder decision-making; coastal management;
   hurricanes; climate adaptation
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; EROSION; MANAGEMENT
AB Coastal communities exist on the front lines of diverse natural hazards and the growing impacts of climate change. While traditional strategies for dealing with coastal hazards have often involved the hardening or armoring of shorelines, more recent research and practice have demonstrated the value and cost-effectiveness of "living shorelines" and other ecosystem-based strategies for coastal protection. To explore potential relationships among geographic exposure (waterfront vs. inland), shoreline condition (armored vs. natural), and hazard concerns, we surveyed 583 waterfront and inland residents in the northern Gulf of Mexico. We found that overall concern for coastal hazards was similar across waterfront and inland residents, as well as among residents with both armored and natural shorelines. However, concern for specific hazards differed across these groups. Waterfront residents were significantly more concerned about major hurricanes and erosion than inland residents. Conversely, inland residents were more concerned with drought and flooding than waterfront residents. Among waterfront residents, specific hazard concerns were similar between residents with natural and armored shorelines with two key exceptions. Residents with armored shorelines reported higher concern for erosion and sea level rise than residents with natural shorelines. Our results suggest that armored shorelines do not necessarily alleviate concerns about coastal hazards. In the context of balancing social and ecological objectives in addressing coastal hazards or adapting to climate change, understanding the perceptions and behaviors of coastal residents is essential for conserving and protecting coastal ecosystems along residential shorelines.
C1 [Scyphers, Steven B.; Furman, Kelsi L.; Josephs, Lauren I.; Lynskey, Rebecca; Grabowski, Jonathan H.] Northeastern Univ, Coastal Sustainabil Inst, Dept Marine & Environm Sci, Nahant, MA 01908 USA.
   [Beck, MichaelW.] Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Inst Marine Sci, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA.
   [Haner, Judy] Nature Conservancy, Alabama Coastal Program, Mobile, AL 36602 USA.
   [Josephs, Lauren I.] Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Fisheries Anim & Vet Sci, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
   [Keeler, Andrew G.] East Carolina Univ, Dept Coastal Studies, Wanchese, NC 27981 USA.
   [Landry, Craig E.] Univ Georgia, Dept Agr & Appl Econ, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
   [Powers, Sean P.] Univ S Alabama, Dept Marine Sci, Mobile, AL 36688 USA.
   [Webb, Bret M.] Univ S Alabama, Dept Civil Engn, Mobile, AL 36688 USA.
C3 Northeastern University; University of California System; University of
   California Santa Cruz; University of Rhode Island; University of North
   Carolina; East Carolina University; University System of Georgia;
   University of Georgia; University of South Alabama; University of South
   Alabama
RP Scyphers, SB (corresponding author), Northeastern Univ, Coastal Sustainabil Inst, Dept Marine & Environm Sci, Nahant, MA 01908 USA.
EM s.scyphers@northeastern.edu; mwbeck@ucsc.edu; furman.ke@husky.neu.edu;
   jhaner@tnc.org; lauren_josephs2@uri.edu; lynskey.r@husky.neu.edu;
   keelera@ecu.edu; clandry@uga.edu; spowers@disl.org;
   bwebb@southalabama.edu; j.grabowski@northeastern.edu
RI Webb, Bret/AAI-3634-2021
OI Powers, Sean/0000-0002-4770-9944; Grabowski,
   Jonathan/0000-0003-4711-5481
FU National Science Foundation's SEES Fellowship Program [OCE-1215825]
FX This work was funded by the National Science Foundation's SEES
   Fellowship Program (OCE-1215825).
CR [Anonymous], 2014, Internet, phone, mail, and mixed-mode surveys: The tailored design method, DOI DOI 10.1002/9781394260645
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NR 32
TC 17
Z9 18
U1 0
U2 25
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD DEC
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 23
AR 6687
DI 10.3390/su11236687
PG 11
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KD9MV
UT WOS:000508186400159
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Teutschbein, C
   Albrecht, F
   Blicharska, M
   Tootoonchi, F
   Stenfors, E
   Grabs, T
AF Teutschbein, Claudia
   Albrecht, Frederike
   Blicharska, Malgorzata
   Tootoonchi, Faranak
   Stenfors, Elin
   Grabs, Thomas
TI Drought hazards and stakeholder perception: Unraveling the interlinkages
   between drought severity, perceived impacts, preparedness, and
   management
SO AMBIO
LA English
DT Article
DE Drought; Stakeholder perception; Municipal drought planning; Drought
   preparedness; Drought risk management; Climate change adaptation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; FLOOD-RISK PERCEPTION; WATER; DESIGN; EUROPE;
   LEGITIMACY; INDICATORS; FREQUENCY; BARRIERS; TYPOLOGY
AB The future risk for droughts and water shortages calls for substantial efforts by authorities to adapt at local levels. Understanding their perception of drought hazards, risk and vulnerability can help to identify drivers of and barriers to drought risk planning and management in a changing climate at the local level. This paper presents a novel interdisciplinary drought case study in Sweden that integrates soft data from a nationwide survey among more than 100 local practitioners and hard data based on hydrological measurements to provide a holistic assessment of the links between drought severity and the perceived levels of drought severity, impacts, preparedness, and management for two consecutive drought events. The paper highlights challenges for drought risk planning and management in a changing climate at the local level and elaborates on how improved understanding of local practitioners to plan for climate change adaptation can be achieved.
C1 [Teutschbein, Claudia; Tootoonchi, Faranak; Stenfors, Elin; Grabs, Thomas] Uppsala Univ, Dept Earth Sci, Air Water & Landscape Sci, Villavagen 16, S-75236 Uppsala, Sweden.
   [Albrecht, Frederike] Swedish Def Univ, Dept Polit Sci & Law, Box 27805, S-11593 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Albrecht, Frederike] Ctr Nat Hazards & Disaster Sci CNDS, Villavagen 16, S-75236 Uppsala, Sweden.
   [Blicharska, Malgorzata] Uppsala Univ, Dept Earth Sci, Nat Resources & Sustainable Dev, Villavagen 16, S-75236 Uppsala, Sweden.
C3 Uppsala University; Centre of Natural Hazards & Disaster Science (CNDS);
   Uppsala University
RP Teutschbein, C (corresponding author), Uppsala Univ, Dept Earth Sci, Air Water & Landscape Sci, Villavagen 16, S-75236 Uppsala, Sweden.
EM claudia.teutschbein@geo.uu.se; frederike.albrecht@fhs.se;
   malgorzata.blicharska@geo.uu.se; faranak.tootoonchi@slu.se;
   elin.stenfors@geo.uu.se; thomas.grabs@geo.uu.se
RI Tootoonchi, Faranak/AFV-7850-2022; Grabs, Thomas/G-5563-2012;
   Teutschbein, Claudia/P-5504-2014
OI Grabs, Thomas/0000-0002-6537-0753; Teutschbein,
   Claudia/0000-0002-3344-2468
FU Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and
   Spatial Planning (FORMAS) [942-2015-1123]; Royal Swedish Academy of
   Sciences [LN2016-0101]
FX AcknowledgementsThis research was supported by grants from the Swedish
   Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial
   Planning (FORMAS, Contract Number: 942-2015-1123) and the Royal Swedish
   Academy of Sciences (no. LN2016-0101). We would also like to thank all
   respondents, who took the survey and helped us to map the drought
   perception across Sweden.
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NR 114
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 6
U2 35
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0044-7447
EI 1654-7209
J9 AMBIO
JI Ambio
PD JUL
PY 2023
VL 52
IS 7
SI SI
BP 1262
EP 1281
DI 10.1007/s13280-023-01849-w
EA APR 2023
PG 20
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA I3JF6
UT WOS:000962042600001
PM 37010693
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Muchaku, S
   Magaiza, G
   Hamandawana, H
AF Muchaku, Shadreck
   Magaiza, Grey
   Hamandawana, Hamisai
TI Translating Indigenous Knowledge into Actionable Climate-Change Adaption
   Strategies: A Case Study of Maluti-a-Phofung Local Municipality, Free
   State Province, South Africa
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaption; coping strategies; local communities
ID ISLAND; HEAT
AB Although the literature concerning vulnerabilities to climate change (CC) has been growing, research continues to be silent on approaches that can enhance the adaptive capacities of resource-poor communities that are vulnerable to the adverse effects of CC by translating indigenous knowledge (IK) into actionable adaptation strategies. This assertion is premised on the absence of concerted efforts to incorporate IK into science-based adaptation strategies. We attempt to address this gap by using a multidisciplinary investigative approach that taps into the perceptions of local people in the Maluti-a-Phofung Local Municipality in the Free state province of South Africa and what is available in the literature. This approach is helpful because it ensures that local people's perceptions, alongside other objectively informed insights, are systematically integrated into the co-designing of actionable climate-change adaption strategies. Given these and other considerations, we invite the scientific community and those interested in sustainability to complement our efforts by providing suggestions on the way forward.
C1 [Muchaku, Shadreck; Magaiza, Grey] Univ Free State, Ctr Gender & Africa Studies, ZA-9866 Phuthaditjhaba, South Africa.
   [Hamandawana, Hamisai] Univ Free State, ARU Risk & Vulnerabil Sci Ctr, ZA-9866 Phuthaditjhaba, South Africa.
C3 University of the Free State; University of the Free State
RP Muchaku, S (corresponding author), Univ Free State, Ctr Gender & Africa Studies, ZA-9866 Phuthaditjhaba, South Africa.
EM Muchaku.S@ufs.ac.za
RI Magaiza, Grey/LNQ-9454-2024; Muchaku, Shadreck/KDP-2757-2024;
   Hamandawana, Hamisai/AAV-5263-2021
OI Magaiza, Grey/0000-0003-4310-3010; Muchaku, Shadreck/0000-0003-1356-1969
FU South Africa's National Research Foundation through the University of
   Free State's Risk and Vulnerability Science Centre [118601]; Afromontane
   Research Unit, University of the Free State
FX This research was funded by South Africa's National Research Foundation
   through the University of Free State's Risk and Vulnerability Science
   Centre (RVSC; Grant No. 118601) award to the Afromontane Research Unit,
   University of the Free State.
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NR 36
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 2
U2 6
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JAN
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 2
AR 1558
DI 10.3390/su15021558
PG 11
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 8Q4AT
UT WOS:000927152200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Spiekermann, R
   Kienberger, S
   Norton, J
   Briones, F
   Weichselgartner, J
AF Spiekermann, Raphael
   Kienberger, Stefan
   Norton, John
   Briones, Fernando
   Weichselgartner, Juergen
TI The Disaster-Knowledge Matrix - Reframing and evaluating the knowledge
   challenges in disaster risk reduction
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Knowledge; Science communication; Science-policy nexus; Disaster risk
   reduction; Climate change adaptation
ID VULNERABILITY
AB Within the context of disaster risk reduction, including climate change adaptation, significant thematic discourse has been dedicated to the difficulty of implementing research-based knowledge in policy and practise. Not only has the discussion focused on the causes of this issue, but many recommendations for enhancing the use of information and knowledge have also been made. The authors first frame the knowledge challenges and, second, introduce a systematic means to identify the factors hindering the use of information and knowledge. The approach proposed allows determining core barriers in the co-production, exchange, and use of knowledge. Subsequently, we illustrate where further advancement is needed in the field of knowledge development, means of transmission and use for disaster risk reduction. We suggest a method that analyses cases considering the success or failure of information flows from and to different stakeholder groups. The aim is to identify causes for knowledge fragmentation at different phases in the disaster management continuum, and, subsequently, to strengthen both individual and institutional learning, as well as to determine social and Functional changes required to address pressing issues of disaster risk reduction, including climate change adaptation, in a competent manner. (c) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Spiekermann, Raphael; Kienberger, Stefan] Salzburg Univ, Dept Geoinformat Z GIS, A-5020 Salzburg, Austria.
   [Norton, John] DWF, Lauzerte, France.
   [Briones, Fernando] CIESAS, Mexico City, DF, Mexico.
   [Weichselgartner, Juergen] Politecn Milan, Dept Architecture & Urban Studies, Milan, Italy.
   [Weichselgartner, Juergen] Univ Munich, Dept Geog, D-81377 Munich, Germany.
C3 Salzburg University; CIESAS - Centro de Investigacion y Estudios
   Superiores en Antropologia Social; Polytechnic University of Milan;
   University of Munich
RP Spiekermann, R (corresponding author), Salzburg Univ, Dept Geoinformat Z GIS, A-5020 Salzburg, Austria.
EM spiekermann.raphael@gmail.com
RI Spiekermann, Raphael/AAC-4464-2019; Briones, Fernando/C-2500-2018
OI Spiekermann, Raphael/0000-0002-4772-9750; Kienberger,
   Stefan/0000-0002-4800-4516; Briones, Fernando/0000-0001-9186-2455
FU European Union [603807]
FX We would especially like to thank the local interview partners for their
   input. The research leading to these results has received funding from
   the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2013-2015) under
   Grant Agreement no. 603807 (KNOW-4-DRR, http://www.know4drr.polimi.it/).
   We are grateful to Dominic Spiekermann for valuable discussions on the
   philosophical aspects of knowledge presented in Section 2. We also thank
   Hans Wiesenegger and Bernhard Niedermoser for the details they provided
   on the Salzburg Flood 2013.
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NR 52
TC 75
Z9 84
U1 1
U2 22
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD SEP
PY 2015
VL 13
BP 96
EP 108
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2015.05.002
PG 13
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA DC0SM
UT WOS:000368928000010
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Abella, GPL
   Lansigan, F
   Tubay, J
AF Abella, Gella Patria L.
   Lansigan, Felino
   Tubay, Jerrold
TI Agricultural Land Use Allocation under Current and Projected Scenarios
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Land suitability; Land use allocation;
   Systems approach
AB A model-based systems approach in optimizing agricultural land use spatial allocation integrating climate change adaptation was developed in this study. A land use planning and analysis system framework was modified and adopted under current conditions and anticipated scenarios for 2035. Climatic scenarios were reflected in land suitability ratings by conducting a land evaluation. All agricultural inputs and outputs were estimated and analyzed by multiple goal linear programming using Gurobi software. The results demonstrated that under current conditions, the city can meet its crop production, increase total farmers' net income, maximize agricultural labor, and provide a suitable residential area by optimally allocating grids to suitable uses. Under the 2035 scenario, the city can still achieve its development goals despite the change in land suitability and increase in population.
C1 [Abella, Gella Patria L.] Cent Luzon State Univ, Sci City Of Munoz 3120, Nueva Ecija, Philippines.
   [Lansigan, Felino; Tubay, Jerrold] Univ Philippines Los Banos, Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
C3 Central Luzon State University; University of the Philippines System;
   University of the Philippines Los Banos
RP Abella, GPL (corresponding author), Cent Luzon State Univ, Sci City Of Munoz 3120, Nueva Ecija, Philippines.
EM gplabella@clsu.edu.ph
RI Tubay, Jerrold/G-4039-2017
OI Tubay, Jerrold/0000-0003-4826-1966; Abella, Gella
   Patria/0000-0003-0917-4755
FU Commission on Higher Education; Faculty Development Program Phase II
   [2012-080006]
FX The authors would like to express their humble gratitude to: (1) the
   Commission on Higher Education for the research grant, Faculty
   Development Program Phase II 2012-080006, awarded to the corresponding
   author; (2) employees of the city government of San Jose for providing
   the necessary information and documents; and (3) farmer respondents for
   allowing their farms to be part of the study.
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NR 24
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 6
PU UNIV INDONESIA, FAC ENGINEERING
PI DEPOK
PA KAMPUS UI DEPOK, DEPOK, 16424, INDONESIA
SN 2086-9614
EI 2087-2100
J9 INT J TECHNOL
JI Int. J. Technol.
PD DEC 9
PY 2021
VL 12
IS 5
BP 975
EP 988
DI 10.14716/ijtech.v12i5.5179
PG 14
WC Engineering, Multidisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Engineering
GA YJ0GP
UT WOS:000744217900009
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Courtoy, M
AF Courtoy, Marie
TI "To Leave Is to Die": States' Use of Mobility in Anticipation of Land
   Uninhabitability
SO GERMAN LAW JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Mobility; migration; resettlement; climate change; natural disasters;
   uninhabitability; grounded theory; ethnography; France; Guadeloupe;
   Senegal
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ENVIRONMENTAL REFUGEES; ANTHROPOLOGY; ADAPTATION;
   MIGRATION; DISPLACEMENT; DISCOURSES; CONTEXT
AB Climate change is profoundly modifying the earth's environment, making certain territories uninhabitable. Faced with this known phenomenon, this article outlines a research approach for assessing the law's role in encouraging states to preemptively protect individuals who live in deteriorating territories, notably by enabling mobility. The question is, however, far from simple, insofar as most of the ways to adapt to climate change-and particularly mobility, which has important human and social implications-require profound societal choices that anthropology has the tools to study. I therefore accompany my legal research with an anthropological approach centered around ethnography conducted at three sites-France, Guadeloupe, Senegal-where state-sponsored mobility is either being considered or already being used as an option to confront the progressive disappearance of land that is being swept away by the sea.
C1 [Courtoy, Marie] Univ catholique Louvain UCLouvain, Ottignies Louvain La Neuv, Belgium.
   [Courtoy, Marie] Katholieke Univ Leuven KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
C3 KU Leuven
RP Courtoy, M (corresponding author), Univ catholique Louvain UCLouvain, Ottignies Louvain La Neuv, Belgium.; Courtoy, M (corresponding author), Katholieke Univ Leuven KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
EM marie.courtoy@uclouvain.be
OI Courtoy, Marie/0000-0003-1075-3260
FU Belgian Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS)
FX Marie Courtoy holds a double Bachelor's degree in Sociology and
   Anthropology and in Law (Universite Saint-Louis-Bruxelles, Belgium) as
   well as a Master's degree in Law (UCLouvain, Belgium). She is currently
   enrolled in a PhD programat UCLouvain and KU Leuven, in partnership with
   the Law & Anthropology Department of the Max Planck Institute for Social
   Anthropology. Her doctoral research focuses on climate mobilities in the
   broader context of environmental justice. The author's PhD studies, of
   which this article is a product, are funded by a grant from the Belgian
   Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS).
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TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 1
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
EI 2071-8322
J9 GERMAN LAW J
JI German Law J.
PD SEP
PY 2022
VL 23
IS 7
SI SI
BP 992
EP 1011
AR PII S2071832222000694
DI 10.1017/glj.2022.69
PG 20
WC Law
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Government & Law
GA 6N0RQ
UT WOS:000889269000006
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chan, N
AF Chan, Nicholas
TI "Special Circumstances" and the Politics of Climate Vulnerability:
   African Agency in the UN Climate Change Negotiations
SO AFRICA SPECTRUM
LA English
DT Article
DE Africa; climate change; negotiations; climate vulnerability; United
   Nations; African agency; African Group
ID STRATEGIES; POWERS
AB African countries are well recognised as being among the worst affected by the impacts of climate change. However, efforts to secure recognition of these "special circumstances" of African countries within the UN climate negotiations have been unsuccessful, despite this being a continental priority prior to and following adoption of the Paris Agreement. Such status is linked to global priorities for funding adaptation to climate change. This article explores why some other groups of developing countries have been successful in securing such recognition when African countries have not. It provides a historical institutionalist explanation of the path-dependent politics of such institutional recognition, emphasising the timing of when different groups have advanced vulnerability claims, which shapes the opposition that African countries have encountered in their efforts, as relative late-movers, to exercise agency. It highlights contestation surrounding what "vulnerability" to climate impacts means, and how this contestation has divided Global South solidarity.
C1 [Chan, Nicholas] Monash Univ Malaysia, Sch Arts & Social Sci, Bandar Sunway, Malaysia.
C3 Monash University; Monash University Malaysia
RP Chan, N (corresponding author), Monash Univ, Sch Arts & Social Sci, Malaysia Campus,Jalan Lagoon Selatan, Bandar Sunway 46150, Malaysia.
EM nickchan@hotmail.com
RI Chan, Nicholas/JXN-8635-2024
OI Chan, Nicholas/0000-0002-7386-6724
FU School of Arts and Social Sciences, Monash University, Malaysia
FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for
   the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: A version
   of this article was presented at the International Studies Association
   International Conference in Accra, Ghana, in August 2019. Participation
   at this conference was funded by the School of Arts and Social Sciences,
   Monash University, Malaysia.
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NR 54
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 6
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0002-0397
EI 1868-6869
J9 AFR SPECTR
JI Afr. Spectr.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 56
IS 3
SI SI
BP 314
EP 332
DI 10.1177/0002039721991151
PG 19
WC Area Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies
GA WX0TJ
UT WOS:000718317300005
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Huang, KX
   Wang, JX
   Huang, JK
   Findlay, C
AF Huang, Kaixing
   Wang, Jinxia
   Huang, Jikun
   Findlay, Christopher
TI The potential benefits of agricultural adaptation to warming in China in
   the long run
SO ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; adaptation capacity; agriculture and China
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE EVIDENCE; RANDOM FLUCTUATIONS; ECONOMIC-IMPACTS; US
   AGRICULTURE; WEATHER; VULNERABILITY; IRRIGATION; MANAGEMENT; OUTPUT
AB Understanding the extent to which agriculture can adapt to climate change and the determinants of farmers' adaptive capacity are of paramount importance from a policy perspective. Based on household survey data from a large sample in rural China, the present article adopts a panel approach to estimate the potential benefits of long-run adaptation and to identify the determinants of farmers' adaptive capacity. The empirical results suggest that, for various model settings and climate change scenarios, long-run adaptations should mitigate one-third to one-half of the damages of warming on crop profits by the end of this century. These findings support the basic argument of the hedonic approach that omitting long-run adaptations will dramatically overestimate the potential damage of climate change. The paper also finds that household-level capital intensity and farmland size have significant effects on farmers' adaptive capacities.
C1 [Huang, Kaixing] Nankai Univ, Sch Econ, Tianjin, Peoples R China.
   [Huang, Kaixing] Univ Adelaide, Sch Econ, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
   [Wang, Jinxia; Huang, Jikun] Peking Univ, China Ctr Agr Policy, Sch Adv Agr Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Findlay, Christopher] Univ Adelaide, Fac Profess, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
C3 Nankai University; University of Adelaide; Peking University; University
   of Adelaide
RP Huang, JK (corresponding author), Peking Univ, China Ctr Agr Policy, Sch Adv Agr Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM jkhuang.ccap@pku.edu.cn
RI huang, kaixing/HZH-8458-2023
FU National Natural Sciences Foundation in China [71333013, 71161140351];
   Ministry of Science and Technology in China [2012CB955700]; Australian
   Centre for International Agricultural Research [ADP/2011/039];
   Collaborative Innovation Center for China Economy [CICCE/2017/09]
FX The authors wish to thank the Ministry of Science and Technology in
   China (2012CB955700), National Natural Sciences Foundation in China
   (71161140351 and 71333013), Australian Centre for International
   Agricultural Research (ADP/2011/039), and the Collaborative Innovation
   Center for China Economy (CICCE/2017/09) for funding. We are grateful
   for the helpful comments by the editors and two anonymous referees that
   have helped to significantly improve this paper.
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NR 34
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 7
U2 61
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI NEW YORK
PA 32 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, NY 10013-2473 USA
SN 1355-770X
EI 1469-4395
J9 ENVIRON DEV ECON
JI Environ. Dev. Econ.
PD APR
PY 2018
VL 23
IS 2
BP 139
EP 160
DI 10.1017/S1355770X17000390
PG 22
WC Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FY5NP
UT WOS:000426876000002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Rodriguez, M
   Delpla, I
AF Rodriguez, Manuel
   Delpla, Ianis
BE Brebbia, CA
   Sendra, JJ
TI CLIMATE CHANGES AND DRINKING WATER IN SUSTAINABLE CITIES: IMPACTS AND
   ADAPTATION
SO SUSTAINABLE CITY XII
SE WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 12th International Conference on Urban Regeneration and Sustainability
   (Sustainable City)
CY 2017
CL Seville, SPAIN
SP Wessex Inst, Univ Seville, Int Journal Sustainable Dev & Planning, WIT Transact Ecol & Environm
DE drinking water; cities; climate change; impacts; adaptation
ID DISINFECTION BY-PRODUCTS; QUALITY; VARIABILITY; FUTURE; PRECIPITATION;
   SCENARIOS; EVENTS
AB Planning and management of sustainable cities must consider the impacts of climate changes on urban water resources. There is a growing concern about how climate changes affect the quality of drinking water from the catchment to the citizen's tap. Changes in precipitation and temperature patterns can have effects on quality of water sources and on the capacity of water treatment and distribution infrastructure to respond with such changes. We present herein a research program that investigates the potential impacts of climate change scenarios on source and drinking water quality. The research methodology is based on a modelling framework that exploit datasets from Canadian cities concerning land use, source and tap water quality, water infrastructure and operations, and estimations on future changes on water temperature and local rainfall. The paper concludes with the initiatives that municipalities must conduct in order to implement sustainable strategies for adapting to climate changes regarding drinking water resources.
C1 [Rodriguez, Manuel; Delpla, Ianis] Univ Laval, CRAD, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
C3 Laval University
RP Rodriguez, M (corresponding author), Univ Laval, CRAD, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
RI Rodriguez, Manuel/P-3713-2015
OI Rodriguez, Manuel J/0000-0003-2010-6438
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NR 23
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 19
PU WIT PRESS
PI SOUTHAMPTON
PA ASHURST LODGE, SOUTHAMPTON SO40 7AA, ASHURST, ENGLAND
SN 1743-3541
BN 978-1-78466-218-9; 978-1-78466-217-2
J9 WIT TRANS ECOL ENVIR
JI WIT Trans. Ecol. Environ.
PY 2017
VL 223
BP 573
EP 582
DI 10.2495/SC170501
PG 10
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Ecology; Environmental
   Sciences; Urban Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Urban Studies
GA BL5HK
UT WOS:000451538100050
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sujakhu, NM
   Ranjitkar, S
   Niraula, RR
   Pokharel, BK
   Schmidt-Vogt, D
   Xu, JC
AF Sujakhu, Nani Maiya
   Ranjitkar, Sailesh
   Niraula, Rabin Raj
   Pokharel, Bharat K.
   Schmidt-Vogt, Dietrich
   Xu, Jianchu
TI Farmers' Perceptions of and Adaptations to Changing Climate in the
   Melamchi Valley of Nepal
SO MOUNTAIN RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; CRiSTAL; adaptation strategies; Melamchi Valley; Nepal
ID WATER; RESPONSES; IMPACT
AB Knowledge of farmers' perceptions of and adaptations to climate change is important to inform policies addressing the risk of climate change to farmers. This case study explored those issues in the Melamchi Valley of Nepal through a survey of 365 households and focus group discussions in 6 communities using a Community-Based Risk Screening Tool-Adaptation and Livelihoods (CRiSTAL). Analysis of climate trends in the study area for 1979-2009 showed that mean annual temperatures rose by 1.02 degrees C and the frequency of drought increased measurably after 2003. Farmers reported increases in crop pests, hailstorms, landslides, floods, thunderstorms, and erratic precipitation as climate-related hazards affecting agriculture. They responded in a variety of ways including changing farming practices, selling livestock, milk, and eggs, and engaging in daily wage labor and seasonal labor migration. With more efficient support and planning, some of these measures could be adjusted to better meet current and future risks from climate change.
C1 [Sujakhu, Nani Maiya; Ranjitkar, Sailesh; Schmidt-Vogt, Dietrich; Xu, Jianchu] Chinese Acad Sci, Kunming Inst Bot, Ctr Mt Ecosyst Studies, Lanhei Rd 132, Kunming 650201, Yunnan, Peoples R China.
   [Sujakhu, Nani Maiya] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.
   [Ranjitkar, Sailesh; Schmidt-Vogt, Dietrich; Xu, Jianchu] East & Cent Asia, World Agroforestry Ctr, Kunming 650201, Peoples R China.
   [Niraula, Rabin Raj; Pokharel, Bharat K.] HELVETAS Swiss Intercooperat Jhamsikhel Dhobi Gha, GPO Box 688, Kathmandu, Nepal.
   [Schmidt-Vogt, Dietrich] Univ Cent Asia, Mt Soc Res Inst, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Kunming Institute of Botany, CAS; Chinese
   Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS;
   University of Central Asia
RP Schmidt-Vogt, D; Xu, JC (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Kunming Inst Bot, Ctr Mt Ecosyst Studies, Lanhei Rd 132, Kunming 650201, Yunnan, Peoples R China.; Schmidt-Vogt, D; Xu, JC (corresponding author), East & Cent Asia, World Agroforestry Ctr, Kunming 650201, Peoples R China.; Schmidt-Vogt, D (corresponding author), Univ Cent Asia, Mt Soc Res Inst, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
EM dietrich.schmidt-vogt@ucentralasia.org; jxu@mail.kib.ac.cn
RI Xu, Jianchu/Y-2890-2019; Ranjitkar, Sailesh/I-9307-2014
OI Ranjitkar, Sailesh/0000-0002-4741-3975; Niraula, Rabin
   Raj/0000-0003-0318-897X
FU Building Effective Water Governance in the Asian Highlands Project
   [107085-002]; CGIAR research programs on "Climate change adaptation and
   mitigation" [CRP6.4]
FX Fieldwork and data collection were supported by funds from the "Building
   Effective Water Governance in the Asian Highlands Project (107085-002)"
   and the CGIAR research programs on "Climate change adaptation and
   mitigation" (CRP6.4). The NMS would like to thank Sander Van de Moortel
   for English editing and to acknowledge help from Andrea Barrueto in
   conducting the CRiSTAL exercise. Thanks also go to Sweta Bhattarai,
   Smriti Pokhrel, Anusha Malla, Sudip Ranjit, and Suresh Sujakhu for
   assisting with the household survey.
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NR 50
TC 50
Z9 51
U1 1
U2 59
PU INT MOUNTAIN SOC
PI BERN
PA University of Bern, Mittelstrasse 43, BERN, SWITZERLAND
SN 0276-4741
EI 1994-7151
J9 MT RES DEV
JI Mt. Res. Dev.
PD FEB
PY 2016
VL 36
IS 1
BP 15
EP 30
DI 10.1659/MRD-JOURNAL-D-15-00032.1
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Geography, Physical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography
GA DO3UL
UT WOS:000377707300003
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Minhas, PS
   Dagar, JC
AF Minhas, P. S.
   Dagar, J. C.
BE Dagar, JC
   Minhas, PS
TI Synthesis and Way Forward: Agroforestry for Waterlogged Saline Soils and
   Poor-quality Waters
SO AGROFORESTRY FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF WATERLOGGED SALINE SOILS AND
   POOR-QUALITY WATERS
SE Advances in Agroforestry
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
AB The development of salt-affected soils has been considered to be an adjunct of irrigated agriculture since time immemorial. The social, economic, and environmental costs being high for the on-and off-farm reclamation techniques, agroforestry is now emerging as a potential tool not only for arresting salinity but also for other environmental services like adaptation to climate change, sequestration of carbon, and restoration of biodiversity. Recent research and developmental efforts, though experimentally in small plots or under microsite conditions in catchments, have demonstrated that trees can be successfully established through appropriate site preparation, careful species selection, post-planting care especially during the earlier and other critical stages of development. The multienterprise models involving the integration of agroforestry with other enterprises like fisheries/dairying should improve productivity vis-a-vis income generation. Special commitment would be required by governments on the insurance, legal, and institutional arrangements and also the collaboration between ecologists and land managers for the large-scale promotion of agroforestry on salt-degraded lands.
C1 [Minhas, P. S.] Natl Inst Abiot Stress Management, Pune 413115, Maharashtra, India.
   [Dagar, J. C.] Cent Soil Salin Res Inst, Karnal 132001, Haryana, India.
C3 Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR); ICAR - National
   Institute of Abiotic Stress Management; Indian Council of Agricultural
   Research (ICAR); ICAR - Central Soil Salinity Research Institute
RP Minhas, PS (corresponding author), Natl Inst Abiot Stress Management, Pune 413115, Maharashtra, India.
EM minhas_54@yahoo.co.in; dagarjc@gmail.com
RI Minhas, P.S./F-6061-2012; Dagar, Jagdish/AAZ-4824-2021
NR 0
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1875-1199
BN 978-81-322-2659-8; 978-81-322-2657-4
J9 ADV AGROFOR
PY 2016
VL 13
BP 197
EP 201
DI 10.1007/978-81-322-2659-8_12
D2 10.1007/978-81-322-2659-8
PG 5
WC Agronomy; Soil Science
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture
GA BE3XM
UT WOS:000371341900014
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU West, JM
   Julius, SH
   Weaver, CP
AF West, J. M.
   Julius, S. H.
   Weaver, C. P.
TI Assessing confidence in management adaptation approaches for
   climate-sensitive ecosystems
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation; ecosystems; resilience; management;
   uncertainty; confidence
ID UNCERTAINTIES; WATER; BIODIVERSITY; FRAMEWORK; FACE
AB A number of options are available for adapting ecosystem management to improve resilience in the face of climatic changes. However, uncertainty exists as to the effectiveness of these options. A report prepared for the US Climate Change Science Program reviewed adaptation options for a range of federally managed systems in the United States. The report included a qualitative uncertainty analysis of conceptual approaches to adaptation derived from the review. The approaches included reducing anthropogenic stressors, protecting key ecosystem features, maintaining representation, replicating, restoring, identifying refugia and relocating organisms. The results showed that the expert teams had the greatest scientific confidence in adaptation options that reduce anthropogenic stresses. Confidence in other approaches was lower because of gaps in understanding of ecosystem function, climate change impacts on ecosystems, and management effectiveness. This letter discusses insights gained from the confidence exercise and proposes strategies for improving future assessments of confidence for management adaptations to climate change.
C1 [West, J. M.; Julius, S. H.; Weaver, C. P.] US EPA, Global Change Res Program, Natl Ctr Environm Assessment, Off Res & Dev, Washington, DC 20460 USA.
C3 United States Environmental Protection Agency
RP West, JM (corresponding author), US EPA, Global Change Res Program, Natl Ctr Environm Assessment, Off Res & Dev, 1200 Penn Ave NW,8601P, Washington, DC 20460 USA.
EM west.jordan@epa.gov
RI Weaver, Christopher/G-3714-2010
OI Weaver, Christopher/0000-0003-4016-5451
FU National Center for Environmental Assessment (NCEA)
FX The views expressed in this letter are those of the authors and do not
   necessarily reflect the views or policies of the US Environmental
   Protection Agency. The authors wish to thank all of the author teams
   from CCSP SAP 4.4 for lending their expertise to the uncertainty
   exercise therein. The authors also wish to thank their colleagues in the
   National Center for Environmental Assessment (NCEA) for invaluable
   discussions and support.
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NR 25
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 27
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD JAN-MAR
PY 2012
VL 7
IS 1
AR 014016
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/7/1/014016
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 922XA
UT WOS:000302580600027
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Mocarquer, S
   Rudnick, H
AF Mocarquer, Sebastian
   Rudnick, Hugh
GP IEEE
TI Achieving a low carbon economy in a fast developing country
SO 2011 IEEE POWER AND ENERGY SOCIETY GENERAL MEETING
SE IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting PESGM
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT General Meeting of the IEEE-Power-and-Energy-Society (PES)
CY JUL 24-28, 2011
CL Detroit, MI
SP IEEE Power & Energy Soc (PES), IEEE
DE energy policy; low carbon economy; renewable energy; electricity
   regulation
ID BALANCE
AB Most fast developing countries have set targets to achieve a developed status in the near future. Nonetheless, emerging economies from developing countries must struggle to balance the need for energy but coping with environmental sustainability principles, both local and globally. Chile has set a voluntary target of capping CO2 emissions by 20 % by the year 2020, with 2007 as reference. Heated discussion has risen in how to comply with such a goal and how should energy policy drive the needed actions.
   Mitigation of the effects of climate change has been mainly in the center of the discussion everywhere, however adaptation to climate change effects is probably the key element if the premise that the earth's temperature will continue to increase before mankind can effectively change current GHG trends.
   Challenges faced for developing countries to achieve a low carbon economy are reviewed taking as an example the case of Chile.
EM smocarquer@systep.cl; hrudnick@ing.puc.cl
RI Rudnick, Hugh/F-8281-2013
CR BARROSO LA, 2006, IEEE POWER ENERG JUL, V4
   Mocarquer S., 2010, P IEEE PES GEN M 201
   Mocarquer S, 2009, IEEE POWER ENERGY M, V7, P26, DOI 10.1109/MPE.2009.933417
   Rudnick H., P IEEE PES GEN M 200
   Rudnick H, 2008, IEEE POWER ENERGY M, V6, P22, DOI 10.1109/MPE.2008.924813
NR 5
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 6
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
SN 1944-9925
BN 978-1-4577-1001-8
J9 IEEE POW ENER SOC GE
PY 2011
PG 6
WC Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Electrical & Electronic
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA BXX66
UT WOS:000297469605060
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gujja, B
   Dalai, S
   Shaik, H
   Goud, V
AF Gujja, Biksham
   Dalai, Sraban
   Shaik, Hajara
   Goud, Vinod
TI Adapting to climate change in the Godavari River basin of India by
   restoring traditional water storage systems
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; groundwater; restoration; tanks; water productivity
AB Food, climate and water crises are interrelated and interdependent. Climate change is projected to significantly alter rainfall patterns, with implications for the annual runoff for the Godavari River basin of the Indian subcontinent. Agriculture, especially rain-fed agriculture, will be particularly affected, due to changes such as periodicity and intensity of rainfall. This paper describes field interventions in 2005-2007 designed to restore traditional water management systems (in the form of water tanks; that is, wetlands embedded in a semi-arid region), with the aim of mitigating the effects of increased climate variability and the frequency of weather extremes. Our findings suggest that traditional water management methods can be both socially and economically effective in coping with variability in precipitation patterns, decentralizing management institutions, improving crop productivity and increasing groundwater recharge. This approach is preferable to large projects for increasing water storage capacity or expanding areas under irrigation, which are expensive, and can displace people and degrade ecosystems.
C1 [Dalai, Sraban; Goud, Vinod] Int Crops Res Inst Semi Arid Trop, WWF Int Project, Patancheru, Andhra Pradesh, India.
   [Gujja, Biksham] WWF Int, Global Freshwater Programme, CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland.
C3 CGIAR; International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid-Tropics
   (ICRISAT); World Wildlife Fund
RP Goud, V (corresponding author), Int Crops Res Inst Semi Arid Trop, WWF Int Project, Patancheru, Andhra Pradesh, India.
EM v.goud@cgiar.org
OI Pandey, Alok Kumar/0000-0001-5604-3243
CR Bates B.C., 2008, LINKING CLIMATE CHAN
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NR 25
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 19
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2009
VL 1
IS 3
SI SI
BP 229
EP 240
DI 10.3763/cdev.2009.0020
PG 12
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA V17CO
UT WOS:000207915500005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Iñiguez-Gallardo, V
   Córdova, JL
   Ordoñez-León, A
   Reyes-Bueno, F
AF Iniguez-Gallardo, Veronica
   Lojan Cordova, Julia
   Ordonez-Leon, Andrea
   Reyes-Bueno, Fabian
TI Food Markets and Free Fairs as Contributors for Designing Climate
   Resilient Cities: A Study Case in Southern Ecuador
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE study case; climate change adaptation; food sovereignty; urban planning;
   resilient cities; Ecuador
ID SECURITY; AGRICULTURE; IMPACTS
AB Climate change will have far-reaching impacts on food systems, which require strengthening social, economic, and political structures that allow farmers to offer their produce and consumers to have access to the food they eat. This research focuses on food access and stability. Specifically, through the analysis of a system of urban markets and free fairs, the (a) public satisfaction with these spaces, (b) the distribution and access to the same spaces, and (c) potential scenarios envisaging a food system that contributes to the designing of a climate resilient city are evaluated. The results indicate a high public satisfaction with markets and free fairs, while providing evidence on the importance of designing cities that include a network of markets and free fairs in urban planning for climate adaptation and resilience, shifting the paradigm from centralised urban systems towards an urbanism of services' proximity within walking distances.
C1 [Iniguez-Gallardo, Veronica; Lojan Cordova, Julia; Reyes-Bueno, Fabian] Univ Tecn Particular Loja, Dept Ciencias Biol & Agr, Loja 110160, Ecuador.
   [Ordonez-Leon, Andrea] Univ Int Ecuador, Escuela Arquitectura, Grp Invest Dinam Urbanas Ciudad Intermedia, Loja 110107, Ecuador.
C3 Universidad Tecnica Particular de Loja
RP Iñiguez-Gallardo, V (corresponding author), Univ Tecn Particular Loja, Dept Ciencias Biol & Agr, Loja 110160, Ecuador.
EM mviniguezl@utpl.edu.ec; jilojan@utpl.edu.ec; anordonezle@uide.edu.ec;
   frreyes@utpl.edu.ec
RI ; Iniguez-Gallardo, Veronica/ADU-9823-2022
OI Ordonez Leon, Andrea/0000-0001-6204-2052; Reyes-Bueno,
   Fabian/0000-0002-5646-0263; Iniguez-Gallardo,
   Veronica/0000-0002-9590-1738; Lojan Cordova, Julia
   Isabel/0000-0003-0832-2621
FU Universidad Tecnica Particular de Loja funds
FX Universidad Tecnica Particular de Loja funds the publication of this
   manuscript.
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NR 50
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 16
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 12
AR 7214
DI 10.3390/su14127214
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 2L2HE
UT WOS:000816840100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lund, AJ
   Lopez-Carr, D
   Sokolow, SH
   Rohr, JR
   De Leo, GA
AF Lund, Andrea J.
   Lopez-Carr, David
   Sokolow, Susanne H.
   Rohr, Jason R.
   De Leo, Giulio A.
TI Agricultural Innovations to Reduce the Health Impacts of Dams
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE dams; agriculture; livelihoods; health; schistosomiasis; restoration;
   sustainable development; climate adaptation
AB Dams enable the production of food and renewable energy, making them a crucial tool for both economic development and climate change adaptation in low- and middle-income countries. However, dams may also disrupt traditional livelihood systems and increase the transmission of vector- and water-borne pathogens. These livelihood and health impacts diminish the benefits of dams to rural populations dependent on rivers, as hydrological and ecological alterations change flood regimes, reduce nutrient transport and lead to the loss of biodiversity. We propose four agricultural innovations for promoting equity, health, sustainable development, and climate resilience in dammed watersheds: (1) restoring migratory aquatic species, (2) removing submerged vegetation and transforming it into an agricultural resource, (3) restoring environmental flows and (4) integrating agriculture and aquaculture. As investment in dams accelerates in low- and middle-income countries, appropriately addressing their livelihood and health impacts can improve the sustainability of modern agriculture and economic development in a changing climate.
C1 [Lund, Andrea J.] Stanford Univ, Emmett Interdisciplinary Program Environm & Resou, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   [Lopez-Carr, David] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Geog, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA.
   [Sokolow, Susanne H.] Stanford Univ, Woods Inst Environm, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   [Sokolow, Susanne H.] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Marine Sci Inst, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA.
   [Rohr, Jason R.] Univ Notre Dame, Dept Biol Sci, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.
   [De Leo, Giulio A.] Stanford Univ, Hopkins Marine Stn, Pacific Grove, CA 93950 USA.
C3 Stanford University; University of California System; University of
   California Santa Barbara; Stanford University; University of California
   System; University of California Santa Barbara; University of Notre
   Dame; Stanford University
RP Lund, AJ (corresponding author), Stanford Univ, Emmett Interdisciplinary Program Environm & Resou, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
EM andrea.janelle.lund@gmail.com; davidlopezcarr@ucsb.edu;
   shsokolow@gmail.com; jrohr2@nd.edu; deleo@stanford.edu
RI De Leo, Giulio/AAC-5098-2019
OI De Leo, Giulio/0000-0002-4186-3369; Sokolow,
   Susanne/0000-0002-5111-9322; Lund, Andrea/0000-0003-0880-310X; Rohr,
   Jason/0000-0001-8285-4912
FU James and Nancy Kelso Fellowship through the Stanford Interdisciplinary
   Graduate Fellowship program; National Science Foundation [DEB-2017785,
   IOS-1754868, BCS-1414102, ICER-202438, DEB-2011179]; Bill & Melinda
   Gates Foundation [OPP1114050]; National Institutes of Health
   [R01TW010286-01]; Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute
FX A.J.L. was supported by a James and Nancy Kelso Fellowship through the
   Stanford Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellowship program. D.L.-C. was
   partially supported by the National Science Foundation (BCS-1414102).
   G.A.D.L. and S.H.S. were partially supported by grants from the National
   Science Foundation (ICER-202438 and DEB-2011179) as well as a grant from
   the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (#OPP1114050). J.R.R. was supported
   by grants from the National Institutes of Health (R01TW010286-01), the
   National Science Foundation (DEB-2017785, IOS-1754868) and the Indiana
   Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute.
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NR 71
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 7
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD FEB
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 4
AR 1869
DI 10.3390/su13041869
PG 8
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA QQ8KO
UT WOS:000624768700001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Esteve, P
   Varela-Ortega, C
   Downing, TE
AF Esteve, Paloma
   Varela-Ortega, Consuelo
   Downing, Thomas E.
TI A stakeholder-based assessment of barriers to climate change adaptation
   in a water-scarce basin in Spain
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Barriers; Climate change; Irrigation; Social network
   mapping; Water management
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; GOVERNANCE; INSIGHTS; FRAMEWORK
AB In the last decade, increasing evidence of climate change fostered the development of multiple initiatives for adaptation. However, there are few examples in which adaptation has been successfully implemented, evidencing the need for improving understanding about the socio-institutional context of adaptation processes and the underlying causes of barriers to adaptation. In this research, we developed a stakeholder-based assessment of barriers to the adoption of climate adaptation options for irrigation in the Guadiana basin, one of Spain's most climate-vulnerable basins. Based on social network mapping, we elicited potential barriers to adaptation in the water sector. Using stakeholder questionnaires, we assessed the impact of the identified barriers on the implementation of selected adaptation measures. Results highlight the low acceptance of planned adaptation by stakeholders, and the lack of awareness and of a common understanding among the different actors as preeminent barriers to adaptation, potentially caused by insufficient interactions between water users, the scientific community and environmental groups. The role of the government as a catalyst of those interactions can be crucial for overcoming those barriers. Acknowledged water management instruments, such as water tariffs and quotas, may face the greatest barriers, while widely accepted adaptation measures, such as irrigation modernisation, can contribute to overcoming the obstacles for the implementation of more controversial measures. Overall, the results of this research contribute to climate change adaptation providing a better understanding of the social dimension of adaptation processes, potential barriers to overcome and the feasibility of specific measures.
C1 [Esteve, Paloma; Varela-Ortega, Consuelo] Univ Politecn Madrid, Dept Agr Econ Stat & Management, Madrid, Spain.
   [Esteve, Paloma; Varela-Ortega, Consuelo] Univ Politecn Madrid, Res Ctr Management Agr & Environm Risks, Madrid, Spain.
   [Downing, Thomas E.] Global Climate Adaptat Partnership, Oxford, England.
C3 Universidad Politecnica de Madrid; Universidad Politecnica de Madrid
RP Esteve, P (corresponding author), Univ Politecn Madrid, Dept Agr Econ Stat & Management, Madrid, Spain.; Esteve, P (corresponding author), Univ Politecn Madrid, Res Ctr Management Agr & Environm Risks, Madrid, Spain.
EM paloma.esteve@upm.es; consuelo.varela@upm.es;
   TDowning@ClimateAdaptation.cc
RI Esteve, Paloma/Y-6746-2019
OI Esteve, Paloma/0000-0003-1216-9156
FU European Commission through the MEDIATION project (Methodology for
   Effective Decision-Making on Impacts and Adaptation FP7, Small
   Collaborative Project, European Commission, DG Research, Project)
   [244012]; Universidad Politecnica de Madrid through a PhD scholarship of
   UPM RD Programme
FX This research was funded by the European Commission through the
   MEDIATION project (Methodology for Effective Decision-Making on Impacts
   and Adaptation FP7, Small Collaborative Project, European Commission, DG
   Research, Project No. 244012, 2010-2013), and co-funded by Universidad
   Politecnica de Madrid through a PhD scholarship of UPM R&D Programme.
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NR 55
TC 22
Z9 23
U1 1
U2 11
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2018
VL 18
IS 8
SI SI
BP 2505
EP 2517
DI 10.1007/s10113-018-1366-y
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HA8VS
UT WOS:000450572900027
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mills, AJ
   Tan, DW
   Manji, AK
   Vijitpan, T
   Henriette, E
   Murugaiyan, P
   Pantha, RH
   Lafdal, MY
   Soule, A
   Cazzetta, S
   Bégat, P
   Vlieghe, KEP
   Lavirotte, L
   Kok, JT
   Lister, J
AF Mills, Anthony J.
   Tan, Diwen
   Manji, Atifa K.
   Vijitpan, Tatirose
   Henriette, Elvina
   Murugaiyan, Pugazhendhi
   Pantha, Ram H.
   Lafdal, Mohamed Y.
   Soule, Ahmedou
   Cazzetta, Silvia
   Begat, Pierre
   Vlieghe, Kelly E. P.
   Lavirotte, Lucy
   Kok, Johannes T.
   Lister, James
TI Ecosystem-based adaptation to climate change: Lessons learned from a
   pioneering project spanning Mauritania, Nepal, the Seychelles, and China
SO PLANTS PEOPLE PLANET
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; EbA South; exit strategy; long-term research; project
   management; restoration; South-South cooperation; technology
ID CONSERVATION
AB Societal Impact StatementEcosystem-based adaptation (EbA) is increasingly being used to reduce the impacts of climate change on vulnerable people and landscapes. The international EbA South project implemented EbA interventions across three countries (Mauritania, Nepal, the Seychelles), piloting the restoration of mountain, desert and coastal ecosystems to enhance the climate resilience of local communities. The experiences of the EbA South project across these distinct ecosystems and socio-economic environments provide unique insights into the adaptive management invariably required within EbA initiatives. This analysis also provides lessons on how to share knowledge among different stakeholders and countries to advance South-South cooperation.
   SummaryClimate change is having an increasingly negative impact on the world's most vulnerable societies. Ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) uses biodiversity and ecosystem services to help local communities adapt to the adverse impacts of climate change. This approach, which has the potential to be implemented across a wide range of ecosystem types and scales, is increasingly being adopted by governments and international donors within climate change adaptation initiatives. The objective of the EbA South project was to enhance the climate resilience of communities in Mauritania, Nepal, and the Seychelles by building institutional capacity, mobilizing knowledge and transferring EbA technologies based on China's experience in successfully implementing restoration. The project implemented EbA interventions in the drylands of Mauritania, Himalayan forests in Nepal, and the coastal zone of the Seychelles. All interventions were carefully monitored by researchers to generate scientific evidence of the impacts of EbA. Here, we provide implementers of EbA with the major lessons learned from the EbA South project, namely: (a) quantifying the full suite of ecosystem goods and services generated through EbA at a landscape scale; (b) budgeting in advance for management of time-consuming complexities related to socioeconomics and ecology such as land-use conflict, ineffective government structures, disagreements regarding intervention options, and challenging environmental conditions; (c) undertaking long-term research for adaptive management and documenting the project's successes; (d) providing platforms for effective communication and collaboration among stakeholders with different first languages; and (e) regularly adjusting exit strategies for maintenance of the EbA landscapes after closure of the project.
C1 [Mills, Anthony J.] Stellenbosch Univ, Dept Soil Sci, ZA-7602 Cape Town, South Africa.
   [Tan, Diwen; Vijitpan, Tatirose; Cazzetta, Silvia] UNEP Int Ecosyst Management Partnership, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Manji, Atifa K.] UN Environm, Climate Change Adaptat Unit, Ecosyst Div, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Henriette, Elvina] Univ Seychelles, Isl Biodivers & Conservat Ctr, Anse Royale, Seychelles.
   [Murugaiyan, Pugazhendhi] Minist Environm Energy & Climate Change, Mahe, Seychelles.
   [Pantha, Ram H.] Minist Populat & Environm, Climate Change Sect, Kathmandu, Nepal.
   [Lafdal, Mohamed Y.] Minist Environm & Dev Durable MEDD, Nouakchott, Mauritania.
   [Soule, Ahmedou] Ecole Normale Super Nouakchott, Ctr Rech Valorisat Biodiversite CRVB, Nouakchott, Mauritania.
   [Begat, Pierre; Vlieghe, Kelly E. P.; Lavirotte, Lucy; Kok, Johannes T.; Lister, James] C4 EcoSolut, Cape Town, South Africa.
C3 Stellenbosch University; Ecole Normale Superieure de Nouakchott
RP Mills, AJ (corresponding author), Stellenbosch Univ, Dept Soil Sci, ZA-7602 Cape Town, South Africa.
EM mills@sun.ac.za
RI Mills, Anthony/W-9228-2019
OI Mills, Anthony J/0000-0001-5676-2440; Tan, Diwen/0000-0002-5574-2859
FU National Research Foundation [FA2005040700027]; Global Environment
   Facility
FX National Research Foundation, Grant/Award Number: FA2005040700027;
   Global Environment Facility
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NR 45
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 24
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
EI 2572-2611
J9 PLANTS PEOPLE PLANET
JI Plants People Planet
PD NOV
PY 2020
VL 2
IS 6
BP 587
EP 597
DI 10.1002/ppp3.10126
PG 11
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Plant Sciences; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Plant Sciences; Environmental Sciences &
   Ecology
GA TX9ZL
UT WOS:000683443900002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bernabé-Crespo, MB
   Rodríguez, AV
   Juan, LG
   García, AJP
   Bullón, CC
AF Bernabe-Crespo, Miguel B.
   Vallina Rodriguez, Alejandro
   Garcia Juan, Laura
   Palacios Garcia, Antonio J.
   Camarero Bullon, Concepcion
TI Trends in water consumption and its sources of supply in water stress
   spaces: case studies
SO COORDENADAS-REVISTA DE HISTORIA LOCAL Y REGIONAL
LA English
DT Article
DE water supply; local water resources; desalination; water transfers
ID DESALINATION; RESOURCE; REUSE
AB The effects of climate change predict greater variability and reduction in surface water resources, which, in addition to the increase in population in coastal areas, poses challenges in order to guarantee the supply of drinking water. This paper studies cases from Spain (Southeast and Madrid), the United States ( Los Angeles) and Australia (Sydney), which share the challenge of guaranteeing water supply to a growing population, in a context of adaptation to climate change. A study of the supply sources of each space is carried out, with data from the water distribution agencies in each space. Taking the number of inhabitants, the study shows that per capita consumption has been reduced in the three spaces, although with notable differences, being almost double in Los Angeles than in the Spanish case.
C1 [Bernabe-Crespo, Miguel B.; Vallina Rodriguez, Alejandro; Garcia Juan, Laura; Palacios Garcia, Antonio J.; Camarero Bullon, Concepcion] Univ Autonoma Madrid, Dept Geog, Madrid, Spain.
C3 Autonomous University of Madrid
RP Bernabé-Crespo, MB (corresponding author), Univ Autonoma Madrid, Dept Geog, Madrid, Spain.
EM miguelb.bernabe@uam.es; alejandro.vallina@uam.es; laura.garciaj@uam.es;
   antonio.palacios@uam.es; concepcion.camarero@uam.es
RI Juan, Laura/ABH-1010-2020
CR [Anonymous], 2015, Cuadernos Geograficos, DOI DOI 10.30827/CUADGEO.V54I2.3097
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NR 32
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU UNIV NAC RIO CUARTO
PI CORDOBA
PA RUTA NAC 36 KM 601, CAMPUS UNIV, CORDOBA, X5800BYA, ARGENTINA
SN 2362-4752
J9 COORDENADAS
JI Coordenadas
PD JUL-DEC
PY 2023
VL 10
IS 2
PG 19
WC History
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC History
GA MM9G0
UT WOS:001194149400009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nagel, LM
   Palik, BJ
   Battaglia, MA
   D'Amato, AW
   Guldin, JM
   Swanston, CW
   Janowiak, MK
   Powers, MP
   Joyce, LA
   Millar, CI
   Peterson, DL
   Ganio, LM
   Kirschbaum, C
   Roske, MR
AF Nagel, Linda M.
   Palik, Brian J.
   Battaglia, Michael A.
   D'Amato, Anthony W.
   Guldin, James M.
   Swanston, Christopher W.
   Janowiak, Maria K.
   Powers, Matthew P.
   Joyce, Linda A.
   Millar, Constance I.
   Peterson, David L.
   Ganio, Lisa M.
   Kirschbaum, Chad
   Roske, Molly R.
TI Adaptive Silviculture for Climate Change: A National Experiment in
   Manager-Scientist Partnerships to Apply an Adaptation Framework
SO JOURNAL OF FORESTRY
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT National Silviculture Workshop (NSW)
CY 2015
CL Baton Rouge, LA
DE adaptation; adaptive management; climate change; partnerships;
   silviculture
ID WESTERN UNITED-STATES; FOREST MANAGEMENT; SOUTHWESTERN COLORADO; PINE
   ECOSYSTEM; RESTORATION; USA; VARIABILITY; STRATEGIES; MINNESOTA; DROUGHT
AB Forest managers in the United States must respond to the need for climate-adaptive strategies in the face of observed and projected climatic changes. However, there is a lack of on-the-ground forest adaptation research to indicate what adaptation measures or tactics might be effective in preparing forest ecosystems to deal with climate change. Natural resource managers in many areas are also challenged by scant locally or regionally relevant information on climate projections and potential impacts. The Adaptive Silviculture for Climate Change (ASCC) project was designed to respond to these barriers to operationalizing climate adaptation strategies by providing a multiregion network of replicated opeiational-scale research sites testing ecosystem-specific climate change adaptation treatments across a gradient of adaptive approaches, and introducing conceptual tools and processes to integrate climate change considerations into management and silvicultural decisionmaking. Here we present the framework of the ASCC project, highlight the implementation process at two of the study sites, and discuss the contributions of this collaborative science-management partnership.
C1 [Nagel, Linda M.; Roske, Molly R.] Colorado State Univ, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA.
   [Palik, Brian J.; Battaglia, Michael A.; Guldin, James M.; Joyce, Linda A.; Millar, Constance I.; Ganio, Lisa M.; Kirschbaum, Chad] US Forest Serv, USDA, Washington, DC 20250 USA.
   [D'Amato, Anthony W.] Univ Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405 USA.
   [Swanston, Christopher W.; Janowiak, Maria K.] US Forest Serv, Northern Inst Appl Climate Sci, USDA, Washington, DC 20250 USA.
   [Powers, Matthew P.] Oregon State Univ, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
   [Peterson, David L.] Pacific Northwest Res Stn, Portland, OR USA.
C3 Colorado State University; United States Department of Agriculture
   (USDA); United States Forest Service; University of Vermont; United
   States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States Forest Service;
   Oregon State University
RP Nagel, LM (corresponding author), Colorado State Univ, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA.
EM linda.nagel@colostate.edu; bpalik@fs.fed.us; mbattaglia@fs.fed.us;
   awdamato@uvm.edu; jguldin@fs.fed.us; cswanston@fs.fed.us;
   mjanowiak02@fs.fed.us; matthew.powers@oregonstate.edu; ljoyce@fs.fed.us;
   cmillar@fs.fed.us; peterson@fs.fed.us; lisa.ganio@oregonstate.edu;
   ckirschbaum@fs.fed.us; molly.roske@colostate.edu
RI D'Amato, Anthony/AAV-3245-2021
OI Palik, Brian/0000-0003-0300-9644; Battaglia,
   Michael/0000-0002-4260-5804; Swanston, Chris/0000-0003-2167-0970
FU USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station; Northern Research
   Station; Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science; Rocky Mountain
   Research Station; Michigan Technological University; University of
   Minnesota; Colorado State University; Department of Interior Northeast
   Climate Science Center
FX The Adaptive Silviculture for Climate Change project has been supported
   in large part by a grant from the USDA Forest Service Southern Research
   Station to develop and implement the framework. We give special thanks
   for the generous support from the Northern Research Station, as well as
   key support from the Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science, the
   Rocky Mountain Research Station, Michigan Technological University, the
   University of Minnesota, Colorado State University, and the Department
   of Interior Northeast Climate Science Center. We express heartfelt
   gratitude to our numerous partners, especially managers and staff who
   have committed their time, experience, expertise, and enthusiasm in
   support of this project, including staff on the Chippewa, San Juan, and
   Flathead National Forests, the Joseph W. Jones Ecological Research
   Center, and the Second College Grant of Dartmouth College. We also
   extend special thanks to two anonymous reviewers for their constructive
   feedback on this article.
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NR 41
TC 159
Z9 205
U1 11
U2 86
PU SOC AMER FORESTERS
PI BETHESDA
PA 5400 GROSVENOR LANE, BETHESDA, MD 20814 USA
SN 0022-1201
EI 1938-3746
J9 J FOREST
JI J. For.
PD MAY
PY 2017
VL 115
IS 3
BP 167
EP 178
DI 10.5849/jof.16-039
PG 12
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Forestry
GA EV1IE
UT WOS:000401499100003
OA Bronze
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maihoff, F
   Sahler, S
   Schoger, S
   Brenzinger, K
   Kallnik, K
   Sauer, N
   Bofinger, L
   Schmitt, T
   Nooten, SS
   Classen, A
AF Maihoff, Fabienne
   Sahler, Simone
   Schoger, Simon
   Brenzinger, Kristof
   Kallnik, Katharina
   Sauer, Nikki
   Bofinger, Lukas
   Schmitt, Thomas
   Nooten, Sabine S.
   Classen, Alice
TI Cuticular hydrocarbons of alpine bumble bees (Hymenoptera:
   <i>Bombus</i>) are species-specific, but show little evidence of
   elevation-related climate adaptation
SO FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
LA English
DT Article
DE pollinators; altitudinal gradient; cuticular hydrocarbon; desiccation;
   mountain; global change; translocation experiment; drought stress
ID NESTMATE RECOGNITION CUES; PATTERNS; TRAITS; COMMUNICATION; EVOLUTION;
   IMPACTS; WORKERS; POLLINATION; DIVERGENCE; DIVERSITY
AB Alpine bumble bees are the most important pollinators in temperate mountain ecosystems. Although they are used to encounter small-scale successions of very different climates in the mountains, many species respond sensitively to climatic changes, reflected in spatial range shifts and declining populations worldwide. Cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) mediate climate adaptation in some insects. However, whether they predict the elevational niche of bumble bees or their responses to climatic changes remains poorly understood. Here, we used three different approaches to study the role of bumble bees' CHCs in the context of climate adaptation: using a 1,300 m elevational gradient, we first investigated whether the overall composition of CHCs, and two potentially climate-associated chemical traits (proportion of saturated components, mean chain length) on the cuticle of six bumble bee species were linked to the species' elevational niches. We then analyzed intraspecific variation in CHCs of Bombus pascuorum along the elevational gradient and tested whether these traits respond to temperature. Finally, we used a field translocation experiment to test whether CHCs of Bombus lucorum workers change, when translocated from the foothill of a cool and wet mountain region to (a) higher elevations, and (b) a warm and dry region. Overall, the six species showed distinctive, species-specific CHC profiles. We found inter- and intraspecific variation in the composition of CHCs and in chemical traits along the elevational gradient, but no link to the elevational distribution of species and individuals. According to our expectations, bumble bees translocated to a warm and dry region tended to express longer CHC chains than bumble bees translocated to cool and wet foothills, which could reflect an acclimatization to regional climate. However, chain lengths did not further decrease systematically along the elevational gradient, suggesting that other factors than temperature also shape chain lengths in CHC profiles. We conclude that in alpine bumble bees, CHC profiles and traits respond at best secondarily to the climate conditions tested in this study. While the functional role of species-specific CHC profiles in bumble bees remains elusive, limited plasticity in this trait could restrict species' ability to adapt to climatic changes.
C1 [Maihoff, Fabienne; Sahler, Simone; Schoger, Simon; Brenzinger, Kristof; Kallnik, Katharina; Sauer, Nikki; Bofinger, Lukas; Schmitt, Thomas; Nooten, Sabine S.; Classen, Alice] Univ Wurzburg, Dept Anim Ecol & Trop Biol, Wurzburg, Germany.
C3 University of Wurzburg
RP Maihoff, F (corresponding author), Univ Wurzburg, Dept Anim Ecol & Trop Biol, Wurzburg, Germany.
EM anne_fabienne.maihoff@uni-wuerzburg.de
RI Schmitt, Thomas/H-3033-2013; Schoger, Simon/KRP-1362-2024
OI Maihoff, Fabienne/0000-0003-3246-3213
FU DFG; Bavarian State Ministry of Science
FX The GC/MS was granted by the DFG to TS. This project was sponsored by
   the Bavarian State Ministry of Science and the Arts in the context of
   the Bavarian Climate Research Network (bayklif).
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NR 106
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 16
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
SN 2296-701X
J9 FRONT ECOL EVOL
JI Front. Ecol. Evol.
PD FEB 10
PY 2023
VL 11
AR 1082559
DI 10.3389/fevo.2023.1082559
PG 13
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 9F6LQ
UT WOS:000937579000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mustafa, G
   Alotaibi, BA
   Nayak, RK
AF Mustafa, Ghulam
   Alotaibi, Bader Alhafi
   Nayak, Roshan K.
TI Linking Climate Change Awareness, Climate Change Perceptions and
   Subsequent Adaptation Options among Farmers
SO AGRONOMY-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation to climate change; climate change awareness; CCA; logit
   model; odds ratio; perception
ID DETERMINANTS; MITIGATION; RISK; PRECIPITATION; VULNERABILITY;
   VARIABILITY; STRATEGIES; POLLUTION; BEHAVIOR; PROVINCE
AB Several studies have reported farmers' perceptions of climate change, but there is inadequate knowledge available on the farm households' climate change awareness (CCA) in Pakistan. This study was undertaken to assess farmers' CCA. For this purpose, the study collected the data from southern and central Punjab, Pakistan, through a purposively multistage random sampling technique. Binary logit and odds ratio were used to analyse the data. The analysis of the study shows that the majority of respondents were aware of climate change but had differing perceptions of climate change. This research showed that 70.8% of farmers are aware of climate change and reported their awareness level on winter and summer rainfall and temperature, the growing season length (GSL) of crops, the sea level rise, and the causes of climate changes and conceptual understanding of it while persistently denying climate change. However, many farmers did not perceive decreasing winter (48%) and summer (31.2%) precipitation, the majority of the farmers could not perceive in the GSL of summer (63.2%) and winter (64.4%) crops, while few did not notice increased winter (36.4%) and summer (33.6%) temperature, respectively. Financial and non-financial factors such as education (1.16), experience (1.07), distance to markets (1.07), non-agricultural income (2.83), access to agricultural credit (0.29) and marketing of produce (6.10), access to extension services (3.87) and the number of adaptation strategies (1.30) were pointedly related to farm households' CCA. These odds values in the parenthesis show that the likelihood of CCA increases/decreases as these determinants increase. Moreover, the results of the study show that CCA is a significant predictor of adaptation to climate change. Main adaptation strategies opted for by farmers include changing crop variety and type, changing planting dates, tree plantation, increasing/changing fertilizer, soil and water conservation, off-farm income and diversification. Further, the study finds that some farmers did not perceive climate change as it takes time to be visible, but they are aware of climate change. Therefore, there is a need to reshape the households' perception of climate change and enhance farmers' CCA through existing extension services.
C1 [Mustafa, Ghulam] Univ Educ, Dept Econ, Div Management & Adm Sci, Lahore 54000, Pakistan.
   [Alotaibi, Bader Alhafi] King Saud Univ, Dept Agr Extens, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia.
   [Alotaibi, Bader Alhafi] King Saud Univ, Rural Soc, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia.
   [Nayak, Roshan K.] Univ Calif Davis, Div Agr & Nat Resources, 2801 2nd St, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
C3 King Saud University; King Saud University; University of California
   System; University of California Davis
RP Alotaibi, BA (corresponding author), King Saud Univ, Dept Agr Extens, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia.; Alotaibi, BA (corresponding author), King Saud Univ, Rural Soc, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia.
EM balhafi@ksu.edu.sa
RI Mustafa, Ghulam/U-9384-2017
OI Alhafi-Alotaibi, Bader/0000-0002-9633-4341; Mustafa,
   Ghulam/0000-0002-7876-2107; Nayak, Roshan/0009-0009-7855-0102
FU Researchers Supporting Project Number , King Saud University, Riyadh,
   Saudi Arabia [RSP2023R443]
FX This research was funded by Researchers Supporting Project Number
   (RSP2023R443), King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
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NR 89
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 6
U2 25
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4395
J9 AGRONOMY-BASEL
JI Agronomy-Basel
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 13
IS 3
AR 758
DI 10.3390/agronomy13030758
PG 21
WC Agronomy; Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Plant Sciences
GA A8CT6
UT WOS:000957350300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Flood, S
   Schechtman, J
AF Flood, Stephen
   Schechtman, Judd
TI The rise of resilience: Evolution of a new concept in coastal planning
   in Ireland and the US
SO OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID ZONE MANAGEMENT
AB Interest in the concept of resilience has grown significantly in recent years. The perceived strengths of resilience as a concept stem from its foundations in the sciences and humanities, and have recently gained currency amongst political actors and in policy spheres. This papers objective is to investigate the value of resilience as a concept when applied to the process of coastal climate change adaptation with a focus on place specificity. As applied to coastal hazards and climate change adaptation, we expect that resilience encompasses more system complexities than a traditional vulnerability or hazards approach. Our aim in this paper is achieved through carrying out a critical analysis of Irish and US academic and policy literature and determining if, and to what degree, one or more of the three selected lenses of psychological, engineering and ecological resilience are applied. Through contrasting the evolution of coastal adaptation policy developments in both Ireland and the U.S. the paper highlights the importance of policy, environment and geography in the area of coastal management. It furthermore examines the question of whether the concept of resilience represents a paradigm shift, or whether it maintains the dominant anthropological perspective of earlier hazard mitigation approaches under new guise.
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C1 [Flood, Stephen] Victoria Univ Wellington, New Zealand Climate Change Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand.
   [Schechtman, Judd] Rutgers Bloustein Sch Planning, New Brunswick, NJ USA.
C3 Victoria University Wellington
RP Flood, S (corresponding author), Victoria Univ Wellington, New Zealand Climate Change Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand.
EM stephen.flood@vuw.ac.nz; judds@rutgers.edu
OI Flood, Stephen/0000-0001-8206-737X
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   [No title captured]
NR 78
TC 33
Z9 37
U1 2
U2 61
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-5691
EI 1873-524X
J9 OCEAN COAST MANAGE
JI Ocean Coastal Manage.
PD DEC
PY 2014
VL 102
BP 19
EP 31
DI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2014.08.015
PN A
PG 13
WC Oceanography; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Oceanography; Water Resources
GA AY4XZ
UT WOS:000347579600003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Durant, SM
   Marino, A
   Linnell, JDC
   Oriol-Cotterill, A
   Dloniak, S
   Dolrenry, S
   Funston, P
   Groom, RJ
   Hanssen, L
   Horgan, J
   Ikanda, D
   Ipavec, A
   Kissui, B
   Lichtenfeld, L
   McNutt, JW
   Mitchell, N
   Naro, E
   Samna, A
   Yirga, G
AF Durant, Sarah M.
   Marino, Agnese
   Linnell, John D. C.
   Oriol-Cotterill, Alayne
   Dloniak, Stephanie
   Dolrenry, Stephanie
   Funston, Paul
   Groom, Rosemary J.
   Hanssen, Lise
   Horgan, Jane
   Ikanda, Dennis
   Ipavec, Audrey
   Kissui, Bernard
   Lichtenfeld, Laly
   McNutt, J. Weldon
   Mitchell, Nicholas
   Naro, Elizabeth
   Samna, Abdoulkarim
   Yirga, Gidey
TI Fostering Coexistence Between People and Large Carnivores in Africa:
   Using a Theory of Change to Identify Pathways to Impact and Their
   Underlying Assumptions
SO FRONTIERS IN CONSERVATION SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE large carnivore conservation; African semi-arid; community-based
   conservation; human wildlife conflict; community-based natural resource
   management; adaptive co-management; rangeland management; climate change
   adaptation
ID COMMUNITY-BASED CONSERVATION; HUMAN-WILDLIFE CONFLICT; BIODIVERSITY
   CONSERVATION; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; ADAPTIVE COMANAGEMENT;
   FOOD-PRODUCTION; LAND USES; CLIMATE; MANAGEMENT; PATTERNS
AB Coexistence with large carnivores poses challenges to human well-being, livelihoods, development, resource management, and policy. Even where people and carnivores have historically coexisted, traditional patterns of behavior toward large carnivores may be disrupted by wider processes of economic, social, political, and climate change. Conservation interventions have typically focused on changing behaviors of those living alongside large carnivores to promote sustainable practices. While these interventions remain important, their success is inextricably linked to broader socio-political contexts, including natural resource governance and equitable distribution of conservation-linked costs and benefits. In this context we propose a Theory of Change to identify logical pathways of action through which coexistence with large carnivores can be enhanced. We focus on Africa's dryland landscapes, known for their diverse guild of large carnivores that remain relatively widespread across the continent. We review the literature to understand coexistence and its challenges; explain our Theory of Change, including expected outcomes and pathways to impact; and discuss how our model could be implemented and operationalized. Our analysis draws on the experience of coauthors, who are scientists and practitioners, and on literature from conservation, political ecology, and anthropology to explore the challenges, local realities, and place-based conditions under which expected outcomes succeed or fail. Three pathways to impact were identified: (a) putting in place good governance harmonized across geographic scales; (b) addressing coexistence at the landscape level; and (c) reducing costs and increasing benefits of sharing a landscape with large carnivores. Coordinated conservation across the extensive, and potentially transboundary, landscapes needed by large carnivores requires harmonization of top-down approaches with bottom-up community-based conservation. We propose adaptive co-management approaches combined with processes for active community engagement and informed consent as useful dynamic mechanisms for navigating through this contested space, while enabling adaptation to climate change. Success depends on strengthening underlying enabling conditions, including governance, capacity, local empowerment, effective monitoring, and sustainable financial support. Implementing the Theory of Change requires ongoing monitoring and evaluation to inform adaptation and build confidence in the model. Overall, the model provides a flexible and practical framework that can be adapted to dynamic local socio-ecological contexts.
C1 [Durant, Sarah M.; Marino, Agnese; Groom, Rosemary J.; Ipavec, Audrey; Mitchell, Nicholas] Zool Soc London, Inst Zool, London, England.
   [Durant, Sarah M.] UCL, Dept Genet Evolut & Environm GEE, London, England.
   [Linnell, John D. C.] Norwegian Inst Nat Res NINA, Dept Terr Biodivers, Trondheim, Norway.
   [Linnell, John D. C.] Inland Norway Univ Appl Sci, Dept Forestry & Wildlife Management, Koppang, Norway.
   [Oriol-Cotterill, Alayne] Univ Oxford, Recanati Kaplan Ctr, Dept Zool, Wildlife Conservat Res Unit, Oxford, England.
   [Dloniak, Stephanie] Michigan State Univ, Dept Integrat Biol, E Lansing, MI USA.
   [Dolrenry, Stephanie] Lion Guardians, Langata, Kenya.
   [Funston, Paul] Panthera Corp, New York, NY USA.
   [Hanssen, Lise] Kwando Carnivores Trust, Kongola, Namibia.
   [Horgan, Jane] Cheetah Conservat Botswana, Maun, Botswana.
   [Ikanda, Dennis] Tanzania Wildlife Res Inst, Arusha, Tanzania.
   [Kissui, Bernard] SFS Ctr Wildlife Management Studies, Karatu, Tanzania.
   [Lichtenfeld, Laly; Naro, Elizabeth] African People & Wildlife USA & Tanzania People &, Arusha, Tanzania.
   [McNutt, J. Weldon] Botswana Predator Conservat Trust, Arusha, Botswana.
   [Samna, Abdoulkarim] Direct Faune Chasse & Aires Protegee, Niamey, Niger.
   [Yirga, Gidey] Mekelle Univ, Dept Biol, Mekele, Ethiopia.
C3 Zoological Society of London; University of London; University College
   London; Norwegian Institute Nature Research; Inland Norway University of
   Applied Sciences; University of Oxford; Michigan State University;
   Mekelle University
RP Durant, SM (corresponding author), Zool Soc London, Inst Zool, London, England.; Durant, SM (corresponding author), UCL, Dept Genet Evolut & Environm GEE, London, England.
EM sarah.durant@ioz.ac.uk
RI Linnell, John/V-4177-2019; Durant, Sarah/AAB-9659-2019
OI Durant, Sarah/0000-0003-0724-0878; Marino, Agnese/0000-0002-3150-0118
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NR 155
TC 9
Z9 11
U1 3
U2 11
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2673-611X
J9 FRONT CONSERV SCI
JI Front. Conserv. Sci.
PD JAN 24
PY 2022
VL 2
AR 698631
DI 10.3389/fcosc.2021.698631
PG 17
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA I5JZ0
UT WOS:001003155100001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hashida, Y
   Dundas, SJ
AF Hashida, Yukiko
   Dundas, Steven J.
TI Barriers to Coastal Managed Retreat: Evidence from New Jersey's Blue
   Acres Program
SO MARINE RESOURCE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Buyout programs; climate change adaptation; managed retreat;
   principal-agent problem; sea-level rise; H72; Q54; Q56; Q58
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; ECONOMIC COST; CLIMATE-CHANGE; DISASTER; FLOOD;
   ADAPTATION; PROPERTY; PROTECTION; RESPONSES; BENEFITS
AB Managed retreat is a climate adaptation strategy involving government buyouts of at-risk properties that is currently underutilized in coastal areas of the United States. These programs often require both voluntary homeowner applications and municipal government support for a successful buyout. We use a conceptual framework and a set of empirical models with data from a buyout program in a coastal state to develop descriptive evidence on potential barriers to successful managed-retreat policies in high-risk coastal areas. Key factors influencing buyout success can be associated with municipal budgets, including revenues, expenditures, debt, and government transfers. Importantly, revenue impacts related to property taxes appear to contribute to fewer buyouts, suggesting a potential principal-agent problem related to climate resilience in high-value coastal housing markets. Recognition of the combination of factors that may represent barriers to adoption may help the design and implementation of future programs and improve coastal climate adaptation strategies.
C1 [Hashida, Yukiko] Univ Georgia, Dept Agr & Appl Econ, 313A Conner Hall,147 Cedar St, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
   [Dundas, Steven J.] Oregon State Univ, Dept Appl Econ, 212 Ballard Extens Hall,2591 SW Campus Way, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
   [Dundas, Steven J.] Oregon State Univ, Coastal Oregon Marine Expt Stn, 212 Ballard Extens Hall,2591 SW Campus Way, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
C3 University System of Georgia; University of Georgia; Oregon State
   University; Oregon State University
RP Hashida, Y (corresponding author), Univ Georgia, Dept Agr & Appl Econ, 313A Conner Hall,147 Cedar St, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
EM yhashida@uga.edu; steven.dundas@oregonstate.edu
RI Hashida, Yukiko/AFK-1455-2022; Dundas, Steven/AAV-9779-2020
OI Dundas, Steven J./0000-0003-3000-3395
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NR 61
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 4
PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
PI CHICAGO
PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA
SN 0738-1360
EI 2334-5985
J9 MAR RESOUR ECON
JI Mar. Resour. Econ.
PD JUL 1
PY 2024
VL 39
IS 3
BP 179
EP 205
DI 10.1086/729868
EA JUL 2024
PG 27
WC Economics; Environmental Studies; Fisheries
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Fisheries
GA WP8A9
UT WOS:001235037400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gatt, YM
   Walton, RW
   Andradi-Brown, DA
   Spalding, MD
   Acosta-Velazquez, J
   Adame, MF
   Barros, F
   Beeston, MA
   Bernardino, AF
   Buelow, CA
   Cadier, C
   Vela, ACV
   Canty, SWJ
   Dahdouh-Guebas, F
   Gomes, LED
   Duncan, C
   Eger, AM
   Enright, JA
   Frausto-Illescas, TC
   Friess, DA
   Glass, L
   Grimsditch, G
   Hagger, V
   Hein, MY
   Herrera-Silveira, JA
   Hilarides, L
   Howard, JF
   Hoyos-Santillan, J
   Kandasamy, K
   Kennedy, B
   Kincaid, K
   Lagat, AK
   Lara-Dominguez, AL
   Longley-Wood, K
   Mahajan, SL
   Mangubhai, S
   Martin, PA
   Medard, M
   Nájera-Hillman, E
   Nicolas, T
   Nicolau, DK
   Nyaega, LM
   Paiz, Y
   Quarto, A
   Ralifo, AI
   Randriamanantena, OD
   Rasolozaka, TM
   Ravelojaona, DK
   Robaigau, A
   Rodríguez-Rodríguez, A
   Rog, SM
   Rounds, I
   Rovai, AS
   Saunders, MI
   Sievers, M
   Song, DT
   Sutherland, WJ
   Taylor, NG
   Teutli-Hernández, C
   Thornton, H
   Tuiwawa, S
   Ulumuddin, YI
   Veverka, L
   Videira, EJS
   White, TB
   Wodehouse, DCJ
   Wosu, A
   Yamashita, H
   Zimmer, M
   Worthington, TA
AF Gatt, Yasmine M.
   Walton, Rowana W.
   Andradi-Brown, Dominic A.
   Spalding, Mark D.
   Acosta-Velazquez, Joanna
   Adame, Maria Fernanda
   Barros, Francisco
   Beeston, Mark A.
   Bernardino, Angelo Fraga
   Buelow, Christina A.
   Cadier, Charles
   Vela, Alejandra Calzada Vazquez
   Canty, Steven W. J.
   Dahdouh-Guebas, Farid
   Gomes, Luiz Eduardo de Oliveira
   Duncan, Clare
   Eger, Aaron M.
   Enright, James A.
   Frausto-Illescas, Tannia C.
   Friess, Daniel A.
   Glass, Leah
   Grimsditch, Gabriel
   Hagger, Valerie
   Hein, Margaux Y.
   Herrera-Silveira, Jorge A.
   Hilarides, Lammert
   Howard, Jennifer F.
   Hoyos-Santillan, Jorge
   Kandasamy, Kathiresan
   Kennedy, Bridget
   Kincaid, Kate
   Lagat, Abel Kiprono
   Lara-Dominguez, Ana L.
   Longley-Wood, Kate
   Mahajan, Shauna L.
   Mangubhai, Sangeeta
   Martin, Philip A.
   Medard, Modesta
   Najera-Hillman, Eduardo
   Nicolas, Tanguy
   Nicolau, Denise K.
   Nyaega, Lilian M.
   Paiz, Yves
   Quarto, Alfredo
   Ralifo, Alfred I.
   Randriamanantena, O. Dannick
   Rasolozaka, Tojo M.
   Ravelojaona, Danny K.
   Robaigau, Apolosa
   Rodriguez-Rodriguez, Alexandra
   Rog, Stefanie M.
   Rounds, Isaac
   Rovai, Andre S.
   Saunders, Megan I.
   Sievers, Michael
   Song, Det
   Sutherland, William J.
   Taylor, Nigel G.
   Teutli-Hernandez, Claudia
   Thornton, Hazel
   Tuiwawa, Senilolia
   Ulumuddin, Yaya Ihya
   Veverka, Laura
   Videira, Eduardo J. S.
   White, Thomas B.
   Wodehouse, Dominic C. J.
   Wosu, Adaoma
   Yamashita, Hiromi
   Zimmer, Martin
   Worthington, Thomas A.
TI The Mangrove Restoration Tracker Tool: Meeting local practitioner needs
   and tracking progress toward global targets
SO ONE EARTH
LA English
DT Article
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICE; REHABILITATION; PHILIPPINES; MANAGEMENT; COST
AB Restoration is a key component of global and national efforts to combat ecosystem degradation, reduce biodiversity loss, and adapt to climate change, and there is currently an impetus to scale up restoration efforts. However, our ability to track progress toward restoration targets is limited by the lack of consistent and standardized data on objectives, interventions, and outcomes. To address this, a collaboration of conservation practitioners and scientists from around the world have developed the Mangrove Restoration Tracker Tool (MRTT), an application to record and track outcomes from mangrove restoration projects. The MRTT records information across the lifetime of a project, capturing data describing the site background and pre-restoration baseline and the restoration interventions and costs, as well as post-restoration monitoring that incorporates both socioeconomic and ecological factors. The MRTT allows decision makers, practitioners, and site managers to access information that is essential in making informed, evidence-based decisions on restoration interventions to maximize impact and success.
C1 [Gatt, Yasmine M.] Natl Univ Singapore, Ctr Nat Based Climate Solut, 16 Sci Dr 4, Singapore 117558, Singapore.
   [Gatt, Yasmine M.] Natl Univ Singapore, Dept Biol Sci, 16 Sci Dr 4, Singapore 117558, Singapore.
   [Walton, Rowana W.; Spalding, Mark D.; Kincaid, Kate; Sutherland, William J.; Taylor, Nigel G.; White, Thomas B.; Yamashita, Hiromi; Worthington, Thomas A.] Univ Cambridge, Dept Zool, Conservat Sci Grp, David Attenborough Bldg, Cambridge CB2 3QZ, England.
   [Andradi-Brown, Dominic A.; Veverka, Laura] World Wildlife Fund WWF, Oceans Conservat, 1250 24th St NW, Washington, DC 20037 USA.
   [Spalding, Mark D.] Nature Conservancy, Strada Tolfe 14, I-53100 Siena, Italy.
   [Acosta-Velazquez, Joanna] Univ Autonoma Carmen, Fac Ciencias Nat, Lab Humedales Costeros, Ave Cent S-N, Cuidad Del Carmen 24115, Campeche, Mexico.
   [Adame, Maria Fernanda; Buelow, Christina A.; Cadier, Charles; Sievers, Michael] Griffith Univ, Australian Rivers Inst, Coastal & Marine Res Ctr, Gold Coast, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Barros, Francisco] Univ Fed Bahia, INCT IN TREE, CIENAM,IBIO, Salvador, Brazil.
   [Beeston, Mark A.] Blue Marine Fdn, Somerset House, London WC2R 1LA, England.
   [Bernardino, Angelo Fraga; Gomes, Luiz Eduardo de Oliveira] Univ Fed Espirito Santo, Dept Oceanog, Vitoria, Espirito Santo, Brazil.
   [Vela, Alejandra Calzada Vazquez; Najera-Hillman, Eduardo] WWF Mexico, Ave Insurgentes Sur 1216,Despacho 702, Cdmx 03100, Mexico.
   [Canty, Steven W. J.] Smithsonian Environm Res Ctr, 647 Contees Wharf Rd, Edgewater, MD 21037 USA.
   [Canty, Steven W. J.] Smithsonian Inst, Working Land & Seascapes, Washington, DC 20013 USA.
   [Dahdouh-Guebas, Farid] Univ Libre Bruxelles ULB, Dept Organism Biol, Syst Ecol & Resource Management Res Unit SERM, Ave FD Roosevelt 50,CPi 264-1, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium.
   [Dahdouh-Guebas, Farid] Vrije Univ Brussel VUB, Biol Dept, bDIV Ecol Evolut & Genet, VUB APNA WE, Pl Laan 2, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium.
   [Dahdouh-Guebas, Farid; Duncan, Clare; Friess, Daniel A.; Zimmer, Martin] Int Union Conservat Nat IUCN, Species Survival Commiss SSC, Mangrove Specialist Grp MSG, Gland, Switzerland.
   [Dahdouh-Guebas, Farid] Univ Libre Bruxelles ULB, Interfac Inst Social Ecol Transit, Brussels, Belgium.
   [Gomes, Luiz Eduardo de Oliveira] ONG Guardioes do Mar, R Alfredo Azamor 739, Boa Vista, RR, Brazil.
   [Gomes, Luiz Eduardo de Oliveira] R Vieira de Morais 420, BR-04634020 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.
   [Duncan, Clare] Zool Soc London, Inst Zool, Regents Pk, London NW1 4RY, England.
   [Duncan, Clare] Univ Exeter, Coll Life & Environm Sci, Ctr Ecol & Conservat, Penryn TR10 9FE, Cornwall, England.
   [Eger, Aaron M.] Univ New South Wales, Ctr Marine Sci & Innovat, Sch Biol Earth & Environm Sci, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
   [Enright, James A.] Mangrove Act Project, Trang, Thailand.
   [Frausto-Illescas, Tannia C.] CICESE, Ensenada, Mexico.
   [Friess, Daniel A.] Tulane Univ, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, New Orleans, LA 70118 USA.
   [Glass, Leah] Blue Ventures Conservat, Lot 2U 86 Cite Planton, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar.
   [Grimsditch, Gabriel] UN Environm Program, UN Ave, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Hagger, Valerie; Saunders, Megan I.] Univ Queensland, Sch Environm, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
   [Hein, Margaux Y.] Marine Ecosyst Restorat MER Res & Consulting, 1 Rue Lujerneta, Monaco, Monaco.
   [Herrera-Silveira, Jorge A.] CINVESTAV IPN, Unidad Merida, Carretera Antigua Progreso Km 6, Yucatan 97310, Mexico.
   [Herrera-Silveira, Jorge A.] Lab Nacl Resiliencia Costera, Puerto de Abrigo Sisal S-N, Sisal 97355, Yucatan, Mexico.
   [Hilarides, Lammert] Wetlands Int, Ede, Netherlands.
   [Howard, Jennifer F.] Conservat Int, 2011 Crystal Dr,Suite 600, Arlington, VA 22202 USA.
   [Hoyos-Santillan, Jorge] Univ Magallanes, GAIA Antarctica Res Ctr, Punta Arenas 6200000, Chile.
   [Kandasamy, Kathiresan] Annamalai Univ, Ctr Adv Study Marine Biol, Parangipettai 608502, Tamil Nadu, India.
   [Kennedy, Bridget; Rounds, Isaac] Conservat Int Pacific Isl Program, Suva, Fiji.
   [Lagat, Abel Kiprono] Kenya Marine & Fisheries Res Inst, POB 81651, Mombasa 80100, Kenya.
   [Lagat, Abel Kiprono] Univ Nairobi, Wangari Maathai Inst Peace & Environm Studies, POB 29053-00625, Kangemi, Kenya.
   [Lara-Dominguez, Ana L.] Carretera Antigua Coatepec 351, Xalapa 91073, Veracruz, Mexico.
   [Longley-Wood, Kate] Nature Conservancy, Boston, MA USA.
   [Mahajan, Shauna L.] WWF, Global Sci, 1250 24th St NW, Washington, DC 20037 USA.
   [Mangubhai, Sangeeta] Talanoa Consulting, 42 Knollys St, Suva, Fiji.
   [Martin, Philip A.] Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Edificio Sede 1,Planta 1,Parque Cient UPV EHU,Barr, Leioa 48940, Bizkaia, Spain.
   [Medard, Modesta] WWF Tanzania, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
   [Nicolas, Tanguy] Fauna & Flora Int, David Attenborough Bldg,Pembroke St, Cambridge CB2 3QZ, England.
   [Nicolau, Denise K.] Minist Hlth Mozambique, Maputo, Mozambique.
   [Nyaega, Lilian M.] Wetlands Int Eastern Africa, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Nicolau, Denise K.; Paiz, Yves] Nat Conservancy Mexico, Insurgentes Sur 863,Oficina 720, Cdmx, Mexico.
   [Quarto, Alfredo] Mangrove Act Project, POB 1854, Port Angeles, WA 98362 USA.
   [Ralifo, Alfred I.; Robaigau, Apolosa] World Wide Fund Nat WWF, Suva, Fiji.
   [Randriamanantena, O. Dannick; Rasolozaka, Tojo M.; Ravelojaona, Danny K.] WWF Madagascar, Lot Pres 2 M 85 Ter Antsakaviro, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar.
   [Rodriguez-Rodriguez, Alexandra] Deakin Univ, Deakin Marine Res & Innovat Ctr, Sch Life & Environm Sci, Burwood Campus, Burwood, Vic 3125, Australia.
   [Rodriguez-Rodriguez, Alexandra] Inst Invest Marinas & Costeras Jose Benito Vives d, AA-1016 Santa Marta, Colombia.
   [Rog, Stefanie M.] Fauna & Flora, POB 1380,19 St 360, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
   [Rovai, Andre S.] Louisiana State Univ, Dept Oceanog & Coastal Sci, Baton Rouge, LA 70808 USA.
   [Saunders, Megan I.] Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org, Environm, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
   [Song, Det] FHI360, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
   [Teutli-Hernandez, Claudia] Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, UNAM Campus, Mexico City, Mexico.
   [Thornton, Hazel] UN Environm Programme World Conservat Monitoring C, 219 Huntingdon Rd, Cambridge CB3 0DL, England.
   [Tuiwawa, Senilolia] Conservat Int Fiji Program, 375 Waimanu Rd, Suva, Fiji.
   [Ulumuddin, Yaya Ihya] Natl Res & Innovat Agcy RCO BRIN, Res Ctr Oceanog, Jalan Pasir Putih 1, Jakarta 14430, Indonesia.
   [Videira, Eduardo J. S.] WWF Mozambique, Rua Faralay 108, Maputo, Mozambique.
   [White, Thomas B.] Univ Oxford, Dept Biol, Mansfield Rd, Oxford OX1 3SZ, England.
   [White, Thomas B.] Univ Oxford, Leverhulme Ctr Nat Recovery, Mansfield Rd, Oxford OX1 3SZ, England.
   [Wodehouse, Dominic C. J.] Mangrove Act Project, 1455 NW Leary Way,Suite 400, Seattle, WA 98107 USA.
   [Wosu, Adaoma] Landscapes & Livelihoods Grp, 3-2 1 Royston Terrace, Edinburgh EH3 5QU, Midlothian, Scotland.
   [Yamashita, Hiromi] Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific Univ, 1-1 Jumonji Baru, Beppu, Oita 8748577, Japan.
   [Zimmer, Martin] Leibniz Ctr Trop Marine Res, ZMT, Fahrenheitstr 6, D-28359 Bremen, Germany.
   [Acosta-Velazquez, Joanna] Lab Humedales Costeros Aura Manglares & Costas SC, Circuito Azul Cielo 1825, Mazatlan 82112, Sinaloa, Mexico.
   [Eger, Aaron M.] Kelp Forest Alliance, Sydney, NSW 2034, Australia.
   [Hoyos-Santillan, Jorge] Smithsonian Trop Res Inst, Apartado 0843-03092, Panama City, Panama.
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   [Saunders, Megan I.] Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org CSIRO Environm, Hobart, Tas, Australia.
   [Song, Det] Wild Earth Allies, 2 Wisconsin Circle,Suite 900, Chevy Chase, MD 20815 USA.
C3 National University of Singapore; National University of Singapore;
   University of Cambridge; World Wildlife Fund; Universidad Autonoma del
   Carmen; Griffith University; Griffith University - Gold Coast Campus;
   Universidade Federal da Bahia; University of London Courtauld Institute
   of Art; Universidade Federal do Espirito Santo; Smithsonian Institution;
   Smithsonian Environmental Research Center; Smithsonian Institution;
   Universite Libre de Bruxelles; Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Universite
   Libre de Bruxelles; Zoological Society of London; University of Exeter;
   University of New South Wales Sydney; Tulane University; United Nations
   Environment Programme; University of Queensland; CINVESTAV - Centro de
   Investigacion y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politecnico
   Nacional; Conservation International; Universidad de Magallanes;
   Annamalai University; University of Nairobi; Nature Conservancy; World
   Wildlife Fund; Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3); World Wildlife
   Fund; Deakin University; Louisiana State University System; Louisiana
   State University; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO); Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico; National
   Research & Innovation Agency of Indonesia (BRIN); University of Oxford;
   University of Oxford; Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University; Leibniz
   Association; Leibniz Zentrum fur Marine Tropenforschung (ZMT);
   Smithsonian Institution; Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute; World
   Wildlife Fund; Basque Foundation for Science; United States Department
   of Defense; United States Army; U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; U.S. Army
   Engineer Research & Development Center (ERDC); Commonwealth Scientific &
   Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Worthington, TA (corresponding author), Univ Cambridge, Dept Zool, Conservat Sci Grp, David Attenborough Bldg, Cambridge CB2 3QZ, England.
EM taw52@cam.ac.uk
RI Hoyos, Jorge/F-3529-2019; Duncan, Clare/V-6005-2019; Bernardino,
   Angelo/C-6921-2012; Taylor, Nigel/AFO-6772-2022; Hagger,
   Valerie/G-1773-2014; Cadier, Charles/ABE-2263-2021; Gomes, Luiz
   Eduardo/HJP-1253-2023; Dahdouh-Guebas, Farid/B-9154-2008
OI Barros, Francisco/0000-0002-3037-1991; DAHDOUH-GUEBAS,
   Farid/0000-0002-5906-8996
FU Climate and Land Use Alliance; National Audubon Society; Inter-American
   Development Bank; Department for Environment, Food Rural Affairs
   [PN-T1233]; UK Blue Carbon Fund; Australian Research Council Discovery
   Early Career Researcher Award [DE220100079]; Advance Queensland
   Indus-try Fellowship; Julius Career Award from CSIRO; Julius Career
   Award from CSIRO; Julius Career Award from CSIRO; European Commission
   [2019-1451]; European Commission; European Commission; Australian
   Research Council [DE220100079] Funding Source: Australian Research
   Council
FX We thank all those who attended the workshops, reviewed the framework,
   and conducted field trials of the tool. We acknowledge the funding
   support provided by Jida Bittner and the Climate and Land Use Alliance.
   We would like to thank SparkGeo for their contribution to the technical
   development of the Mangrove Restoration Tracker Tool. J.H.-S.
   acknowledges support from the National Audubon Society and the
   Inter-American Development Bank, which executes the project "Valuing,
   Protecting and Enhancing Coastal Natural Capital in Panama" (PN-T1233) ,
   funded by the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs, and the
   UK Blue Carbon Fund. M. Sievers was funded by an Australian Research
   Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (no. DE220100079) .
   M.F.A. was supported by an Advance Queensland Indus-try Fellowship.
   M.I.S. was supported by a Julius Career Award from CSIRO. F.D.-G. was
   supported by the European Commission-funded Erasmus Mundus Joint Master
   in Tropical Biodiversity and Ecosystems-TROPIMUNDO (2019-1451) .
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NR 61
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 8
U2 8
PU CELL PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA 50 HAMPSHIRE ST, FLOOR 5, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02139 USA
SN 2590-3330
EI 2590-3322
J9 ONE EARTH
JI One Earth
PD NOV 15
PY 2024
VL 7
IS 11
DI 10.1016/j.oneear.2024.09.004
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA N9K8N
UT WOS:001367448100001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Borge-Leandro, D
   Morera-Delgado, AA
AF Borge-Leandro, David
   Morera-Delgado, Alejandro Antonio
TI Control of debris flow through dynamic barriers in the tropic, as a
   means of adaptation to climate change, Burío stream in Aserrí
SO TECNOLOGIA EN MARCHA
LA Spanish
DT Article
DE Debris flow; sediment; dynamic barrier; peak flow; suspended solids;
   return period; IPCC; climate change
AB As of 2020 in Costa Rica only exist therr dynamic barriers installed, two of them are in Quebrada Burio. Climate change is a determining factor in the face of the increase of rainfall intensities. An increase of 20% is expected for the year 2100, so this data is taken into account to perform all the hydrological calculations of the case study. At the same time, the implementation of Iber 2.5.1 model is totally necessary to understand the hydrodynamic behavior of the stream and also the behavior of its suspended sediments. Data such as hydrographs, elevations obtained through orthophotos of drone flights, and sediment concentration are the pillars to generate a model for this case. The speed, height of the water and vector behavior are the results obtained from the hydrodynamic model generated by Iber 2.5.1. As well as the behavior of sediments.
C1 [Borge-Leandro, David] Univ Fidelitas Costa Rica, San Pedro, Santa Marta, Costa Rica.
   [Morera-Delgado, Alejandro Antonio] Univ Fidelitas, San Pedro, Santa Marta, Costa Rica.
RP Borge-Leandro, D (corresponding author), Univ Fidelitas Costa Rica, San Pedro, Santa Marta, Costa Rica.
EM dborge80034@ufide.ac.cr; alemoreradelgado@gmail.com
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NR 23
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU INST TECNOLOGICO COSTA RICA
PI CARTAGO
PA APDO 159, CARTAGO, 7050, COSTA RICA
SN 0379-3982
EI 2215-3241
J9 TECNOL MARCHA
JI Tecnol. Marcha
PD APR-JUN
PY 2023
VL 36
IS 2
DI 10.18845/tm.v36i2.5844
PG 170
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA SN1H5
UT WOS:001235034900003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kapsenberg, L
   Bitter, MC
   Miglioli, A
   Aparicio-Estalella, C
   Pelejero, C
   Gattuso, JP
   Dumollard, R
AF Kapsenberg, Lydia
   Bitter, Mark C.
   Miglioli, Angelica
   Aparicio-Estalella, Claudia
   Pelejero, Carles
   Gattuso, Jean-Pierre
   Dumollard, Remi
TI Molecular basis of ocean acidification sensitivity and adaptation in
   <i>Mytilus galloprovincialis</i>
SO ISCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
ID TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS; EXPRESSION ANALYSIS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; RNA-SEQ;
   GENE; STRESS; EVOLUTIONARY; PROTEIN; RUNX; CALCIFICATION
AB Predicting the potential for species adaption to climate change is challenged by the need to identify the physiological mechanisms that underpin species vulnerability. Here, we investigated the sensitivity to ocean acidification in marine mussels during early development, and specifically the trochophore stage. Using RNA and DNA sequencing and in situ RNA hybridization, we identified developmental processes associated with abnormal development and rapid adaptation to low pH. Trochophores exposed to low pH seawater exhibited 43 differentially expressed genes. Gene annotation and in situ hybridization of differentially expressed genes point to pH sensitivity of (1) shell field development and (2) cellular stress response. Five genes within these two processes exhibited shifts in allele frequencies indicative of a potential for rapid adaptation. This case study contributes direct evidence that protecting species' existing genetic diversity is a critical management action to facilitate species resilience to climate change.
C1 [Kapsenberg, Lydia; Aparicio-Estalella, Claudia; Pelejero, Carles] Inst Marine Sci CSIC, Dept Marine Biol & Oceanog, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Kapsenberg, Lydia; Gattuso, Jean-Pierre] Sorbonne Univ, CNRS, Lab Oceanog Villefranche, Inst La Mer Villefranche IMEV, 181 Chemin Lazaret, F-06230 Villefranche Sur Mer, France.
   [Bitter, Mark C.] Stanford Univ, Dept Biol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   [Bitter, Mark C.] Univ Chicago, Dept Ecol & Evolut, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
   [Miglioli, Angelica; Dumollard, Remi] Sorbonne Univ, CNRS, Inst Mer, UMR7009,Lab Biol Dev, F-06230 Villefranche Sur Mer, France.
   [Miglioli, Angelica] Univ Genoa, Dipartimento Sci Terra Ambiente & Vita DISTAV, Corso Europa 26, I-16132 Genoa, Italy.
   [Aparicio-Estalella, Claudia] Univ Aberdeen, Lighthouse Field Stn, Sch Biol Sci, Aberdeen, Scotland.
   [Pelejero, Carles] Inst Catalana Recerca & Estudis Avancats ICREA, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Gattuso, Jean-Pierre] Sci Po, Inst Sustainable Dev & Int Relat, 27 Rue St Guillaume, F-75007 Paris, France.
C3 Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC); CSIC - Centro
   Mediterraneo de Investigaciones Marinas y Ambientales (CMIMA); CSIC -
   Instituto de Ciencias del Mar (ICM); Sorbonne Universite; Centre
   National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Stanford University;
   University of Chicago; Sorbonne Universite; Centre National de la
   Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - National Institute for Biology
   (INSB); University of Genoa; University of Aberdeen; ICREA; Institut
   d'Etudes Politiques Paris (Sciences Po)
RP Bitter, MC (corresponding author), Stanford Univ, Dept Biol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.; Bitter, MC (corresponding author), Univ Chicago, Dept Ecol & Evolut, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
EM mcbitter@stanford.edu
RI Gattuso, Jean-Pierre/AAG-8643-2019; Pelejero, Carles/AAF-4550-2019;
   Miglioli, Angelica/JBJ-1000-2023
OI Gattuso, Jean-Pierre/0000-0002-4533-4114; Pelejero,
   Carles/0000-0002-7763-7769; dumollard, remi/0000-0002-8444-0630;
   Aparicio Estalella, Claudia/0000-0002-2292-7144; Bitter,
   Mark/0000-0001-7607-2375
FU US National Science Foundation (NSF) [OCE-1521597]; European Commission
   [747637]; University of Chicago's France and Chicago Collaborating in
   the Sciences program; US Department of Education [200A150101]; NSF
   Graduate Research Fellowship [1000198423]; Agence National de la
   Recherche grant [ANR-14-OHRI-0009-01]; Agence Nationale de la Recherche
   (ANR) [ANR-14-OHRI-0009] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la
   Recherche (ANR); Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [747637] Funding Source:
   Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)
FX This research was funded by the US National Science Foundation (NSF;
   OCE-1521597 to L.K.) and European Commission Horizon 2020 Marie
   Sklodowska-Curie Action (No. 747637 to L.K.). Additionally, the DNA
   sequencing data used in this study, and originally published by Bitter
   et al. (2019), were generated, in part, through support by the
   University of Chicago's France and Chicago Collaborating in the Sciences
   program. M.C.B. was supported by US Department of Education (Grant No.
   200A150101) and NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (No. 1000198423). R.D.
   and A.M. were supported by an Agence National de la Recherche grant
   (Marine-EmbryoTox, N~ : ANR-14-OHRI-0009-01, France), and A.M. was
   supported by the PhD program in Marine Sciences, DISTAV, at the
   University of Genoa.
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NR 71
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 12
PU CELL PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA 50 HAMPSHIRE ST, FLOOR 5, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02139 USA
EI 2589-0042
J9 ISCIENCE
JI iScience
PD AUG 19
PY 2022
VL 25
IS 8
AR 104677
DI 10.1016/j.isci.2022.104677
EA JUL 2022
PG 17
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 3A9ZR
UT WOS:000827610700008
PM 35847553
OA Green Published, Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hällfors, MH
   Pöyry, J
   Heliölä, J
   Kohonen, I
   Kuussaari, M
   Leinonen, R
   Schmucki, R
   Sihvonen, P
   Saastamoinen, M
AF Hallfors, Maria H.
   Poyry, Juha
   Heliola, Janne
   Kohonen, Ilmari
   Kuussaari, Mikko
   Leinonen, Reima
   Schmucki, Reto
   Sihvonen, Pasi
   Saastamoinen, Marjo
TI Combining range and phenology shifts offers a winning strategy for
   boreal Lepidoptera
SO ECOLOGY LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change strategies; distribution; global change; life-history
   events; range shifts
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; PHYLOGENETIC CONSERVATISM; ABUNDANCE INDEX; BUTTERFLIES;
   RESPONSES; BIRDS; MARGINS; POPULATIONS; INCREASES; MISMATCH
AB Species can adapt to climate change by adjusting in situ or by dispersing to new areas, and these strategies may complement or enhance each other. Here, we investigate temporal shifts in phenology and spatial shifts in northern range boundaries for 289 Lepidoptera species by using long-term data sampled over two decades. While 40% of the species neither advanced phenology nor moved northward, nearly half (45%) used one of the two strategies. The strongest positive population trends were observed for the minority of species (15%) that both advanced flight phenology and shifted their northern range boundaries northward. We show that, for boreal Lepidoptera, a combination of phenology and range shifts is the most viable strategy under a changing climate. Effectively, this may divide species into winners and losers based on their propensity to capitalize on this combination, with potentially large consequences on future community composition.
C1 [Hallfors, Maria H.; Saastamoinen, Marjo] Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Res Ctr Environm Change, Organismal & Evolutionary Biol Res Programme, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Hallfors, Maria H.; Saastamoinen, Marjo] Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Life Hist Evolut Res Grp, Organismal & Evolutionary Biol Res Programme, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Poyry, Juha; Heliola, Janne; Kuussaari, Mikko] Finnish Environm Inst SYKE, Biodivers Ctr, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Kohonen, Ilmari; Sihvonen, Pasi] Univ Helsinki, Finnish Museum Nat Hist, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Leinonen, Reima] Kainuu Ctr Econ Dev Transport & Environm, Kajaani, Finland.
   [Schmucki, Reto] UK Ctr Ecol & Hydrol, Wallingford, Oxon, England.
   [Saastamoinen, Marjo] Univ Helsinki, Helsinki Inst Life Sci, Helsinki, Finland.
C3 University of Helsinki; University of Helsinki; Finnish Environment
   Institute; University of Helsinki; UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
   (UKCEH); University of Helsinki
RP Hällfors, MH (corresponding author), Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, POB 65,Bioctr 3,Viikinkaari 1, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
EM maria.hallfors@helsinki.fi
RI Kuussaari, Mikko/Y-4070-2019; Saastamoinen, Marjo/F-6576-2012; Poyry,
   Juha/B-7487-2013; Schmucki, Reto/A-6312-2012
OI Sihvonen, Pasi/0000-0003-2237-9325; Saastamoinen,
   Marjo/0000-0001-7009-2527; Poyry, Juha/0000-0002-5548-1046; Schmucki,
   Reto/0000-0003-3064-7553; Hallfors, Maria H/0000-0002-6890-8942;
   Kuussaari, Mikko/0000-0003-0264-9316
FU Jane ja Aatos Erkon Saatio; Ministry of the Environment, Finland
FX Jane ja Aatos Erkon Saatio; Ministry of the Environment, Finland
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NR 84
TC 45
Z9 50
U1 3
U2 32
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1461-023X
EI 1461-0248
J9 ECOL LETT
JI Ecol. Lett.
PD AUG
PY 2021
VL 24
IS 8
BP 1619
EP 1632
DI 10.1111/ele.13774
EA JUN 2021
PG 14
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TG9AT
UT WOS:000658471800001
PM 34101328
OA Green Submitted, hybrid, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alhama, I
   García-Ros, G
   Alhama, F
AF Alhama, I
   Garcia-Ros, G.
   Alhama, F.
TI Integrated water resources management in the basin of the Segura river
   (southeast Spain); an example of adaptation to drought periods
SO ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Drought management; Groundwater modeling; Environmental impact
ID AQUIFER
AB The integrated management of the Sinclinal de Calasparra aquifer and surface waters of the Segura river during periods of drought represents an example of sectoral implementation of the European regulatory framework in terms of adaptation to climate change, thanks to the continued effort of the resource management agency, Confederacion Hidrografica del Segura, over almost 30 years of operation. The effective network of piezometric control and gauging stations distributed throughout the basin has made it possible to meet groundwater demand in situations of declared drought in a predominantly agricultural region, while monitoring the effects on the environment of resource abstraction. The agency has promoted the use of numerical models of aquifer behavior as a management tool, as presented in this work, which has served to anticipate the effects of the abstractions planned for the period 2015-2021 on the Gorgoton spring and on the flow of the Segura river as it passes through the aquifer.
C1 [Alhama, I; Garcia-Ros, G.] Tech Univ Cartagena, Civil Engn Dept, Paseo Alfonso XIII 52, Cartagena 30203, Spain.
   [Alhama, F.] Tech Univ Cartagena, Appl Phys Dept, Paseo Alfonso XIII 48, Cartagena 30203, Spain.
C3 Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena; Universidad Politecnica de
   Cartagena
RP Alhama, I (corresponding author), Tech Univ Cartagena, Civil Engn Dept, Paseo Alfonso XIII 52, Cartagena 30203, Spain.
EM ivan.alhama@upct.es; gonzalo.garcia@upct.es; paco.alhama@upct.es
RI García-Ros, Gonzalo/AFL-9644-2022
OI Garcia-Ros, Gonzalo/0000-0002-2837-7358; Alhama Manteca,
   Ivan/0000-0002-3284-2232
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NR 20
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 10
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 1866-6280
EI 1866-6299
J9 ENVIRON EARTH SCI
JI Environ. Earth Sci.
PD JAN
PY 2020
VL 79
IS 1
AR 7
DI 10.1007/s12665-019-8729-7
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Water Resources
GA KJ1VO
UT WOS:000511846500007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Cravero, J
   Feraille, A
   Versini, PA
   Caron, JF
   Tchiguirinskaia, I
   Baverel, O
AF Cravero, J.
   Feraille, A.
   Versini, P-A
   Caron, J-F
   Tchiguirinskaia, I
   Baverel, O.
BE Passer, A
   Lutzkendorf, T
   Habert, G
   KrompKolb, H
   Monsberger, M
TI Sustainable design of vegetated structures: Building freshness
SO SUSTAINABLE BUILT ENVIRONMENT D-A-CH CONFERENCE 2019 (SBE19 GRAZ)
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Sustainable Built Environment D-A-CH Conference (SBE)
CY SEP 11-14, 2019
CL Graz Univ Technol, Graz, AUSTRIA
SP Wienerberger, Inst Bauen & Umwelt e V, GRASPOINTER, BAUMASSIV, MARIENHUTTE, Klima Energie Fonds, BECKHOFF, VinylPlus, Schwabisch Hall Stiftung, OeaD, Fed Miist Republ Austria, Sustainabil & Tourism, Klimaaktiv, Fed Miist Republ Austria, Transport Innovat & Technol, Fed Off Building & Reg Planning, Fed Inst Res Building Urban Affairs Spatial Dev, FFG, Stadt Graz, Land Steiermark
HO Graz Univ Technol
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-FACTORS; HEAT; COOL
AB City revegetation strategies seem appealing to mitigate urban heat island effects through shading and transpirational cooling. Moreover, other potential benefits that may derive, e.g. biodiversity enhancement, the reduction in buildings energy consumption, stormwater management, acoustic insulation or air purification, earned them the designation 'no-regrets approaches' for adapting to climate change. However, the lack of understanding and quantification of green infrastructures' environmental impacts prevents urban planning policies to be consistent and to turn attractive initiatives to effective implementations. The monitoring of existing green infrastructures is required to evaluate their cooling effect. For this purpose, an elastic gridshell in composite materials has been designed as a support for climbing plants at Ecole des Ponts ParisTech (Champs-sur-Marne, France). The life cycle assessment of the vegetated structure is performed in order to develop sustainable design strategies. Based on an energy balance approach, the collected thermo-hydric data can be used to determine which mechanisms are the most suitable for urban vegetation to enhance outdoor thermal comfort.
C1 [Cravero, J.; Versini, P-A; Tchiguirinskaia, I] UPE, Ecole Ponts, HM&Co, Champs Sur Marne, France.
   [Cravero, J.; Feraille, A.; Caron, J-F; Baverel, O.] UPE, CNRS, IFSTTAR, Navier,UMR 8205,Ecole Ponts, Champs Sur Marne, France.
C3 Institut Polytechnique de Paris; Ecole des Ponts ParisTech; Institut
   Polytechnique de Paris; Ecole des Ponts ParisTech; Universite
   Gustave-Eiffel; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS);
   CNRS - Institute for Engineering & Systems Sciences (INSIS)
RP Cravero, J (corresponding author), UPE, Ecole Ponts, HM&Co, Champs Sur Marne, France.; Cravero, J (corresponding author), UPE, CNRS, IFSTTAR, Navier,UMR 8205,Ecole Ponts, Champs Sur Marne, France.
EM julien.cravero@enpc.fr
RI Cravero, Julien/LUZ-5800-2024; Tchiguirinskaia, Ioulia/JZM-0994-2024;
   caron, jean-francois/B-2981-2018
OI caron, jean-francois/0000-0001-8625-6784; Cravero,
   Julien/0000-0002-5508-7081
CR Afnor, 2014, 15804 NF EN
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NR 26
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 10
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2019
VL 323
AR 012021
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/323/1/012021
PG 9
WC Architecture; Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable
   Science & Technology; Engineering, Civil; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Architecture; Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology -
   Other Topics; Engineering; Public Administration
GA BP7IP
UT WOS:000562136800021
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Choi, JH
   Yoon, TH
   Kim, JS
   Moon, YI
AF Choi, Ji-Hyeok
   Yoon, Tae-Hyung
   Kim, Jong-Suk
   Moon, Young-Il
TI Dam Rehabilitation Assessment Using the Delphi-AHP Method for Adapting
   to Climate Change
SO JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Dam rehabilitation assessment; Delphi-analytic hierarchy
   process (AHP); Consistency analysis; South Korea
ID MULTICRITERIA DECISION-ANALYSIS; FLOOD
AB Extreme climate events are expected to become more severe or frequent under climate change projections, and these future changes continue to be an urgent concern for the aging water infrastructure in East Asia and Pacific countries. In this study, the authors suggest an approach to dam rehabilitation assessment to prepare for the complex dam safety and environmental issues caused by climate change and aging dam facilities in South Korea. The authors review the validity of each evaluation component and the appropriateness of all criteria through research into both domestic and foreign cases, literature review, and consultation with dam rehabilitation assessment experts. In addition, the authors propose quantitative evaluation indices and a comprehensive importance evaluation of dam rehabilitation using a survey-based Delphi-analytic hierarchy process (AHP) method, in accordance with the professional experience of panel participants. (c) 2017 American Society of Civil Engineers.
C1 [Choi, Ji-Hyeok; Yoon, Tae-Hyung] Univ Seoul, Dept Civil Engn, Seoul 02504, South Korea.
   [Kim, Jong-Suk] Wuhan Univ, State Key Lab Water Resources & Hydropower Engn S, Wuhan 430072, Hubei, Peoples R China.
   [Moon, Young-Il] Univ Seoul, Urban Flood Res Inst, Dept Civil Engn, Seoul 02504, South Korea.
C3 University of Seoul; Wuhan University; University of Seoul
RP Kim, JS (corresponding author), Wuhan Univ, State Key Lab Water Resources & Hydropower Engn S, Wuhan 430072, Hubei, Peoples R China.
EM jongsuk@whu.edu.cn
RI Kim, Jong-Suk/ABC-9255-2021
OI Kim, Jong-Suk/0000-0002-5274-5085
FU Korea Agency for Infrastructure Technology Advancement (KAIA) - Ministry
   of Land, Infrastructure, and Transport [17AWMP-B083066-04]
FX This work is supported by the Korea Agency for Infrastructure Technology
   Advancement (KAIA) grant funded by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure,
   and Transport (Grant 17AWMP-B083066-04).
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NR 28
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 1
U2 46
PU ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
PI RESTON
PA 1801 ALEXANDER BELL DR, RESTON, VA 20191-4400 USA
SN 0733-9496
EI 1943-5452
J9 J WATER RES PLAN MAN
JI J. Water Resour. Plan. Manage.-ASCE
PD FEB
PY 2018
VL 144
IS 2
AR 06017007
DI 10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0000877
PG 8
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA FQ3CH
UT WOS:000418233900016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Galderisi, A
   Mazzeo, G
   Pinto, F
AF Galderisi, Adriana
   Mazzeo, Giuseppe
   Pinto, Fulvia
BE Papa, R
   Fistola, R
TI Cities Dealing with Energy Issues and Climate-Related Impacts:
   Approaches, Strategies and Tools for a Sustainable Urban Development
SO SMART ENERGY IN THE SMART CITY: URBAN PLANNING FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
SE Green Energy and Technology
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID RESILIENCE; VULNERABILITY; RISK; ADAPTABILITY; CHALLENGES; SMART
AB In respect to the numerous environmental challenges that cities have to face in the next future, namely to energy issues and to the increasing impacts of climate change, this contribution aims at providing innovative approaches, strategies and tools for improving cities' response to climate-related issues. According to this aim, the first chapter focuses on the two concepts of vulnerability and resilience, both of them concerned with how systems react to internal and external pressures, highlighting the complementarities between a vulnerability and a resilience-based approach for promoting a sustainable, safe and less energy consuming urban development; then, focusing on current strategies addressing mitigation and adaptation to climate change, the main relationships among current strategies and spatial planning will be explored; finally, an innovative tool for the evaluation of spatial plans at local scale and of built-up areas, capable to assess the overall sustainability of cities' development paths in the face of climate change, will be presented.
C1 [Galderisi, Adriana] Univ Naples Federico II, DICEA, Naples, Italy.
   [Mazzeo, Giuseppe] CNR, ISSM, Naples, Italy.
   [Pinto, Fulvia] Politecn Milan, DASTU, Milan, Italy.
C3 University of Naples Federico II; Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche
   (CNR); Istituto di Studi Sulle Societa Del Mediterraneo (ISSM-CNR);
   Polytechnic University of Milan
RP Galderisi, A (corresponding author), Univ Naples Federico II, DICEA, Naples, Italy.
EM galderis@unina.it; gimazzeo@unina.it; fulvia.pinto@polimi.it
RI Galderisi, Adriana/M-7860-2019; Mazzeo, Giuseppe/AAW-3705-2020
OI GALDERISI, Adriana/0000-0003-0565-4313; Mazzeo,
   Giuseppe/0000-0001-6204-9940
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NR 35
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10013, UNITED STATES
SN 1865-3529
EI 1865-3537
BN 978-3-319-31157-9; 978-3-319-31155-5
J9 GREEN ENERGY TECHNOL
PY 2016
BP 199
EP 217
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-31157-9_11
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-31157-9
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Urban Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Urban Studies
GA BF8AW
UT WOS:000384678800012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ozgo, M
   Schilthuizen, M
AF Ozgo, Malgorzata
   Schilthuizen, Menno
TI Evolutionary change in Cepaea nemoralis shell colour over 43 years
SO GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; habitat change; Land snail; microevolution; natural
   history collections; polymorphism
ID POLYMORPHIC LAND SNAIL; MORPH-FREQUENCIES; GENE-FREQUENCY; CONTEMPORARY
   EVOLUTION; LONG-TERM; POPULATIONS; STABILITY; TEMPERATURE; RESPONSES;
   SELECTION
AB We compared shell colour forms in the land snail Cepaea nemoralis at 16 sites in a 7 x 8 km section of the Province of Groningen, the Netherlands, between 1967 and 2010. To do so, we used stored samples in a natural history collection and resampled the exact collection localities. We found that almost all populations had experienced considerable evolutionary change in various phenotypes, possibly due to population bottlenecks and habitat change after repeated land consolidation schemes in the area. More importantly, we found a consistent increase in yellow effectively unbanded snails at the expense of brown snails. This is one of the expected adaptations to climate change (this area of the Netherlands has warmed by 1.52.0 degrees C over the time period spanned by the two sampling years), and the first clear demonstration of this in C. nemoralis.
C1 [Schilthuizen, Menno] Netherlands Ctr Biodivers Nat, NL-2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands.
   [Ozgo, Malgorzata] Pomeranian Univ, Inst Biol, PL-76200 Slupsk, Poland.
   [Schilthuizen, Menno] Univ Groningen, Ctr Ecol & Evolutionary Studies, NL-9700 CC Groningen, Netherlands.
C3 Naturalis Biodiversity Center; Pomeranian Medical University; University
   of Groningen
RP Schilthuizen, M (corresponding author), Netherlands Ctr Biodivers Nat, POB 9517, NL-2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands.
EM menno.schilthuizen@ncbnaturalis.nl
RI Ozgo, Malgorzata/F-3150-2018; Schilthuizen, Menno/B-5156-2009
OI Ozgo, Malgorzata/0000-0002-9999-8450; Schilthuizen,
   Menno/0000-0001-6229-0347
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NR 45
TC 48
Z9 53
U1 1
U2 91
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1354-1013
EI 1365-2486
J9 GLOBAL CHANGE BIOL
JI Glob. Change Biol.
PD JAN
PY 2012
VL 18
IS 1
BP 74
EP 81
DI 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2011.02514.x
PG 8
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 869LG
UT WOS:000298598900007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Florenzio, N
   Guastella, G
   Magni, F
   Pareglio, S
   Musco, F
AF Florenzio, N.
   Guastella, G.
   Magni, F.
   Pareglio, S.
   Musco, F.
TI The role of urban planning in climate adaptation: an empirical analysis
   of UHI in European cities
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; urban planning; urban form; urban heat
   island; land use; remote sensing; sample selection
ID LAND-SURFACE TEMPERATURE; HEAT-ISLAND; MULTISENSOR DATA; FORM;
   CONFIGURATION; INDICATORS; DENSITY; PATTERN; IMPACT; ENERGY
AB This paper empirically analyses the relationship between urban form and Urban Heat Island (UHI) in a dataset of 523 European cities that matches remotely sensed land-use and surface temperature data. A UHI anomaly is defined as an uninterrupted streak of days where the temperature differential measured at 12.00 AM between the city core and its surroundings is higher than a given threshold. From this definition, three UHI indicators are obtained: mean intensity, mean duration of the event and occurrence rate. We study the influence of urban morphology on the UHI indictors with a Heckman model. A sample selection bias is detected for mean intensity and mean duration. The estimation results also show that some urban morphological features have a mitigating effect, while some others play a role at the adaptation level.
C1 [Florenzio, N.; Guastella, G.; Pareglio, S.] Fdn Eni Enrico Mattei, Milan, Italy.
   [Guastella, G.; Pareglio, S.] Univ Cattolica Sacro Cuore, Dept Math & Phys, Brescia, Italy.
   [Magni, F.; Musco, F.] IUAV Univ, Dept Design & Planning Complex Environm, Venice, Italy.
C3 Fondazione Mattei; Catholic University of the Sacred Heart; IUAV
   University Venice
RP Florenzio, N (corresponding author), Fdn Eni Enrico Mattei, Milan, Italy.
EM nicolo.florenzio@feem.it
RI Pareglio, Stefano/B-5283-2012; Magni, Filippo/AAL-3262-2021; Guastella,
   Gianni/Q-6653-2016
OI Magni, Filippo/0000-0002-1399-1080; Florenzio,
   Nicolo/0000-0002-0249-445X; Guastella, Gianni/0000-0002-1333-4718
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NR 61
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 4
U2 20
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-0568
EI 1360-0559
J9 J ENVIRON PLANN MAN
JI J. Environ. Plan. Manag.
PD AUG 24
PY 2023
VL 66
IS 10
BP 2071
EP 2089
DI 10.1080/09640568.2022.2061334
EA APR 2022
PG 19
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA I4XM7
UT WOS:000800505700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Farber, DA
AF Farber, Daniel A.
TI The Challenge of Climate Change Adaptation: Learning from National
   Planning Efforts in Britain, China, and the USA
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
LA English
DT Article
AB This article examines projected climate impacts and national planning efforts in three major countries: the USA, UK and China. The three countries are in varying stages of planning for climate adaptation. Planning frameworks in all three countries suffer from a lack of specificity and urgency. To address this situation, the article recommends two measures. The first is the use of scenario planning, including consideration of high-impact scenarios, to address the downside risks of climate change. Planning in the UK has begun to make use of scenario analysis, although in a less comprehensive manner, while the USA had an earlier experiment in the use of the worst-case scenario as a planning tool. The second recommendation is to identify and prioritise impacts on vulnerable populations such as the elderly, the poor and coastal communities. This recommendation has roots in the US planning proposals, but also resonates with international human rights law.
C1 Univ Calif Berkeley, Energy & Resources Grp, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley
RP Farber, DA (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Energy & Resources Grp, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
EM dfarber@law.berkeley.edu
OI FARBER, Daniel/0000-0002-9885-8958
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NR 63
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 17
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0952-8873
EI 1464-374X
J9 J ENVIRON LAW
JI J. Environ. Law
PY 2011
VL 23
IS 3
BP 359
EP 382
DI 10.1093/jel/eqr015
PG 24
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Law; Multidisciplinary
   Sciences
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Government & Law; Science & Technology
   - Other Topics
GA 844JR
UT WOS:000296744000001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wardekker, A
AF Wardekker, Arjan
TI Contrasting the framing of urban climate resilience
SO SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban resilience; Framing; Climate change adaptation; Science-policy
   interfaces; Governance
ID DISASTER RISK REDUCTION; NEW-YORK-CITY; COMMUNITY RESILIENCE; CHANGE
   ADAPTATION; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; POLICY; PRINCIPLES; STRATEGIES;
   SCIENCE; CITIES
AB Cities worldwide face climate change and other complex challenges and strive to become more resilient to the shocks and stresses that these bring. The notion of urban (climate) resilience has become highly popular in both research and practice. However, the concept is inherently malleable; it can be framed in different ways, emphasising different problems, causes, moral judgements, and solutions. This review explores contrasting ways of framing urban climate resilience and their potential consequences. It identifies four typical framings: Urban Shock-Proofing (short-term & system focus), Resilience Planning (long-term & system focus), Community Disaster Resilience (short-term & community focus), and Resilient Community Development (long-term & community focus). These framings lead to different approaches to urban resilience and climate adaptation in research, science-policy-society interactions, governance, and practical resilience-building. They also offer different synergies with wider sustainability efforts, including the SDGs. Resilience Planning is widely represented in urban climate adaptation research. However, Resilient Community Development, dealing with community self-determination, equity, and deeper long-term socio-political determinants of vulnerability, is currently underdeveloped. Expansion of current scientific and institutional toolboxes is needed to support and build community-based adaptive and transformative capacities. Explicit reflection on framing is important to facilitate collaboration among actors and across disciplinary and departmental siloes.
C1 [Wardekker, Arjan] Univ Bergen, Ctr Study Sci & Humanities, POB 7805, N-5020 Bergen, Norway.
C3 University of Bergen
RP Wardekker, A (corresponding author), Univ Bergen, Ctr Study Sci & Humanities, POB 7805, N-5020 Bergen, Norway.
EM Arjan.Wardekker@uib.no
RI Wardekker, Arjan/U-8500-2019
OI Wardekker, Arjan/0000-0001-7974-4835
FU Belmont Forum project SeMPER-Arctic (Norwegian Research Council)
   [312938]; European Research Council (ERC) [312938] Funding Source:
   European Research Council (ERC)
FX The author was partly funded through Belmont Forum project SeMPER-Arctic
   (Norwegian Research Council Grant Agreement 312938). The funding source
   had no involvement in decisions regarding the research, writing or
   submitting this article for publication.
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NR 164
TC 43
Z9 44
U1 24
U2 91
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2210-6707
EI 2210-6715
J9 SUSTAIN CITIES SOC
JI Sust. Cities Soc.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 75
AR 103258
DI 10.1016/j.scs.2021.103258
EA SEP 2021
PG 13
WC Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Energy & Fuels
GA XD3AW
UT WOS:000722582900003
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Colombo, AF
   Byer, PH
AF Colombo, Andrew F.
   Byer, Philip H.
TI Adaptation, flexibility and project decision-making with climate change
   uncertainties
SO IMPACT ASSESSMENT AND PROJECT APPRAISAL
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; flexibility; climate change; decision-making; project
   evaluation; uncertainty
ID OPTIONS
AB Project planning in the future must directly address both climate change and uncertainties about it. This paper presents the use of classical decision criteria, such as maximin and minimax regret, and approaches for adapting to climate change given the uncertainties. Adaptation strategies can help reduce the effects of uncertainties by allowing for adjustments in designs as the future climate evolves, although at a cost for such future flexibility. Adding such options and evaluating them against other design options using the decision criteria can provide valuable information to decision-makers and other stakeholders during project planning. A hypothetical example of a hydroelectric project illustrates the use of these approaches.
C1 [Colombo, Andrew F.; Byer, Philip H.] Univ Toronto, Dept Civil Engn, Toronto, ON M5S 1A4, Canada.
   [Colombo, Andrew F.] Natl Res Council Canada, Ottawa, ON K1A 0R6, Canada.
C3 University of Toronto; National Research Council Canada
RP Byer, PH (corresponding author), Univ Toronto, Dept Civil Engn, Toronto, ON M5S 1A4, Canada.
EM byer@ecf.utoronto.ca
FU Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency's Research and Development
   Program
FX The paper is based on a report by the authors prepared with the
   financial support of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency's
   Research and Development Program. The authors gratefully acknowledge the
   Agency for this support. The views and conclusions expressed herein are
   those of the authors and do not represent the views of CEAA or the
   Government of Canada. We also thank two anonymous reviewers for their
   useful suggestions.
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NR 30
TC 6
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 4
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1461-5517
EI 1471-5465
J9 IMPACT ASSESS PROJ A
JI Impact Assess. Proj. Apprais.
PY 2012
VL 30
IS 4
BP 229
EP 241
DI 10.1080/14615517.2012.731189
PG 13
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA VI5PW
UT WOS:000495582100002
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Key, IB
   Smith, AC
   Turner, B
   Chausson, A
   Girardin, CAJ
   Macgillivray, M
   Seddon, N
AF Key, Isabel B.
   Smith, Alison C.
   Turner, Beth
   Chausson, Alexandre
   Girardin, Cecile A. J.
   Macgillivray, Megan
   Seddon, Nathalie
TI Biodiversity outcomes of nature-based solutions for climate change
   adaptation: Characterising the evidence base
SO FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE nature-based solutions; ecosystem-based adaptation; ecosystem health;
   climate change adaptation; biodiversity; biodiversity conservation;
   metrics
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; GENETIC DIVERSITY; FOREST; CONSERVATION;
   RESTORATION; AREAS; METAANALYSIS; POPULATIONS; RESILIENCE; VEGETATION
AB Nature-based solutions (NbS) are increasingly recognised for their potential to address both the climate and biodiversity crises. Both these outcomes rely on the capacity of NbS to support and enhance the health of an ecosystem: its biodiversity, the condition of its abiotic and biotic elements, and its capacity to continue to function despite environmental change. However, while understanding of ecosystem health outcomes of NbS for climate change mitigation has developed in recent years, the outcomes of those implemented for adaptation remain poorly understood. To address this, we systematically reviewed the outcomes of 109 nature-based interventions for climate change adaptation using 33 indicators of ecosystem health across eight broad categories (e.g., diversity, biomass, ecosystem composition). We showed that 88% of interventions with reported positive outcomes for climate change adaptation also reported benefits for ecosystem health. We also showed that interventions were associated with a 67% average increase in species richness. All eight studies that reported benefits for both climate change mitigation and adaptation also supported ecosystem health, leading to a "triple win. " However, there were also trade-offs, mainly for forest management and creation of novel ecosystems such as monoculture plantations of non-native species. Our review highlights two key limitations in our understanding of the outcomes of NbS for ecosystem health. First, a limited selection of metrics are used and these rarely include key aspects such as functional diversity and habitat connectivity. Second, taxonomic coverage is limited: 50% of interventions only had evidence for effects on plants, and 57% of outcomes did not distinguish between native and non-native species. We make suggestions of how to improve assessments of the ecosystem health outcomes of NbS, as well as policy recommendations to enable the upscaling of NbS that support flourishing and resilient ecosystems, and are effective in addressing both climate and biodiversity goals.
C1 [Key, Isabel B.; Smith, Alison C.; Turner, Beth; Chausson, Alexandre; Girardin, Cecile A. J.; Macgillivray, Megan; Seddon, Nathalie] Univ Oxford, Dept Biol, Nat Based Solut Initiat, Oxford, England.
   [Key, Isabel B.] Univ Edinburgh, Sch Geosci, Changing Oceans Res Grp, Edinburgh, Scotland.
   [Smith, Alison C.; Girardin, Cecile A. J.] Univ Oxford, Environm Change Inst, Sch Geog & Environm, Oxford, England.
   [Turner, Beth] Univ Quebec Montreal, Ctr Etud Foret, Dept Sci Biol, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
C3 University of Oxford; University of Edinburgh; University of Oxford;
   University of Quebec; University of Quebec Montreal
RP Seddon, N (corresponding author), Univ Oxford, Dept Biol, Nat Based Solut Initiat, Oxford, England.
EM nathalie.seddon@biology.ox.ac.uk
RI ; Smith, Alison/P-3326-2019
OI Key, Isabel/0000-0002-3200-2399; Smith, Alison/0000-0003-2649-2202
FU Natural Environmental Research Council Knowledge Exchange Fellowship;
   Waterloo Foundation [NE/R002649/1]; University of Oxford (Oxford Martin
   School) [2263-3954]
FX This study was supported by a Natural Environmental Research Council
   Knowledge Exchange Fellowship to NS (NE/R002649/1), with additional
   funding from the Waterloo Foundation (2263-3954) and the University of
   Oxford (Oxford Martin School).
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NR 129
TC 17
Z9 18
U1 8
U2 80
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-665X
J9 FRONT ENV SCI-SWITZ
JI Front. Environ. Sci.
PD OCT 11
PY 2022
VL 10
AR 905767
DI 10.3389/fenvs.2022.905767
PG 29
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 5T9YV
UT WOS:000876213000001
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Russo, A
AF Russo, Alessio
TI Transforming contemporary public urban spaces with planting design.
   Shifting from monocultural planting blocks to naturalistic plant
   communities
SO RI VISTA-RICERCHE PER LA PROGETTAZIONE DEL PAESAGGIO
LA English
DT Article
DE Landscape architecture; Designed plant communities; Naturalistic
   planting; Resilient landscapes; Urban regeneration
AB The field of landscape architecture is currently undergoing a notable transformation in planting design styles, driven by the imperative to create resilient and sustainable landscapes capable of adapting to climate change. New approaches to planting design have become a fundamental element in the regeneration of urban spaces, as evidenced by prominent projects such as the High Line in New York and the Lurie Garden in Chicago. To investigate this phenomenon, this paper conducts a review of the literature, aiming to analyse the historical evolution of planting styles. Furthermore, it presents a series of case studies from the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Russia, highlighting the positive impact of designed plant communities on urban landscapes. Drawing upon the findings from the literature review and case studies, this paper concludes by discussing future directions and current issues in planting design.
C1 [Russo, Alessio] Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Architecture & Built Environm, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
C3 Queensland University of Technology (QUT)
RP Russo, A (corresponding author), Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Architecture & Built Environm, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
EM alessio.russo@qut.edu.au
RI Russo, Alessio/M-6352-2016
OI Russo, Alessio/0000-0002-0073-7243
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NR 44
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 8
U2 9
PU FIRENZE UNIV PRESS
PI FIRENZE
PA JOURNALS DIVISION, BORGO ALBIZI, 28, FIRENZE, 50122, ITALY
SN 1724-6768
J9 RI VISTA
JI Ri Vista
PY 2023
IS 2
BP 110
EP 125
DI 10.36253/rv-14888
PG 16
WC Architecture
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Architecture
GA TZ2V5
UT WOS:001245024300009
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Istok, I
   Sedlar, T
   Oreskovic, G
   Jambrekovic, B
AF Istok, Iva
   Sedlar, Tomislav
   Oreskovic, Gordana
   Jambrekovic, Branimir
BE Nemeth, R
   Hansmann, C
   Rademacher, P
   Bak, M
   Bader, M
TI Effect of ring width on cell wall area in Populus alba L. juvenile wood
SO 10TH HARDWOOD CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS 2022
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 10th Hardwood Conference
CY OCT 12-14, 2022
CL Sopron, HUNGARY
SP Univ Sopron, Fac Wood Engn & Creat Ind, Wood K Plus, Mendel Univ Brno
DE Populus alba L; cell wall area; ring width; wood properties correlation
AB Nowadays, white poplar (Populus alba L.), as a fast growing species, has a great breeding potential, due to its adaptation to climate changes and changed ecological conditions. For the purpose of this research, a total of ten trees from two sites along the Drava river in Croatia were selected and harvested. From each tree, five annual growth rings within juvenile wood were selected. Ring width (mm) was measured and cell wall area (%) was calculated as a percentage remain after detracting fibre lumen area, vessel lumen area and ray area. Relationship between cell wall area and ring width was analysed. As a result, statistical analyses indicated weakly negative correlation between cell wall area and ring width in juvenile wood of both Populus alba L. natural populations. Overall, no significant effect of growth rate on cell wall area was determined.
C1 [Istok, Iva; Sedlar, Tomislav; Oreskovic, Gordana; Jambrekovic, Branimir] Univ Zagreb, Fac Forestry & Wood Technol, Inst Wood Sci, Zagreb, Croatia.
C3 University of Zagreb
RP Istok, I (corresponding author), Univ Zagreb, Fac Forestry & Wood Technol, Inst Wood Sci, Zagreb, Croatia.
EM iistok@sumfak.hr; tsedlar@sumfak.hr; goreskov@sumfak.hr;
   bjambreko@sumfak.hr
RI Sedlar, Tomislav/AAT-4997-2020
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NR 13
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU UNIV SOPRON, DEPT FORESTRY POLICY & ECONOMICS
PI H-9400 SOPRON
PA ADY ENDRE U 5, H-9400 SOPRON, 00000, HUNGARY
BN 978-963-334-446-0
PY 2022
BP 124
EP 127
PG 4
WC Forestry; Materials Science, Paper & Wood
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Forestry; Materials Science
GA BU8AN
UT WOS:000945965000022
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Behnassi, M
   Kahime, K
   Boussaa, S
   Boumezzough, A
   Messouli, M
AF Behnassi, Mohamed
   Kahime, Kholoud
   Boussaa, Samia
   Boumezzough, Ali
   Messouli, Mohammed
GP Informat Resources Management Assoc
TI Infectious Diseases and Climate Vulnerability in Morocco: Governance and
   Adaptation Options
SO NATURAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT: CONCEPTS, METHODOLOGIES, TOOLS, AND
   APPLICATIONS
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID SCHISTOSOMA-MANSONI; LEISHMANIA-TROPICA; MALARIA; NORTH; TRANSMISSION;
   HISTORY; IMPACT; AREA
AB Climate change is expected to affect the distribution, prevalence and life cycle of several infectious diseases. This scenario is relevant to Morocco since the country is considered by many IPCC assessments reports as a climate change hotspot with a high vulnerability to many expected impacts. Given this existing vulnerability, this chapter aims to highlight relevant vector-borne diseases, the risks of their reemergence in many vulnerable regions and the pressing need to understand their dynamics within a context marked by knowledge gaps and limited scientific evidence; underline the problematic aspects of health adaptation to climate change and the current difficulties in terms of policy and governance to manage climate-health linkages; and finally undertake an assessment of Morocco's adaptive capacity from a health perspective and formulate recommendations for effective climate-health governance and policy.
C1 [Behnassi, Mohamed] Ibn Zohr Univ Agadir, Agadir, Morocco.
   [Kahime, Kholoud; Boumezzough, Ali; Messouli, Mohammed] Cadi Ayyad Univ Marrakesh, Marrakech, Morocco.
   [Boussaa, Samia] Higher Inst Nursing Profess & Hlth Tech Marrakes, Marrakech, Morocco.
C3 Ibn Zohr University of Agadir; Cadi Ayyad University of Marrakech
RP Behnassi, M (corresponding author), Ibn Zohr Univ Agadir, Agadir, Morocco.
RI BOUSSAA, Samia/F-2343-2014; Behnassi, Mohamed/AAE-4693-2022
OI BOUSSAA, Samia/0000-0002-5599-1097
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NR 53
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU IGI GLOBAL
PI HERSEY
PA 701 E CHOCOLATE AVE, STE 200, HERSEY, PA 17033-1240 USA
BN 978-1-5225-0804-5; 978-1-5225-0803-8
PY 2017
BP 1056
EP 1074
DI 10.4018/978-1-5225-0803-8.ch050
D2 10.4018/978-1-5225-0803-8
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA BN2WQ
UT WOS:000477803700051
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cheng, Y
   Han, XH
AF Cheng, Yuan
   Han, Xuehui
TI Assessing the economic loss due to natural disasters from outer space
SO CLIMATE SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Natural disaster; Nighttime lights; Cost-benefit
ID NIGHTTIME LIGHTS; PROXY
AB We propose an innovative approach to provide climate service by using the geographic distributions of natural disasters, assets exposed to disasters, and nighttime lights to estimate the potential benefit of climate-change adaptation through the economic loss avoided. We use a quasi-experimental panel data approach to assess the economic loss pre-and post-natural disaster reflected by changes in nighttime lights. Annual data from 1992 to 2012 in the Philippines is used as an example for illustration. We find that the potential benefits of climatechange adaptation might be much higher than those implied in the previous literature based on the Philippines data. We also show that the benefits would increase with the frequency of natural disasters. Our approach provides a cost-effective, transparent, and timely alternative to the conventional approach.
C1 [Cheng, Yuan] Fudan Univ, LSE Fudan Res Ctr Global Publ Policy, Sch Social Dev & Publ Policy, Shanghai, Peoples R China.
   [Han, Xuehui] Int Monetary Fund, Fiscal Affair Dept, Washington, DC 20431 USA.
C3 Fudan University; International Monetary Fund
RP Cheng, Y (corresponding author), Fudan Univ, LSE Fudan Res Ctr Global Publ Policy, Sch Social Dev & Publ Policy, Shanghai, Peoples R China.
EM chengyuan@fudan.edu.cn; xhan@imf.org
RI Cheng, Yuan/AAG-3167-2019
OI Han, Xuehui/0000-0003-2152-798X; Cheng, Yuan/0000-0002-1153-9699
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NR 26
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 11
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2405-8807
J9 CLIM SERV
JI Clim. Serv.
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 26
AR 100286
DI 10.1016/j.cliser.2022.100286
EA APR 2022
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 1H3VY
UT WOS:000796474500002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bednar, D
   Henstra, D
AF Bednar, Danny
   Henstra, Daniel
TI Applying a Typology of Governance Modes to Climate Change Adaptation
SO POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation; governance; typology; Canada
ID NETWORKS; CANADA; FRAMEWORK
AB Climate change adaptation is a complex field of public policy that requires action by multiple levels of government, the private sector, and civil society. In recent years, increasing scholarly attention has been focused on the governance of adaptation, which has included exploring alternatives to state-centric models of decision-making and identifying appropriate roles and responsibilities of multiple actors to achieve desired outcomes. Scholars have called for greater clarity in distinguishing between different approaches to adaptation governance. Drawing on the rich scholarship about public governance, this article articulates and applies a typology of four modes of governance by which adaptation takes place (hierarchy, market, network, and community). Using examples of initiatives from across Canada, the article offers a frame-work for describing, comparing, and evaluating the governance of adaptation initiatives.
C1 [Bednar, Danny] Western Univ, Dept Geog, London N6A 3K7, England.
   [Henstra, Daniel] Univ Waterloo, Dept Polit Sci, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
C3 University of Waterloo
RP Bednar, D (corresponding author), Western Univ, Dept Geog, London N6A 3K7, England.
EM dbednar@uwo.ca; dhenstra@uwaterloo.ca
OI Henstra, Daniel/0000-0003-0224-9152
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NR 58
TC 13
Z9 15
U1 4
U2 25
PU COGITATIO PRESS
PI LISBON
PA RUA FIALHO ALMEIDA 14, 2 ESQ, LISBON, 1070-129, PORTUGAL
SN 2183-2463
J9 POLITICS GOV
JI Politics Gov.
PY 2018
VL 6
IS 3
BP 147
EP 158
DI 10.17645/pag.v6i3.1432
PG 12
WC Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law
GA HB0QQ
UT WOS:000450722500003
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hedger, M
   Greeley, M
   Leavy, J
AF Hedger, Merylyn
   Greeley, Martin
   Leavy, Jennifer
TI Evaluating Climate Change: Pro-Poor Perspectives
SO IDS BULLETIN-INSTITUTE OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
AB As the number and diversity of climate change adaptation interventions (CCAI) increases, there is a growing need to evaluate their effectiveness. It is timely therefore to consider how pro-poor perspectives fit into emerging evaluation approaches. This article reviews the current state of evaluation of CCAI and identifies opportunities for evaluation processes to focus attention on the achievement of results, which benefit poor and vulnerable households. Both development and climate change adaptation communities urgently need to learn what helps to reduce poverty as efforts on adaptation are scaled up. Evaluation provides an established methodology for systematic assessment of aims and objectives and their achievement. The article reviews the main issues involved in evaluating CCAI. It examines what approaches and methods to adaptation evaluation have or could be used at different levels and considers where pro-poor perspectives fit in.
RI Greeley, Martin/I-6025-2016
OI Greeley, Martin/0000-0002-4718-0366
CR Adger WN, 2007, AR4 CLIMATE CHANGE 2007: IMPACTS, ADAPTATION, AND VULNERABILITY, P717
   [Anonymous], GUID EV REV DFID STA
   BEAULIEU N, 2008, INT WORKSH EV CLIM C
   BROOKS N, 2008, GEF INT WORKSH EV CL
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   McGray H., 2007, Weathering the Storm: Options for Framing Adaptation and Development
   United Nations Framework on Climate Change Convention (UNFCCC), 2007, CLIM CHANG IMP AD VU
NR 7
TC 5
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 7
PU INST DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
PI BRIGHTON
PA UNIV SUSSEX, BRIGHTON BN1 9RE, E SUSSEX, ENGLAND
SN 0265-5012
J9 IDS BULL-I DEV STUD
JI IDS Bull.-Inst. Dev. Stud.
PD SEP
PY 2008
VL 39
IS 4
BP 75
EP +
PG 7
WC Area Studies; Development Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies; Development Studies
GA 377UX
UT WOS:000261277600010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Semenov, MA
   Senapati, N
   Coleman, K
   Collins, AL
AF Semenov, Mikhail A.
   Senapati, Nimai
   Coleman, Kevin
   Collins, Adrian L.
TI A dataset of CMIP6-based climate scenarios for climate change impact
   assessment in Great Britain
SO DATA IN BRIEF
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate scenarios; Downscaling; LARS-WG; CMIP6; SSPs
AB Climate change is a critical issue in the 21st century. Assessment of the impacts of climate change is beneficial for assisting advanced recommendations for adaptations. Climate change impact assessments require high quality local-scale climate scenarios. The future climate projections from Global Climate Models (GCMs) are problematic to use at local scale due to their coarse spatial and temporal resolution, and existing biases. It is important to have climate change scenarios based on the GCMs ensemble downscaled to local scale to account for inherent uncertainty in climate projections, and to have a sufficient large number of years to account for inter-annual climate variability and low frequency, but high impact, extreme climatic events. A dataset of future climate change scenarios was therefore generated at 26 representative sites across Great Britain based on the latest CMIP6 multi-model ensemble downscaled to local-scale by using a stochastic weather generator, LARS-WG 8.0. The data set consists of climate scenarios of daily weather of 1,0 0 0 realizations of typical years for a baseline, and very near (2030) and near-future (2050) climates, based on five GCMs and two emission scenarios (Shared Socioeconomic Pathways- SSPs viz . SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5). A total of 15 GCMs from the CMIP6 ensemble were integrated in LARS-WG 8.0. LARS-WG downscales future climate projections from the GCMs and in- corporates changes at local scale in the mean climate, climatic variability, and extreme events by modifying the statistical distributions of the weather variables at each site. Based on the performance of the GCMs over northern Europe and their climate sensitivity, a subset of five GCMs was selected, viz .; ACCESS-ESM1-5, CNRM-CM6-1, HadGEM3-GC31- LL, MPI-ESM1-2-LR and MRI-ESM2-0. The selected GCMs are evenly distributed among the full set of 15 GCMs. The use of a subset of GCMs substantially reduces computational time, while allowing assessment of uncertainties in impact studies related to uncertain future climate projections arising from GCMs. The 10 0 0 years of daily weather for the baseline, as well as for very near and near-future climate change scenarios, are essential for estimating inter-annual variation, and for detecting low frequency, but high impact, extreme climatic events, such as heat waves, floods and droughts. The present dataset can be used as an input to climate change impact models in various fields, including, land and water resources, agriculture and food production, ecology and epidemiology, and human health and welfare. Researchers, breeders, farm managers, social and public sector leaders, and policymakers may benefit from this new dataset when undertaking impact assessments of climate change and decision support for mitigation and adaptation to climate change. (c) 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
C1 [Semenov, Mikhail A.; Senapati, Nimai] Rothamsted Res, Sustainable Soils & Crops, West Common, Harpenden AL5 2JQ, England.
   [Coleman, Kevin] Rothamsted Res, Net Zero & Resilient Farming, West Common, Harpenden AL5 2JQ, England.
   [Collins, Adrian L.] Rothamsted Res, Net Zero & Resilient Farming, North Wyke, Devon EX20 2SB, England.
C3 UK Research & Innovation (UKRI); Biotechnology and Biological Sciences
   Research Council (BBSRC); Rothamsted Research; UK Research & Innovation
   (UKRI); Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC);
   Rothamsted Research; UK Research & Innovation (UKRI); Biotechnology and
   Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC); Rothamsted Research
RP Semenov, MA; Senapati, N (corresponding author), Rothamsted Res, Sustainable Soils & Crops, West Common, Harpenden AL5 2JQ, England.
EM mikhail.semenov@rothamsted.ac.uk; nimai.senapati@rothamsted.ac.uk
RI ; Collins, Adrian/V-5938-2018; Coleman, Kevin/D-5271-2011; Senapati,
   Nimai/R-4353-2017
OI Semenov, Mikhail/0000-0002-1561-7113; Collins,
   Adrian/0000-0001-8790-8473; Coleman, Kevin/0000-0002-9640-1479;
   Senapati, Nimai/0000-0002-0238-6694
FU UK Research and Innovation-Biotechnology and Biological Sciences
   Research Council (UKRI-BBSRC) through the Resilient Farming Futures
   institute strategic programme [BB/X010961/1, 1-BBS/E/RH/230 0 04A,
   BB/X011003/1]
FX Rothamsted Research receives strategic funding from the UK Research and
   Innovation-Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
   (UKRI-BBSRC) through the Resilient Farming Futures institute strategic
   programme [grant award BB/X010961/1 , specifically work package
   1-BBS/E/RH/230 0 04A] and the Delivering Sustainable Wheat strategic
   programme [BB/X011003/1] .
CR Bradshaw C., 2023, Assessing CMIP6 Climate Model Performance over the UK to Support Resilient Farming Futures
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NR 22
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 5
U2 5
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2352-3409
J9 DATA BRIEF
JI Data Brief
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 55
AR 110709
DI 10.1016/j.dib.2024.110709
EA JUL 2024
PG 9
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA J1M1R
UT WOS:001334772600001
PM 39076828
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wu, WM
   Yue, W
   Bi, JJ
   Zhang, L
   Xu, DF
   Peng, C
   Chen, X
   Wang, SJ
AF Wu, Wenming
   Yue, Wei
   Bi, Jianjian
   Zhang, Lin
   Xu, Dafeng
   Peng, Chen
   Chen, Xiang
   Wang, Shiji
TI Influence of climatic variables on maize grain yield and its components
   by adjusting the sowing date
SO FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE maize yield; sowing date; kernel number per ear; climatic variables;
   high temperature
ID HEAT; PRODUCTIVITY; STRESS
AB Yield and its components are greatly affected by climate change. Adjusting the sowing date is an effective way to alleviate adverse effects and adapt to climate change. Aiming to determine the optimal sowing date of summer maize and clarify the contribution of climatic variables to grain yield and its components, a consecutive 4-year field experiment was conducted from 2016 to 2019 with four sowing dates at 10-day intervals from 5 June to 5 July. Analysis of historical meteorological data showed that more solar radiation (SR) was distributed from early June to mid-August, and the maximum temperature (T-max) > 32 degrees C appeared from early July to late August, which advanced and lasted longer in 1991-2020 relative to 1981-1990. Additionally, the precipitation was mainly distributed from early June to late July. The climate change in the growing season of summer maize resulted in optimal sowing dates ranging from 5 June to 15 June, with higher yields and yield stability, mainly because of the higher kernel number per ear and 1,000-grain weight. The average contribution of kernel number per ear to grain yield was 58.7%, higher than that of 1,000-grain weight (41.3%). Variance partitioning analysis showed that SR in 15 days pre-silking to 15 days post-silking (SS) and silking to harvest (SH) stages significantly contributed to grain yield by 63.1% and 86.4%. The extreme growing degree days (EDD) > 32 degrees C, SR, precipitation, and diurnal temperature range (DTR) contributed 20.6%, 22.9%, 14.5%, and 42.0% to kernel number per ear in the SS stage, respectively. Therefore, we concluded that the early sowing dates could gain high yield and yield stability due to the higher SR in the growing season. Meanwhile, due to the decreasing trend in SR and increasing T-max trend in this region, in the future, new maize varieties with high-temperature resistance, high light efficiency, shade tolerance, and medium-season traits need to be bred to adapt to climate change and increased grain yield.
C1 [Wu, Wenming; Bi, Jianjian; Zhang, Lin; Xu, Dafeng; Peng, Chen; Wang, Shiji] Anhui Acad Agr Sci, Crop Res Inst, Hefei, Peoples R China.
   [Yue, Wei] Anhui Meteorol Serv, Anhui Agr Meteorol Ctr, Hefei, Peoples R China.
   [Bi, Jianjian; Chen, Xiang] Anhui Agr Univ, Sch Agron, Hefei, Peoples R China.
C3 Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences; Anhui Agricultural University
RP Wang, SJ (corresponding author), Anhui Acad Agr Sci, Crop Res Inst, Hefei, Peoples R China.
EM wangshijiym@163.com
RI Wu, Wenming/AAK-4397-2020
FU Talent Project of the Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences
   [QNYC-202116]; Key Research and Development Program of Anhui Province
   [202204c06020007, 202204c06020060]
FX The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research,
   authorship, and/or publication of this article. This research was funded
   by the Talent Project of the Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences
   (QNYC-202116), the Key Research and Development Program of Anhui
   Province (202204c06020007, and 202204c06020060).
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NR 59
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 8
U2 8
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
SN 1664-462X
J9 FRONT PLANT SCI
JI Front. Plant Sci.
PD JUN 27
PY 2024
VL 15
AR 1411009
DI 10.3389/fpls.2024.1411009
PG 11
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA YN8D7
UT WOS:001269249700001
PM 38993937
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mitchell, CL
   Burch, SL
   Driscoll, PA
AF Mitchell, Carrie L.
   Burch, Sarah L.
   Driscoll, Patrick A.
TI (Mis)communicating climate change? Why online adaptation databases may
   fail to catalyze adaptation action
SO WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID COMMUNICATION; FRAMEWORK; SCIENCE; MEDIA; ART
AB Over the last decade a plethora of action-oriented research projects has been conducted in developing countries, exploring how to effectively adapt to the anticipated impacts of climate change. Many intergovernmental agencies and development organizations have chosen to disseminate their research results via online databases. It is unclear, however, whether these databases are useful in terms of actual adaptation planning and implementation. A systematic review of online databases has found at least 64 databases and tools online related to climate change adaptation. Despite the abundance of databases, this analysis reveals that the existing body of online databases generally lack the structure and mechanics to identify, extract, and synthesize both effective and ineffective climate change adaptation practices, projects, programs, and policies. Even relatively basic information, such as identification of projects' projected versus actual costs is absent, which are crucial decision-making criteria particularly in developing country contexts where resource constraints are significant. In this paper we evaluate these online tools with a focus on identifying features that potentially could contribute to knowledge sharing and successful exchange of climate change adaptation projects and practices within a developing country context. We conclude the paper with recommendations for how to improve efforts to communicate climate change research, such as more nuanced needs assessments of potential users of databases. WIREs Clim Change 2016, 7:600-613. doi: 10.1002/wcc.401 For further resources related to this article, please visit the .
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   [Driscoll, Patrick A.] Aalborg Univ, Dept Planning, Copenhagen, Denmark.
C3 University of Waterloo; University of Waterloo; Aalborg University
RP Mitchell, CL (corresponding author), Univ Waterloo, Sch Planning, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
EM carrie.mitchell@uwaterloo.ca
OI Driscoll, Patrick/0000-0002-9842-1975
FU International Development Research Centre
FX The authors would like to thank the International Development Research
   Centre for funding this study.
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NR 102
TC 15
Z9 16
U1 2
U2 27
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1757-7780
EI 1757-7799
J9 WIRES CLIM CHANGE
JI Wiley Interdiscip. Rev.-Clim. Chang.
PD JUL-AUG
PY 2016
VL 7
IS 4
BP 600
EP 613
DI 10.1002/wcc.401
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA DQ3CG
UT WOS:000379079800009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Leitch, AM
AF Leitch, Anne M.
TI Campground or losing ground for adaptation? A case study of coastal
   change under neoliberal settings in New South Wales
SO OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Neoliberalism; Commodification of nature;
   Public reserves; Crown land
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; CARAVAN PARKS; ENVIRONMENTAL-POLICY;
   SEA-CHANGE; VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; AUSTRALIA; BARRIERS; GEOGRAPHIES;
   MANAGEMENT
AB Coastal areas are at risk from the dual burden of climate change and rapid development. Coastal areas are significant as contested interfaces where social, cultural and environmental values vie for attention amongst economic and political aspirations. As a political logic, neoliberalism favours market-based logics, privatisations and commodification. Under neoliberal settings, planning for coastal adaptation is constantly tempered by an economic agenda. This case study analyses the management of a particular coastal land use in New South Wales, Australia following a change in management which signals a move to the market-based settings of neoliberalism. Specifically, this paper examines the case of campgrounds on public lands following a State-led change of management from local municipality to a state-run enterprise. I draw on a critical discourse analysis to study local and national media articles and coastal and campgrounds management documents. Findings highlight the influence of neoliberal settings on community consultation, local knowledge and community connections to the coast; management of coastal risks and responsibilities; and the change from nature-based holidays to a more commodified experience. Discussed is how this change and approach is likely to impact on climate change adaptation, with a call for more ambitious and inclusive conversations around coastal futures under a changing climate.
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C3 Griffith University
RP Leitch, AM (corresponding author), Griffith Ctr Social & Cultural Res, Sch Humanities, Languages & Social Sci, Brisbane, Australia.
EM Anne.Leitch@griffith.edu.au
RI Leitch, Anne/D-3033-2011
OI Leitch, Anne/0000-0002-7597-0007
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NR 130
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 3
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0964-5691
EI 1873-524X
J9 OCEAN COAST MANAGE
JI Ocean Coastal Manage.
PD FEB 15
PY 2023
VL 233
AR 106444
DI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2022.106444
EA JAN 2023
PG 15
WC Oceanography; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Oceanography; Water Resources
GA E1SJ8
UT WOS:000973415200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Olsson, D
AF Olsson, David
TI From Technocracy to Democracy: Ways to Promote Democratic Engagement for
   Just Climate Change Adaptation and Resilience Building
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; deliberative democracy; civic republicanism;
   agonistic democracy; social practice theories; behavior-change theories;
   WPR; governmentality; transformation; just sustainabilities
ID ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE; DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY; CHANGE POLICY; POLITICS;
   IMPACTS; VALUES
AB Climate change and the policy responses to it have implications in terms of (in)justice. Research in fields such as political ecology and environmental justice emphasizes the importance of policy-making addressing and responding to climate injustices. It, moreover, stresses that democratic engagement is imperative, since no universal agreement on the meaning of "justice" exists. Democratic engagement on climate (in)justice is, however, hampered by the predominance of technocratic policy frames. Considering this, knowledge of ways to promote democratic engagement is called for. This study develops such knowledge related to policy-making for climate change adaptation and resilience at the local level, in developed country contexts. Specifically, it draws on the "what's the problem represented to be?" approach to conceptualize different styles of democratic engagement and examine the possibilities and limitations of each. From the data, comprised of previous research, representations of three styles of democratic engagement are identified and analyzed: (1) closure-oriented engagement centered on changing behaviors, (2) closure-oriented engagement centered on changing the systemic production of unjust practices, and (3) disruptive engagement centered on changing the systemic production of unjust practices. The contributions of this study are relevant to researchers, policymakers, activists and others interested in how to promote a democratization of climate policy-making.
C1 [Olsson, David] Karlstad Univ, Dept Polit Hist Religious & Cultural Studies, Polit Sci, S-65188 Karlstad, Sweden.
C3 Karlstad University
RP Olsson, D (corresponding author), Karlstad Univ, Dept Polit Hist Religious & Cultural Studies, Polit Sci, S-65188 Karlstad, Sweden.
EM david.olsson@kau.se
OI Olsson, David/0000-0003-0745-2133
FU Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency through the project Societal
   Resilience in Sweden [217-34]
FX FundingThis research was funded by the Swedish Civil Contingencies
   Agency through the project Societal Resilience in Sweden, award number
   217-34.
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NR 84
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 19
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD FEB
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 3
AR 1433
DI 10.3390/su14031433
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZG2DP
UT WOS:000760071900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Birchall, SJ
   Bonnett, N
AF Birchall, S. Jeff
   Bonnett, Nicole
TI Climate change adaptation policy and practice: The role of agents,
   institutions and systems
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban planning; Climate resilience; Coastal community; Climate change
   impacts; Strategic policy
ID RESILIENCE; BARRIERS; FRAMEWORK; OPPORTUNITIES; VULNERABILITY;
   MITIGATION; STRATEGIES; CITIES; PAULO; RISK
AB Surrey, British Columbia, stands out in its efforts to go beyond the provincial mandate on climate change mitigation and incorporate adaptation into strategic planning. The community is not currently overwhelmed by climate change impacts, and has local agents and institutions in place to facilitate anticipatory climate adaptation planning. However, as seen with many other coastal communities, implementation of adaptation action is lagging in practice. Framed through the lens of resilience theory, this research investigates climate change threats and the dynamic relationship between local scale adaptation policy development, integration and implementation in practice. With Surrey as a case study, this research examines key actor narratives and strategic planning documents in order to understand how the community acts on climate change adaptation while being mandated to address mitigation. Findings suggests that while resilience building agents (e.g. senior management, elected officials) can spearhead and organize climate action, their ability to implement goals and policies in practice is largely determined by the robustness of institutions (e.g. strategic plans, policies) and systems (e.g. infrastructure, ecosystems). This case may provide decision-makers in other communities coping with similar climate threats with insight into the factors that can enable and challenge local adaptation planning processes.
C1 [Birchall, S. Jeff; Bonnett, Nicole] Univ Alberta, Sch Urban & Reg Planning, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, 1-26 Earth Sci Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada.
C3 University of Alberta
RP Birchall, SJ (corresponding author), Univ Alberta, Sch Urban & Reg Planning, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, 1-26 Earth Sci Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada.
EM jeff.birchall@ualberta.ca
RI Bonnett, Nicole/HNT-0234-2023; Birchall, S Jeff/HOF-3329-2023
FU Cornerstone Grant, through the Killam Research Fund, University of
   Alberta
FX This research was supported in part by a Cornerstone Grant, through the
   Killam Research Fund, University of Alberta.
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NR 68
TC 37
Z9 39
U1 9
U2 38
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD JAN
PY 2021
VL 108
AR 103001
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2020.103001
PG 9
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA PC8DR
UT WOS:000597225500002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ishtiaque, A
   Eakin, H
   Vij, S
   Chhetri, N
   Rahman, F
   Huq, S
AF Ishtiaque, Asif
   Eakin, Hallie
   Vij, Sumit
   Chhetri, Netra
   Rahman, Feisal
   Huq, Saleemul
TI Multilevel governance in climate change adaptation in Bangladesh:
   structure, processes, and power dynamics
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Multilevel governance; Power dynamics;
   Governance structure & processes; Bangladesh
ID CHANGE POLICY; MANAGEMENT; AUTHORITY; CONFLICT; BARRIERS; POLITICS
AB Climate change adaptation requires the engagement of multiple actors in different sectors and at various levels of governance. The different roles played by policy actors and their interactions shape the process of adaptation governance. Nevertheless, to date, there has been limited attention paid to how the structure of relations and their associated power dynamics between these actors affect adaptation governance process at different levels. In this study, we analyzed the structure, processes, and power dynamics entailed in the multilevel governance of adaptation to floods in coastal areas of Bangladesh. We used social network analysis approach to map and unpack the interactions between actors that influence the adaptation governance. We categorized five types of organizations based on the structural attributes of the governance network and their functions. Our analysis shows that the organizations with high influence over the governance process reside at the national level and the adaptation governance process is influenced by elite-pluralism. We found that both top-down and bottom-up processes co-exist in different phases of adaptation governance (planning, implementation, and monitoring). Lastly, we conclude that a more equitable redistribution of power (roles and responsibilities) may diminish the negative implications of federal centralization in adaptation governance.
C1 [Ishtiaque, Asif] Univ Michigan, Sch Environm & Sustainabil, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Ishtiaque, Asif] Arizona State Univ, Sch Geog Sci & Urban Planning, Tempe, AZ USA.
   [Eakin, Hallie] Arizona State Univ, Sch Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ USA.
   [Vij, Sumit] Wageningen Univ & Res, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Vij, Sumit] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Earth & Climate Cluster, Fac Sci, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Chhetri, Netra] Arizona State Univ, Sch Future Innovat Soc, Tempe, AZ USA.
   [Rahman, Feisal] Univ Durham, Dept Geog, Durham, England.
   [Huq, Saleemul] Independent Univ, Int Ctr Climate Change & Dev, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; Arizona State
   University; Arizona State University-Tempe; Arizona State University;
   Arizona State University-Tempe; Wageningen University & Research; Vrije
   Universiteit Amsterdam; Arizona State University; Arizona State
   University-Tempe; Durham University; Independent University Bangladesh
   (IUB)
RP Ishtiaque, A (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Sch Environm & Sustainabil, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.; Ishtiaque, A (corresponding author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Geog Sci & Urban Planning, Tempe, AZ USA.
EM Asif.Ishtiaque@asu.edu; Hallie.Eakin@asu.edu; sumit.vij@wur.nl;
   Netra.Chhetri@asu.edu; feisal1702@gmail.com; saleeumul.huq@iied.org
RI Vij, Sumit/AAV-6617-2021; Ishtiaque, Asif/P-2423-2019
OI Ishtiaque, Asif/0000-0002-2196-9764; Eakin, Hallie/0000-0001-8253-1320
FU Matthew G. Bailey Fellowship from Arizona State University
FX This research was partially funded by the Matthew G. Bailey Fellowship
   from Arizona State University.
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NR 58
TC 26
Z9 27
U1 13
U2 40
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD SEP
PY 2021
VL 21
IS 3
AR 75
DI 10.1007/s10113-021-01802-1
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TK2DV
UT WOS:000673976600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nightingale, AJ
AF Nightingale, Andrea J.
TI Power and politics in climate change adaptation efforts: Struggles over
   authority and recognition in the context of political instability
SO GEOFORUM
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Authority; Recognition; Subjectivity;
   Political transition; Institutions; Nepal
ID NATURAL-RESOURCES; PUBLIC AUTHORITY; COMMUNITY; VULNERABILITY;
   GOVERNANCE; GEOGRAPHY; STATE; TRANSFORMATION; INTERVENTIONS;
   INSTITUTIONS
AB Throughout the world, climate change adaptation policies supported by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) have provided significant sources of funding and technical support to developing countries. Yet often the adaptation responses proposed belie complex political realities, particularly in politically unstable contexts, where power and politics shape adaptation outcomes. In this paper, the concepts of authority and recognition are used to capture power and politics as they play out in struggles over governing changing resources. The case study in Nepal shows how adaptation policy formation and implementation becomes a platform in which actors seek to claim authority and assert more generic rights as political and cultural citizens. Focusing on authority and recognition helps illuminate how resource governance struggles often have very little to do with the resources themselves. Foundational to the argument is how projects which seek to empower actors to manage their resources, produce realignments of power and knowledge that then shape who is invested in what manner in adaptation. The analysis adds to calls for reframing 'adaptation' to encompass the socionatural processes that shape vulnerability by contributing theoretical depth to questions of power and politics.
C1 [Nightingale, Andrea J.] Swedish Univ Agr Sci SLU, Dept Urban & Rural Dev, Ulls Vag 28,POB 7012, SE-75007 Uppsala, Sweden.
   [Nightingale, Andrea J.] Norwegian Univ Life Sci NMBU, Dept Int Environm & Dev Studies Noragric, POB 5003, N-1432 As, Norway.
C3 Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences; Norwegian University of
   Life Sciences
RP Nightingale, AJ (corresponding author), Swedish Univ Agr Sci SLU, Dept Urban & Rural Dev, Ulls Vag 28,POB 7012, SE-75007 Uppsala, Sweden.
EM andrea.nightingale@slu.se
FU Royal Society of Edinburgh International Exchange Award; British Academy
   International Partnership and Mobility Award
FX This paper has been significantly improved by critical comments from
   Neera Singh, Hemant Ojha, Adam Pain, Tulasi Sigdel, Bharat Pokarel,
   Sarah Byrne, Anil Bhatterai, the editors of Geoforum and an anonymous
   reviewer. The ideas articulated here were greatly enhanced by the
   process of co-editing a special issue on 'Refraining Adaptation' with
   Siri Eriksen and Hallie Eakin and their comments on a much earlier
   version of the paper. Discussions with Muriel Cote and Raj Kumar Rai
   were also vital to the analysis of the data and construction of the
   argument. The research for this article was supported by a Royal Society
   of Edinburgh International Exchange Award (2011-2012) and a British
   Academy International Partnership and Mobility Award (2012-2016).
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NR 116
TC 241
Z9 268
U1 3
U2 71
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0016-7185
EI 1872-9398
J9 GEOFORUM
JI Geoforum
PD AUG
PY 2017
VL 84
BP 11
EP 20
DI 10.1016/j.geoforum.2017.05.011
PG 10
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA FE5YK
UT WOS:000408287000002
OA hybrid
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Madzivhandila, TS
AF Madzivhandila, T. S.
TI INTEGRATING INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS (IKS) TO CLIMATE CHANGE
   ADAPTATION IN SOUTH AFRICA: LESSONS FROM THE "PAST"
SO SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF HIGHER EDUCATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Indigenous Knowledge Systems; climate change adaptation; rural areas;
   culture; South Africa
AB For a long period of time, what is termed scientific knowledge and discoveries have constantly ignored the existence of indigenous practices and knowledge. Until recently, indigenous knowledge systems (IKS) were not acknowledged when it comes to responding to the ailing world. IKS includes information created inside inborn social orders, autonomous of, and earlier to, the appearance of the cutting-edge logical information framework. It can relate to issues such as conserving nature, food production, forestry development and medicine, to mention a few. The purpose of the article is to discuss the importance of the integration of IKS and culture into climate change adaptation. This article makes the case that scientific interventions among the impoverished in rural developing nations are viewed as foreign and are thus not accepted by the local populace. Consequently, the scientific approach by development experts, and the complex nature of climate change and its understanding, has had no impact on people's adaptation in rural areas, where most of the people still rely on IKS to survive. This theoretical article focuses on the implications of IKS for climate change adaptation. The question the article intends to answer is, with the advent of climate change in recent years, how are rural communities coping with its impact? How is the scientific understanding of climate change with its complexities filtering down to the indigenous communities' coping and adaptation activities? The article's conclusion demystifies the notion that the impact of climate change might be mitigated, and repair achieved solely by scientifically developed measures against it. The article intends to contribute towards building knowledge that acknowledges the importance of different sources of interventions towards addressing climate change. It is important for the current and future professoriate to look beyond the conventional understanding of dealing with challenges such as climate change that the world is facing.
C1 [Madzivhandila, T. S.] Univ Limpopo, Turfloop Grad Sch Leadership, Polokwane, South Africa.
C3 University of Limpopo
RP Madzivhandila, TS (corresponding author), Univ Limpopo, Turfloop Grad Sch Leadership, Polokwane, South Africa.
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NR 22
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU SUNJOURNALS
PI STELLENBOSCH
PA STELLENBOSCH UNIV LIB & INFORMATION SERV, PRIVATE BAG X5036,
   STELLENBOSCH, 7599, SOUTH AFRICA
SN 1011-3487
EI 1753-5913
J9 S AFR J HIGH EDUC
JI S. Afr. J. High, Educ.
PD OCT
PY 2024
VL 38
IS 5
SI SI
BP 159
EP 168
DI 10.20853/38-5-6417
PG 10
WC Education & Educational Research
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Education & Educational Research
GA K4Z0H
UT WOS:001343960000010
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Balogun, AL
   Marks, D
   Sharma, R
   Shekhar, H
   Balmes, C
   Maheng, D
   Arshad, A
   Salehi, P
AF Balogun, Abdul-Lateef
   Marks, Danny
   Sharma, Richa
   Shekhar, Himanshu
   Balmes, Chiden
   Maheng, Dikman
   Arshad, Adnan
   Salehi, Pourya
TI Assessing the Potentials of Digitalization as a Tool for Climate Change
   Adaptation and Sustainable Development in Urban Centres
SO SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Digitalization; Sustainable; Urban
ID FLOOD RISK; CITY; OPPORTUNITIES; IMPACT; FUTURE
AB Digitalization is a key enabler of sustainable development of cities' socio-economic dynamics with the potential to foster climate-friendly urban environments and societies. The advent of the 4th industrial revolution has seen the increased application of digitalization in several fields and at different levels. High-tech digital devices, platforms and environments are increasingly being deployed to enhance productivity, efficiency and sustainability, and improve overall well-being of urban dwellers. Digitalization is projected to further impact cities in future, transform jobs and trigger life-style changes with far-reaching impacts that will ultimately affect cities' resilience and adaptation capacities. While a growing body of research has highlighted the significance of digitalization to climate change mitigation such as reducing GHG and CO2 emissions, comprehensive evaluations of the potentials of digitalization as an enabler of climate change adaptation remain scarce. This paper addresses this gap by analysing the current trend in digital revolution in relation to climate change adaptation and examines the likely challenges of digitalization. A desk research method was adopted, focusing on core digitalization concepts driving the Fourth Industrial Revolution (IR 4.0). Nine case studies in cities across various continents were selected to assess the potentials of digitalization in addressing climatic hazards and to highlight benefits from implementing digitalization, while considering the social-ecological-technological challenges and tensions around IR 4.0. Our findings reveal the capabilities of digitalization in supporting more effective early warning and emergency response systems, enhancing food and water security, improving power infrastructure performance, enabling citizen engagement and participatory adaptation measures and minimizing the impacts of climatic hazards. Finally, we recommend feasible pathways to overcome present risks and challenges in order to optimize the numerous opportunities offered by digitalization in support of climate change adaptation initiatives.
C1 [Balogun, Abdul-Lateef] UTP, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Geospatial Anal & Modelling GAM Res Grp, Seri Iskandar 32610, Perak, Malaysia.
   [Marks, Danny] City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Asian & Int Studies, Kowloon Tong, 83 Tat Chee Ave, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Sharma, Richa] Publ Hlth Fdn India, Ctr Environm Hlth, Gurugram 122002, Haryana, India.
   [Shekhar, Himanshu] United Nat Univ, Inst Environm & Human Secur UNU EHS, UN Campus,Pl Vereinten Nationen 1, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
   [Balmes, Chiden] UAE Off, GGGI, Incubator Bldg, Abu Dhabi, U Arab Emirates.
   [Maheng, Dikman] Univ Muhammadiyah Kendari, Dept Environm Engn, Jl Ahmad Dahlan 10, Kendari 93117, Indonesia.
   [Arshad, Adnan] China Agr Univ Beijing, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
   [Salehi, Pourya] World Secretariat, ICLEI Local Govt Sustainabil, Res Team, Kaiser Friedrich Str 7, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
C3 City University of Hong Kong; Public Health Foundation of India;
   Universitas Muhammadiyah Kendari
RP Balogun, AL (corresponding author), UTP, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Geospatial Anal & Modelling GAM Res Grp, Seri Iskandar 32610, Perak, Malaysia.
EM geospatial63@gmail.com; danny.marks@cityu.edu.hk;
   richa.sharma85@gmail.com; shekhar@ehs.unu.edu; chidenb@gmail.com;
   dikman.maheng@gmail.com; adnan.poda@gmail.com; pourya.salehi@iclei.org
RI Maheng, Muhammad/Z-5113-2019; Arshad, Adnan/ABB-9195-2020; Balogun,
   Abdul-Lateef/AAH-2963-2020; Maheng, Muhammad Dikman/N-4182-2017
OI Salehi, Pourya/0000-0002-3292-5599; Balogun,
   Abdul-Lateef/0000-0002-0418-3487; Maheng, Muhammad
   Dikman/0000-0003-4777-2246; Marks, Danny/0000-0003-0833-880X; Arshad,
   Adnan/0000-0002-8755-5281; Shekhar, Himanshu/0000-0002-2793-5143
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NR 95
TC 192
Z9 197
U1 54
U2 284
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2210-6707
EI 2210-6715
J9 SUSTAIN CITIES SOC
JI Sust. Cities Soc.
PD FEB
PY 2020
VL 53
AR 101888
DI 10.1016/j.scs.2019.101888
PG 12
WC Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Energy & Fuels
GA KE2AT
UT WOS:000508361800025
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lusk, G
AF Lusk, Greg
TI Looking Forward and Backward at Extreme Event Attribution in Climate
   Policy
SO ETHICS POLICY & ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE risk management; climate change adaptation; extreme weather;
   decision-making; environment; climate policy
AB How the science of probabilistic extreme event attribution might inform climate change adaptation is hotly debated. Central to these debates is an understanding that event attribution's backward-looking orientation aligns poorly with the forward-facing goals of adaptation policy. Here, I analyze two new philosophical arguments that challenge this understanding and claim that probabilistic event attribution is not only forward-looking, but has a potentially significant role in risk-pooling adaptive strategies. I argue the purported forward-looking capabilities of event attribution are based on a mischaracterization of the scientific methodology, and one consequence of this mischaracterization is a limited role in adaptive risk-pooling schemes.
C1 [Lusk, Greg] Michigan State Univ, Lyman Briggs Coll, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
   [Lusk, Greg] Michigan State Univ, Dept Philosophy, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
C3 Michigan State University; Michigan State University
RP Lusk, G (corresponding author), 919 E Shaw Ln, E Lansing, MI 48825 USA.
EM greglusk@msu.edu
OI Lusk, Greg/0000-0002-2372-711X
FU Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
FX Part of this research was supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
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PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 2155-0085
EI 2155-0093
J9 ETHICS POLICY ENV
JI Ethics Policy Env.
PD JAN 2
PY 2022
VL 25
IS 1
BP 37
EP 51
DI 10.1080/21550085.2020.1848195
EA JAN 2021
PG 15
WC Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZJ9WN
UT WOS:000608317000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mayor, L
   Lindner, LF
   Knöbl, CF
   Ramalho, A
   Berruto, R
   Sanna, F
   Rossi, D
   Tomao, C
   Goodburn, B
   Avila, C
   Leijdens, M
   Stollewerk, K
   Bregler, M
   Koidis, C
   Morin, A
   Milicic, V
   Fadini, G
   Lazaro-Mojica, J
   Busato, P
AF Mayor, Luis
   Lindner, Line F.
   Knoebl, Christoph F.
   Ramalho, Ana
   Berruto, Remigio
   Sanna, Francesca
   Rossi, Daniele
   Tomao, Camilla
   Goodburn, Billy
   Avila, Concha
   Leijdens, Marg
   Stollewerk, Katharina
   Bregler, Michael
   Koidis, Christos
   Morin, Alexandre
   Milicic, Vesna
   Fadini, Giulia
   Lazaro-Mojica, Jonas
   Busato, Patrizia
TI Skill Needs for Sustainable Agri-Food and Forestry Sectors (I):
   Assessment through European and National Focus Groups
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE education; training; skill needs; farmers; food industry; forestry;
   focus groups
ID EDUCATION; COMPETENCES; INNOVATION; READY
AB The agri-food and forestry sectors are under increasing pressure to adapt to climate change, consumer concern, technological and economic change, and complex global value chains. In turn, such challenges require that the necessary skills and competences are identified at various levels and within specific areas of the sectors. For that purpose, eleven focus groups in nine different EU-countries and two at EU-level were organized within the ERASMUS+ project "FIELDS" with the participation of farmers, cooperatives, agri-food companies, foresters, forest industries, advisors, and education providers to identify the skills needed in the agri-food and forestry sectors. The focus group participants identified business and strategic management skills, communication skills, and other skills related to sustainability, entrepreneurship, digital and soft skills to be most important for the agri-food and forestry sectors as a whole.
C1 [Mayor, Luis; Lindner, Line F.; Knoebl, Christoph F.; Ramalho, Ana] Impacthub Vienna, ISEKI Food Assoc, Lindengasse 56, A-1070 Vienna, Austria.
   [Ramalho, Ana] Coimbra Agr Sch, Res Ctr Nat Resources Environm & Soc CERNAS, P-3045601 Coimbra, Portugal.
   [Berruto, Remigio; Sanna, Francesca; Busato, Patrizia] Univ Turin Largo Paolo Braccini 2, Dept Agr Forestry & Food Sci DISAFA, I-10095 Grugliasco, Italy.
   [Rossi, Daniele; Tomao, Camilla] Confagricoltura, Corso Vittorio Emanuele II 101, I-00186 Rome, Italy.
   [Goodburn, Billy] Irish Cooperat Org Soc, Plunkett House,84 Merr Sq, Dublin DO2 T882, Ireland.
   [Avila, Concha] Federac Espanola Ind Alimentac & Bebidas, Velazquez 64, Madrid 28001, Spain.
   [Leijdens, Marg] AERES, Barnseweg 3,Postbus 331, NL-3770 AH Barneveld, Netherlands.
   [Stollewerk, Katharina] Lebensmittelversuchsanstalt, Zaunergasse 1-3, A-1030 Vienna, Austria.
   [Bregler, Michael] Univ Hohenheim, Hohenheim Res Ctr Bioecon, Schloss Hohenheim 1, D-70599 Stuttgart, Germany.
   [Koidis, Christos] Engineers Business SA, Doiranis 17, Thessaloniki 54639, Greece.
   [Morin, Alexandre] Assoc Chambres Agr Arc Atlantique, Maison Agr, Rue PA Bobierre La Geraudiere, F-44939 Nantes, France.
   [Milicic, Vesna] Gospodarska Zborn Slovenije, Dimiceva Ulica 13, Ljubljana 1000, Slovenia.
   [Fadini, Giulia] Confederat European Paper Ind, Ave Louise,250 Box 80, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium.
   [Lazaro-Mojica, Jonas] FoodDrinkEurope, Ave Nerviens 9-31, B-1040 Brussels, Belgium.
C3 University Hohenheim
RP Mayor, L (corresponding author), Impacthub Vienna, ISEKI Food Assoc, Lindengasse 56, A-1070 Vienna, Austria.
EM luis.mayor@iseki-food.net
RI Berruto, Remigio/KWT-5054-2024; Ramalho Ribeiro, Ana/LNQ-6489-2024;
   Sanna, Francesca/I-3777-2014
OI Mayor, Luis/0000-0002-0853-036X; BERRUTO, Remigio/0000-0001-5633-7022;
   Sanna, Francesca/0000-0001-7340-7133; Ramalho Ribeiro,
   Ana/0000-0002-1447-1896; Koidis, Christos/0000-0003-1972-9953
FU ERASMUS+ programme of the European Union
   [612664-EPP-1-2019-1-IT-EPPKA2-SSA-B]
FX This research was co-funded by the ERASMUS+ programme of the European
   Union, grant agreement number 612664-EPP-1-2019-1-IT-EPPKA2-SSA-B. This
   publication reflects only the authors' view, and the European Union is
   not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it
   contains.
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NR 51
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 14
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 15
AR 9607
DI 10.3390/su14159607
PG 24
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 3R4MK
UT WOS:000838888800001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carrico, AR
AF Carrico, Amanda R.
TI Climate change, behavior, and the possibility of spillover effects:
   recent advances and future directions
SO CURRENT OPINION IN BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
ID PRO-ENVIRONMENTAL SPILLOVER; SELF-EFFICACY; US; CONSUMPTION; SUPPORT;
   CONTEXT; POLICY
AB Behavior change is widely recognized as an important strategy for mitigating and adapting to climate change. Yet, positive or negative behavioral spillover effects-if prevalent-have the potential to render behavioral interventions more or less effective. Behavioral spillover occurs when the adoption of one behavior targeted by an intervention changes the likelihood that an individual will adopt one or more nontargeted behaviors. As spillover is defined as a causal process, methods that isolate cause-and-effect relationships are needed to generate evidence of spillover; however, non-experimental methods can still advance knowledge in the field. Recent work reveals growing evidence for positive spillover, including recent field studies involving commonly utilized behavioral interventions. Yet, on average, effects are small and also vary in direction and magnitude as a function of how behaviors are measured. Measurement artifacts as well as concerns of publication bias suggests the need for more work in this field.
C1 [Carrico, Amanda R.] Univ Colorado, 397 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
C3 University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder
RP Carrico, AR (corresponding author), Univ Colorado, 397 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
EM amanda.carrico@colorado.edu
RI Carrico, Amanda/KII-2806-2024
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NR 64
TC 29
Z9 31
U1 2
U2 32
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2352-1546
EI 2352-1554
J9 CURR OPIN BEHAV SCI
JI Curr. Opin. Behav. Sci.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 42
BP 76
EP 82
DI 10.1016/j.cobeha.2021.03.025
EA APR 2021
PG 7
WC Behavioral Sciences; Neurosciences; Psychology, Experimental
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Behavioral Sciences; Neurosciences & Neurology; Psychology
GA WJ9FA
UT WOS:000709341000014
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wright, J
AF Wright, Jeneva
TI Maritime Archaeology and Climate Change: An Invitation
SO JOURNAL OF MARITIME ARCHAEOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Maritime archaeology; Climate change; Marine environment; Management;
   Conservation; Public outreach
AB Maritime archaeology has a tremendous capacity to engage with climate change science. The field is uniquely positioned to support climate change research and the understanding of past human adaptations to climate change. Maritime archaeological data can inform on environmental shifts and submerged sites can serve as an important avenue for public outreach by mobilizing public interest and action towards understanding the impacts of climate change. Despite these opportunities, maritime archaeologists have not fully developed a role within climate change science and policy. Moreover, submerged site vulnerabilities stemming from climate change impacts are not yet well understood. This article discusses potential climate change threats to maritime archaeological resources, the challenges confronting cultural resource managers, and the contributions maritime archaeology can offer to climate change science. Maritime archaeology's ability to both support and benefit from climate change science argues its relevant and valuable place in the global climate change dialogue, but also reveals the necessity for our heightened engagement.
C1 [Wright, Jeneva] Natl Pk Serv, Submerged Resources Ctr, 12795 W Alameda Pkwy, Lakewood, CO 80228 USA.
C3 United States Department of the Interior
RP Wright, J (corresponding author), Natl Pk Serv, Submerged Resources Ctr, 12795 W Alameda Pkwy, Lakewood, CO 80228 USA.
EM jeneva_wright@nps.gov
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NR 53
TC 18
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 36
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 1557-2285
EI 1557-2293
J9 J MARIT ARCHAEOL
JI J. Marit. Archaeol.
PD DEC
PY 2016
VL 11
IS 3
BP 255
EP 270
DI 10.1007/s11457-016-9164-5
PG 16
WC Archaeology
WE Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Archaeology
GA EF1CA
UT WOS:000390061500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Bergström, S
   Andréasson, J
AF Bergstrom, Sten
   Andreasson, Johan
BE Boegh, E
   Blyth, E
   Hannah, DM
   Hisdal, H
   Kunstmann, H
   Su, B
   Yilmaz, KK
TI Accounting for climate change and uncertainty: experience from strategic
   adaptation projects in Sweden
SO CLIMATE AND LAND SURFACE CHANGES IN HYDROLOGY
SE IAHS Publication
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Association of Hydrological Sciences Symposium on Climate
   and Land Surface Changes in Hydrology / IAHS-IAPSO-IASPEI Joint Assemply
CY JUL 22-26, 2013
CL Gothenburg, SWEDEN
SP Int Assoc Hydrolog Sci, Commiss Coupled Land Atmosphere Syst, Int Assoc Hydrolog Sci, Commiss Remote Sens, Int Assoc Hydrolog Sci, Commiss Surface Water, Global Energy & Water Exchanges Project, Global Land Atmosphere Syst Study
DE climate change; dam safety; areal planning; user dialogue; uncertainty
ID CHANGE IMPACTS
AB In Sweden, adaptation to climate change has been addressed in connection with some strategic projects of national significance. Hydrological upgrading of Swedish dam safety assessments has been in the forefront. This has been followed by studies of risks in the expanding metropolitan areas of Stockholm and Gothenburg, where assumptions about hydrological changes have been combined with considerations about future changes in sea level. The two big lakes, Malaren and Vanern, and the River Gota alv have also been a focus. A key subject has been how to cope with the inevitable uncertainty, as illustrated by the range of results based on the set of regional climate scenarios available. The way forward has been close co-operation with stakeholders. In the case of dam safety, this was carried out in a joint committee including industry, responsible agencies and researchers. The dialogue within this committee may serve as a model for other sectors.
C1 [Bergstrom, Sten; Andreasson, Johan] Swedish Meteorol & Hydrol Inst, SE-60176 Norrkoping, Sweden.
C3 Swedish Meteorological & Hydrological Institute
RP Bergström, S (corresponding author), Swedish Meteorol & Hydrol Inst, SE-60176 Norrkoping, Sweden.
EM sten.bergstrom@smhi.se
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NR 16
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 12
PU INT ASSOC HYDROLOGICAL SCIENCES
PI WALLINGFORD
PA INST OF HYDROLOGY, WALLINGFORD OX10 8BB, ENGLAND
SN 0144-7815
BN 978-1-907161-37-7
J9 IAHS-AISH P
PY 2013
VL 359
BP 11
EP 16
PG 6
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA BGO41
UT WOS:000323627400003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Yang, Q
   Zhang, JH
   Liu, ZF
   Xia, S
   Li, WG
AF Yang Qi
   Zhang Jianhua
   Liu Zifa
   Xia Shu
   Li Weiguo
GP IEEE
TI A New Methodology for Optimizing the Size of Hybrid PV/wind System
SO 2008 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES
   (ICSET), VOLS 1 AND 2
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT IEEE International Conference on Sustainable Energy Technologies
CY NOV 24-27, 2008
CL Singapore, SINGAPORE
SP IEEE
DE Wind energy; Solar energy; Renewable energy; Differentia evolutionary
   algorithm
ID WIND; DESIGN
AB Compared with photovoltaic panels only and wind only stand alone energy systems, the hybrid PV/wind system is more economical and reliable. It can be able to adapt to climate changes. This paper presents a new method to design the PV/wind system. While meeting the basic requirements of the stand-alone energy system, the minimum cost of objective function is constructed which is considering initial cost. yearly operating costs and maintenace costs. The hybrid system consists of photovoltaic panels, wind turbines and storage batteries. Considering the complexity of this nonlinear integral planning, differential evolution algorithm is used to solve this problem. By use of migrant operation strategy, the global optimal searching ability of the proposed algorithm is further improved. The improved differential evolution algorithm can avoid to the local minimum trap. The method mentioned in this article is proved to be effective through using an example. Finally, the optimal solution is received.
EM yuanfangren_ren@126.com; Jhzhang001@163.com; tjubluesky@163.com;
   xiashu1984@126.com; lwglixi@tom.com
RI Li, Weiguo/H-3855-2011; jian-hua, zhang/Q-3873-2018
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NR 16
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 2
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
BN 978-1-4244-1887-9
PY 2008
BP 922
EP 927
DI 10.1109/ICSET.2008.4747139
PG 6
WC Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Electrical & Electronic
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA BKO16
UT WOS:000268749500178
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Jiricka, A
   Salak, B
   Eder, R
   Arnberger, A
   Pröbstl, U
AF Jiricka, A.
   Salak, B.
   Eder, R.
   Arnberger, A.
   Proebstl, U.
BE Brebbia, CA
   Pineda, FD
TI Energetic tourism: exploring the experience quality of renewable
   energies as a new sustainable tourism market
SO SUSTAINABLE TOURISM IV
SE WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 4th International Conference on Sustainable Tourism
CY JUL 05-07, 2010
CL Wessex Inst  Technol, New Forest, ENGLAND
SP Wessex Inst Technol, Complutense Univ, WIT Transactions Ecol & Environm
HO Wessex Inst  Technol
DE experience-oriented tourism; niche tourism; tourism product;
   energy-tourism; tourism marketing; tourism demand; rural tourism;
   tourism development; area in transition; renewable energy
AB To tackle the global problem of climate change, it will be crucial that the global economic system adopts energy-saving measures and furthers its reliance on renewable energy sources. This challenge is particularly relevant for the tourism industry, which depends on transportation by definition, and is highly dependent on resources and energy in many other regards. Tourism can quickly be caught in a vicious cycle: the necessity to adapt to climate change, i.e. by increasing artificial snow making, or new product development as exemplified by the "wellness-boom", leads to ever higher rates of energy consumption, thus further contributing to climate change. However, the fledgling human explorations towards combating climate change and increasing energy efficiency also offer innovative opportunities for exploring new niches of tourism.
   This paper presents how such novel tourism opportunities avail themselves around the theme of renewable and sustainable energy use. Combining environmental education and experiencing novel products can be used for marketing a fundamentally new tourism product, which attracts both the technologically interested tourism segment and the family-oriented traveler. This may lead to positive perception of climate change adaptation strategies.
   A summary of "model" energy regions in Central Europe describes the typical characteristics that regions must have for possibly developing these innovative tourism niches. The main focus of the paper is on "eco-energy region" of Guessing, Burgenland, which is involved in an on-going transnational research project -for sustainable tourism development in Central Europe (Interreg IVB). The area around Austria's only energy self sufficient city (Gassing) is situated in a nature park at the eastern foothills of the Alps. Due to the mild climate this region is a part of the so called "Austrian Tuscany". Multicultural influences by the proximity to Hungary, Slovenia and Slovakia are reflected by various cultural, especially culinary experiences. Due to its location along the former iron curtain, the region has remained fairly remote and is not recognized as a tourism destination. However, with the eco-energy project of Guessing gaining world-wide recognition, it became obvious that in addition to the business and conference driven energy tourism, an opportunity for a leisure oriented tourism development also availed itself. This paper presents the innovative strategies that the region will focus on in order to expand to a more complete and sustainable energy-tourism destination.
RI Salak, Boris/CAE-8589-2022
OI Salak, Boris/0000-0002-4929-8376; Arnberger, Arne/0000-0003-3391-0927;
   Eder, Renate/0000-0002-7460-8743; Jiricka-Purrer,
   Alexandra/0000-0002-6842-1835
CR [Anonymous], IMP REN EN POL EC GR
   [Anonymous], INFORM RAUMENTWICKLU
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NR 23
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 2
U2 31
PU WIT PRESS
PI SOUTHAMPTON
PA ASHURST LODGE, SOUTHAMPTON SO40 7AA, ASHURST, ENGLAND
SN 1743-3541
BN 978-1-84564-458-1
J9 WIT TRANS ECOL ENVIR
PY 2010
VL 139
BP 55
EP 68
DI 10.2495/ST100061
PG 14
WC Business; Environmental Studies; Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Social Sciences
   - Other Topics
GA BTS55
UT WOS:000287981100006
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pant, G
   Maraseni, T
   Apan, A
   Allen, BL
AF Pant, Ganesh
   Maraseni, Tek
   Apan, Armando
   Allen, Benjamin L.
TI Identifying and prioritising climate change adaptation actions for
   greater one-horned rhinoceros (<i>Rhinoceros unicornis</i>) conservation
   in Nepal
SO PEERJ
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation action; Adaptive capacity; Biodiversity; Climate refugia;
   Connectivity; Protected area; Resilience
ID BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION; CHALLENGES; MANAGEMENT; FRAMEWORK;
   VULNERABILITY; POPULATION; STRATEGIES; ECOLOGY; SCIENCE; THREATS
AB Climate change has started impacting species, ecosystems, genetic diversity within species, and ecological interactions and is thus a serious threat to conserving biodiversity globally. In the absence of adequate adaptation measures, biodiversity may continue to decline, and many species will possibly become extinct. Given that global temperature continues to increase, climate change adaptation has emerged as an overarching framework for conservation planning. We identified both ongoing and probable climate change adaptation actions for greater one-horned rhinoceros conservation in Nepal through a combination of literature review, key informant surveys (n = 53), focus group discussions (n = 37) and expert consultation (n = 9), and prioritised the identified adaptation actions through stakeholder consultation (n = 17). The majority of key informants (>80%) reported that climate change has been impacting rhinoceros, and more than 65% of them believe that rhinoceros habitat suitability in Nepal has been shifting westwards. Despite these perceived risks, climate change impacts have not been incorporated well into formal conservation planning for rhinoceros. Out of 20 identified adaptation actions under nine adaptation strategies, identifying and protecting climate refugia, restoring the existing habitats through wetland and grassland management, creating artificial highlands in floodplains to provide rhinoceros with refuge during severe floods, and translocating them to other suitable habitats received higher priority. These adaptation actions may contribute to reducing the vulnerability of rhinoceros to the likely impacts of climate change. This study is the first of its kind in Nepal and is expected to provide a guideline to align ongoing conservation measures into climate change adaptation planning for rhinoceros. Further, we emphasise the need to integrating likely climate change impacts while planning for rhinoceros conservation and initiating experimental research and monitoring programs to better inform adaptation planning in the future.
C1 [Pant, Ganesh] Minist Forests & Environm, Kathmandu, Nepal.
   [Pant, Ganesh; Maraseni, Tek; Apan, Armando; Allen, Benjamin L.] Univ Southern Queensland, Inst Life Sci & Environm, Toowoomba, Qld, Australia.
   [Maraseni, Tek] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sunshine Coast, Qld, Australia.
   [Apan, Armando] Univ Philippines Diliman, Inst Environm Sci & Meteorol, Quezon City, Philippines.
   [Allen, Benjamin L.] Nelson Mandela Univ, Ctr African Conservat Ecol, Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
C3 University of Southern Queensland; University of the Sunshine Coast;
   University of the Philippines System; University of the Philippines
   Diliman; Nelson Mandela University
RP Pant, G (corresponding author), Minist Forests & Environm, Kathmandu, Nepal.; Pant, G (corresponding author), Univ Southern Queensland, Inst Life Sci & Environm, Toowoomba, Qld, Australia.
EM ganeshpant@yahoo.com
RI Pant, Ganesh/AAR-2943-2021; Allen, Benjamin/H-3066-2019; Apan,
   Armando/C-2977-2017
OI Allen, Benjamin/0000-0002-1533-0163; Apan, Armando/0000-0002-5412-8881
FU Graduate Research School of the University of Southern Queensland; USAID
FX This study was supported by a travel grant from the Graduate Research
   School of the University of Southern Queensland and a student research
   grant from USAID funded Hariyo Ban Program/WWF Nepal. The funders had no
   role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish,
   or preparation of the manuscript.
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NR 69
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 19
PU PEERJ INC
PI LONDON
PA 341-345 OLD ST, THIRD FLR, LONDON, EC1V 9LL, ENGLAND
SN 2167-8359
J9 PEERJ
JI PeerJ
PD JAN 10
PY 2022
VL 10
AR e12795
DI 10.7717/peerj.12795
PG 23
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA YO6US
UT WOS:000748074500002
PM 35047240
OA gold, Green Accepted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU da Silva, ACS
   Galvao, CD
   da Silva, GS
   de Souza, FD
AF Souza da Silva, Ana Cristina
   Galvao, Carlos De Oliveira
   da Silva, Gerald Souza
   de Souza Filho, Francisco de Assis
BE Schumann, A
   Belyaev, V
   Gargouri, E
   Kuczera, G
   Mahe, G
   Mallory, S
TI Ostrom's institutional design principles and reservoir management: a
   study on adaptation to climate variability and change
SO CONSIDERING HYDROLOGICAL CHANGE IN RESERVOIR PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
SE IAHS Publication
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Conference of H09, IAHS-IAPSO-IASPEI Assembly
CY JUL 22-26, 2013
CL Gothenburg, SWEDEN
SP IAHS, IAPSO, IASPEI
DE water policy; semi-arid; drought; reservoir; climate variability;
   climate change
AB Elinor Ostrom's institutional design principles for common pool resources management were refined and extended recently by water resources researchers for studying the governance of adaptation to climate change. Regarding hydrological variability and change and their influence on the management of water reservoirs, this paper shows how Ostrom's theory can be helpful to better analyse the institutional framework that supports the governance of these systems. This paper analyses the political process of generating adaptation strategies for the management of water resources of one particular reservoir located in the drought-prone semi-arid region of Brazil. The work was based on documental analysis of water resources policy frameworks and plans, as well as past experiences in coping with extreme drought events. The application of Ostrom's extended principles allowed the suggestion of relevant institutional proposals for a more robust management of the analysed reservoir.
C1 [Souza da Silva, Ana Cristina; Galvao, Carlos De Oliveira] Fed Univ Campina Grande UFCG, Campina Grande, Brazil.
C3 Universidade Federal de Campina Grande
RP da Silva, ACS (corresponding author), Fed Univ Campina Grande UFCG, Campina Grande, Brazil.
EM ccristina24@yahoo.com.br
RI de Assis Souza Filho, Francisco/AAV-8783-2020; da Silva,
   Ana/AAC-8498-2019
OI Souza Filho, Francisco de Assis/0000-0001-5989-1731; de Oliveira Galvao,
   Carlos/0000-0002-0800-7085
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NR 8
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 6
PU INT ASSOC HYDROLOGICAL SCIENCES
PI WALLINGFORD
PA INST OF HYDROLOGY, WALLINGFORD OX10 8BB, ENGLAND
SN 0144-7815
BN 978-1-907161-40-7
J9 IAHS-AISH P
PY 2013
VL 362
BP 101
EP 106
PG 6
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Water Resources
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Geology; Water Resources
GA BGU16
UT WOS:000324148800012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Milhorance, C
   Howland, F
   Sabourin, E
   Le Coq, JF
AF Milhorance, Carolina
   Howland, Fanny
   Sabourin, Eric
   Le Coq, Jean-Francois
TI Tackling the implementation gap of climate adaptation strategies:
   understanding policy translation in Brazil and Colombia
SO CLIMATE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation to climate change; policy translation; policy diffusion;
   Brazil; Colombia
ID GOVERNANCE; TRACKING
AB National Adaptation Plans (NAPs) have been characterized by complex implementation and coordination gaps, related to uneven framings in domestic contexts. This study analyzes these framing processes in Brazil and Colombia by examining the translation of global prescriptions into tangible policy instruments. It combines a policy translation analytical framework with the processes of layering, drift, conversion, and replacement. It draws on semi-structured interviews with institutional actors and it examines (i) agenda-setting and elaboration of the NAPs, (ii) the different roles and interactions of sector-based actors in agriculture and land-use, and (iii) the distinct concepts of adaptation put forward and their subsequent policy outputs in relation to national institutional trajectories. In Brazil and Colombia, the initial ambition of mainstreaming climate adaptation into sector-based policies resulted in a divergent patchwork of policies, which is characterized by limited means, capacity and other resources dedicated to coordination and implementation. Key policy insights The study examines the processes through which international prescriptions influence concrete policy outcomes. The ambition of establishing new climate policies resulted in a patchwork of policies, characterized by low levels of coordination and limited means of implementation. In Brazil, adaptation goals were layered in with existing sector-based policies with some operational capacity, while in Colombia the national adoption of several adaptation goals has not translated into implementation. The article addresses the politics of policy transfer, knowledge interpretation, and policy change. It considers the possibility of actors interacting to reframe concepts according to their ideas and interests, while also aiming to assure stability. Climate policy requires efforts to alter policy priorities at the sector level, to create cross-sectoral balances, and strengthen the means of implementation, actions which intimately relate to power relations and institutional settings.
C1 [Milhorance, Carolina; Sabourin, Eric; Le Coq, Jean-Francois] Agr Res Ctr Int Dev CIRAD, Dept Environm & Soc, Art Dev Res Unit, Montpellier, France.
   [Milhorance, Carolina; Sabourin, Eric] Univ Brasilia, Ctr Sustainable Dev CDS UnB, Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Howland, Fanny; Le Coq, Jean-Francois] Int Ctr Trop Agr Alliance Biodivers CIAT, Cali, Colombia.
   [Sabourin, Eric; Le Coq, Jean-Francois] Montpellier Univ Excellence MUSE, Montpellier, France.
C3 CIRAD; Universidade de Brasilia; Universite de Montpellier
RP Milhorance, C (corresponding author), Ctr Int Dev & Agr Res CIRAD, UMR Art Dev Dept Environm & Societies, Bur 309,TA C 113,73 Rue Jean Francois Breton, F-34398 Montpellier 5, France.
EM carolina.milhorance@cirad.fr
RI Milhorance, Carolina/AAY-4743-2020
OI Le Coq, Jean-Francois/0000-0003-1084-1973; Howland,
   Fanny/0000-0002-0778-2741; SABOURIN, Eric/0000-0002-1171-2535;
   Milhorance, Carolina/0000-0002-3290-8596
FU CNPq/Capes/FAPDF under the project INCT [16-2014 ODISSEIA]; French
   Association Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-17-CE03-0005]; Agence
   Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-17-CE03-0005] Funding Source:
   Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)
FX This work was supported by CNPq/Capes/FAPDF under the project INCT
   [16-2014 ODISSEIA], by the French Association Nationale de la Recherche
   (ANR) under projects ARTIMIX [ANR-17-CE03-0005].
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NR 78
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 2
U2 24
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1469-3062
EI 1752-7457
J9 CLIM POLICY
JI Clim. Policy
PD NOV 26
PY 2022
VL 22
IS 9-10
BP 1113
EP 1129
DI 10.1080/14693062.2022.2085650
EA JUN 2022
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA 6C2II
UT WOS:000811712700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carbeck, K
   Wang, TL
   Reid, JM
   Arcese, P
AF Carbeck, Katherine
   Wang, Tongli
   Reid, Jane M.
   Arcese, Peter
TI Adaptation to climate change through seasonal migration revealed by
   climatic versus demographic niche models
SO GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; climate niche; demographic niche; Melospiza melodia;
   migratory behavior; population growth; species distribution model
ID PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; LOCAL ADAPTATION; SONG SPARROWS; CHARACTER
   DISPLACEMENT; REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS; POPULATION-DENSITY; EVOLUTION;
   SELECTION; DISPERSAL; SURVIVAL
AB Predicting the geographic range of species and their response to climatic variation and change are entwined goals in conservation and evolutionary ecology. Species distribution models (SDMs) are foundational in this effort and used to visualize the geographic range of species as the spatial representation of its realized niche. SDMs are also used to forecast range shifts under climate change, but often in the absence of empirical evidence that climate limits population growth. We explored the influence of climate on demography, seasonal migration, and the extent of the geographic range in song sparrows (Melospiza melodia), a species thought to display marked local adaptation to regional climate. To do so, we developed SDMs to predict the demographic and climate niches of migratory and resident song sparrows across our study area in western North America from California to Alaska, using 48 years of demographic data from a focal population in British Columbia and 1.2 million continental-scale citizen science observations. Spatial agreement of our demographic and climate niche models in the region of our focal population was strong (76%), supporting the hypothesis that demographic performance and the occurrence of seasonal migration varied predictably with climatic conditions. In contrast, agreement at the northern (58%) and southern (40%) extents of our study area was lower, as expected if the factors limiting population growth vary regionally. Our results support the hypothesis that local climate drives spatial variation in the occurrence of seasonal migration in song sparrows by limiting the fitness of year-round residents, and suggest that climate warming has favored range expansions and facilitated an upward shift in elevational range song sparrows that forgo seasonal migration. Our work highlights the potential role of seasonal migration in climate adaptation and limits on the reliability of climate niche models not validated with demographic data.
C1 [Carbeck, Katherine; Wang, Tongli; Arcese, Peter] Univ British Columbia, Dept Forest & Conservat Sci, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
   [Reid, Jane M.] Univ Aberdeen, Sch Biol Sci, Aberdeen, Scotland.
   [Reid, Jane M.] NTNU, Inst Biol, Ctr Biodivers Dynam, Trondheim, Norway.
C3 University of British Columbia; University of Aberdeen; Norwegian
   University of Science & Technology (NTNU)
RP Carbeck, K (corresponding author), Univ British Columbia, Forest Sci Ctr, Dept Forest & Conservat Sci, 2424 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
EM katherinecarbeck@gmail.com
RI Carbeck, Katherine/JOZ-3615-2023; Wang, Tongli/AAC-8644-2020
OI Carbeck, Katherine/0000-0002-6149-3668; Wang,
   Tongli/0000-0002-9967-6769; Arcese, Peter/0000-0002-8097-482X
FU Norwegian Research Council; NTNU Centre for Biodiversity Dynamics
   [SFF-III 223257]; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of
   Canada; University of British Columbia; FRBC Chair in Conservation;
   Hesse Graduate Fellowship
FX Norwegian Research Council and NTNU Centre for Biodiversity Dynamics,
   Grant/Award Number: SFF-III 223257; Natural Sciences and Engineering
   Research Council of Canada; University of British Columbia; FRBC Chair
   in Conservation; Hesse Graduate Fellowship
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NR 143
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 2
U2 36
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1354-1013
EI 1365-2486
J9 GLOBAL CHANGE BIOL
JI Glob. Change Biol.
PD JUL
PY 2022
VL 28
IS 14
BP 4260
EP 4275
DI 10.1111/gcb.16185
EA APR 2022
PG 16
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 2C2DY
UT WOS:000783391800001
PM 35366358
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Begashaw, A
   Ketema, M
   Mehare, A
   Yami, M
   Feleke, S
   Abdoulaye, T
AF Begashaw, Andualem
   Ketema, Mengistu
   Mehare, Abule
   Yami, Mesay
   Feleke, Shiferaw
   Abdoulaye, Tahirou
TI Climate Change Adaptation Strategies and Its Impact on Household
   Vulnerability to Food Insecurity: A Micro-Level Evidence from Southwest
   Ethiopia
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; food insecurity; vulnerability; multinomial
   endogenous treatment effect; smallholder farmers; Ethiopia
ID ADOPTION; REGRESSION; WELFARE
AB Smallholder farmers in Ethiopia face increasing challenges from climate change and variability, which threaten their food security and livelihoods. This study examines how adopting single and combined climate change adaptation practices affects their vulnerability to food insecurity in Bench Maji Zone, southwest Ethiopia. Through multistage sampling, data were gathered from 390 rural households in four climate-prone districts. The study examines the impacts resulting from both individual and combined implementations of adaptation techniques. These techniques encompass crop management practices, soil and water conservation measures, and livelihood portfolio diversification strategies. The study employed the multinomial endogenous treatment effect regression model to address selection bias and endogeneity resulting from various sources of heterogeneity, whether observed or unobserved. The results show that farmers who adopted adaptation practices were less vulnerable to food insecurity than those who did not. The study also finds that adopting multiple practices has a more significant impact than adopting single practices. Our findings suggest that implementing climate change adaptation strategies can increase the resilience of smallholder farmers in the study area and decrease their vulnerability to food insecurity. The study recommends supporting farmers in adopting these strategies through research and development, information dissemination, and collaborations among farmers, researchers, and extension services.
C1 [Begashaw, Andualem] Mizan Tepi Univ, Dept Econ, POB 260, Mizan Aman, Ethiopia.
   [Ketema, Mengistu; Mehare, Abule] Ethiopian Econ Assoc, POB 34282, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
   [Yami, Mesay; Feleke, Shiferaw; Abdoulaye, Tahirou] Int Inst Trop Agr IITA, Headquarters & West African Hub, POB 5320, Ibadan, Nigeria.
C3 CGIAR; International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)
RP Begashaw, A (corresponding author), Mizan Tepi Univ, Dept Econ, POB 260, Mizan Aman, Ethiopia.
EM andutg24@gmail.com; mengistuket@gmail.com; abule.mehare@gmail.com;
   m.gurmu@cgiar.org; s.feleke@cgiar.org; t.abdoulaye@cgiar.org
OI Abdoulaye, Tahirou/0000-0002-8072-1363; Ketema,
   Mengistu/0000-0001-9971-3657; Begashaw, Andualem/0000-0003-3732-1847;
   Feleke, Shiferaw/0000-0002-0759-4070
FU Mizan Tepi University; International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
   (IITA)
FX This research was supported by Mizan Tepi University, which funded
   research as part of a A.B. Ph.D. study, through the Ministry of
   Education. The publication of this article was fully supported by the
   International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA).
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NR 42
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUL
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 13
AR 5766
DI 10.3390/su16135766
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YO2N8
UT WOS:001269363900001
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ha, TM
   Kühling, I
   Trautz, D
AF Ha, Tuan M.
   Kuhling, Insa
   Trautz, Dieter
TI A systems approach toward climate resilient livelihoods: A case study in
   Thai Nguyen province, Vietnam
SO HELIYON
LA English
DT Article
DE Social science; Climate change adaptation; Climate-smart agriculture;
   System dynamic modelling; Bayesian belief network; Systemic
   interventions
ID ADAPTING AGRICULTURE; SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; CHANGE ADAPTATION; CHANGE
   IMPACTS; INTENSIFICATION; SUSTAINABILITY; PARTICIPATION; DETERMINANTS;
   STRATEGIES; CROPS
AB This study aims to identify strategic actions towards climate resilient livelihoods and secure income for small-holder farmers in Thai Nguyen province of Vietnam using a systems approach and system dynamic modelling tools. Information and data for this research was collected through surveys, interviews, focus group discussions and workshops with relevant stakeholders and 187 farmers in two vulnerable districts during October 2019-April 2020. Findings of this study uncovered a number of shortcomings of the government policies and approaches in climate change adaptation. Local initiatives, community learning and ownership seem to be neglected. This research has substantiated the effectiveness and validity of systems approaches and tools in structuring and solving complex issues in agricultural research and development under the interwoven relationships between environmental and human factors. Climate resilient production models and practices are just part of the systemic interventions that need to be implemented in a coordinated manner towards a more resilient future of the farming communities. This study has addressed the current knowledge gap and the need for using integrated approaches and decision support systems for unravelling ill-structured and/or complex issues of climate change adaptation (CCA). It also provided practical recommendations for informed CCA policies and implementation.
C1 [Ha, Tuan M.] Thai Nguyen Univ Agr & Forestry, Thai Nguyen City, Vietnam.
   [Kuhling, Insa] Univ Kiel, Kiel, Germany.
   [Trautz, Dieter] Osnabruck Univ Appl Sci, Osnabruck, Germany.
C3 Thai Nguyen University; University of Kiel
RP Ha, TM (corresponding author), Thai Nguyen Univ Agr & Forestry, Thai Nguyen City, Vietnam.
EM haminhtuan@tuaf.edu.vn
RI Kuhling, Insa/N-3571-2018
OI Kuhling, Insa/0000-0003-2873-2425; Ha, Tuan/0000-0002-6009-7030
FU Vietnam National Foundation for Science and Technology Development
   [14/2019/TN]
FX This work was supported by the Vietnam National Foundation for Science
   and Technology Development (14/2019/TN).
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NR 103
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 4
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
EI 2405-8440
J9 HELIYON
JI Heliyon
PD NOV
PY 2020
VL 6
IS 11
AR e05541
DI 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e05541
PG 12
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA SA6BZ
UT WOS:000649388700115
PM 33294686
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Olazabal, M
   Chiabai, A
   Foudi, S
   Neumann, MB
AF Olazabal, Marta
   Chiabai, Aline
   Foudi, Sebastien
   Neumann, Marc B.
TI Emergence of new knowledge for climate change adaptation
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Knowledge co-productlon; Systems approach;
   Fuzzy cognitive mapping; Decision-making
ID FUZZY COGNITIVE MAPS; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT;
   ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; SYSTEMS-APPROACH; COPRODUCTION; DISSERVICES; SCIENCE;
   CITIES; RESILIENCE
AB Decision-making for climate change adaptation requires an integrated and cross-sectoral approach to adequately capture the complexity of interconnected systems. More meaningful decisions can be taken in an arena where different agents provide knowledge of specific domains. This paper uses a semi-quantitative method based on cognitive mapping to demonstrate how new knowledge emerges when combining knowledge from diverse agents. For the case of heatwaves in the city of Madrid (Spain) we elicit knowledge about climatic impacts across urban sectors and potential adaptation options. Knowledge is elicited in individual interviews and then aggregated using fuzzy cognitive maps. We observe that the individual maps vary considerably in size and structure and fend evidence of diverse and even contradictory perceptions. There is no "super-stakeholder", who theoretically could provide full knowledge about mechanisms operating in this urban system: the maximum percentage of the final aggregated map explained by a single individual is 26% in terms of concepts and 13% in terms of connections. We illustrate how the emergence of new knowledge can be sustained by combining scientific and policy expertise. Our approach supports knowledge co-production and allows to account for the interconnectedness of urban sectors under climatic impacts in view of formulating more robust adaptation strategies.
C1 [Olazabal, Marta; Chiabai, Aline; Foudi, Sebastien; Neumann, Marc B.] Basque Ctr Climate Change, BC3, Leioa 48940, Spain.
   [Neumann, Marc B.] Basque Fdn Sci, IKERBASQUE, Bilbao 48013, Spain.
C3 Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3); Basque Foundation for Science
RP Olazabal, M (corresponding author), Basque Ctr Climate Change, BC3,Edificio Sede,Planta 1,Parque Cient UPV EHU, Leioa 48940, Bizkaia, Spain.
EM marta.olazabal@bc3research.org; aline.chiabai@bc3research.org;
   sebastien.foudi@bc3research.org; marc.neumann@bc3research.org
RI CHIABAI, ALINE/M-7447-2013; Olazabal, Marta/AFT-6957-2022; Foudi,
   Sebastien/I-3466-2013; Olazabal, Marta/C-3027-2008; Neumann, Marc
   B./B-5553-2008
OI Foudi, Sebastien/0000-0002-8013-7853; Olazabal,
   Marta/0000-0002-3381-0654; Neumann, Marc B./0000-0002-4801-3279
FU European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological
   development and demonstration activities [308337]; Spanish Ministry of
   Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) [FPDI-2013-16631, RYC-2013-13628];
   Universidad Politecnica de Madrid (UPM)
FX This study is part of the Bottom-up climate adaptation strategies for a
   sustainable Europe (BASE) project funded by the European Union's Seventh
   Framework Programme for research, technological development and
   demonstration activities under Grant Agreement No. 308337. MO
   (FPDI-2013-16631) and MBN (RYC-2013-13628) acknowledge co-funding from
   the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO). The
   authors would like to thank Ana Iglesias, Luis Garrote and Pedro
   Iglesias from the Universidad Politecnica de Madrid (UPM) for their
   support in establishing contacts with the participants in this study.
   The authors are grateful to the 24 participants who devoted their time
   and shared their knowledge. The authors would also like to thank Sergio
   H. Faris and Bosco Lliso for their suggestions on a final version of the
   manuscript and Ignacio Palomo for drawing the analogy between the study
   and the ancient parable of the blind men and the elephant.
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NR 44
TC 59
Z9 64
U1 0
U2 37
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD MAY
PY 2018
VL 83
BP 46
EP 53
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.01.017
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GC1BH
UT WOS:000429511100005
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fornaciari, M
   Marrapodi, S
   Ruga, L
   Proietti, C
   Orlandi, F
AF Fornaciari, Marco
   Marrapodi, Silvia
   Ruga, Luigia
   Proietti, Chiara
   Orlandi, Fabio
TI Tree responses and temperature requirements in two central Italy
   phenological gardens
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Plant phenology; Heat accumulation; GDD; Climate change; Bioindicators
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY
AB Plants have always been able to adapt to climate change by reacting through various responses, mainly at the phenological level. The aim of this work is to investigate the behavior of specific tree species located in two phenological gardens in central Italy in relation to the temperature increases recorded in recent years. Specifically, four main phenological phases, BBCH_11, BBCH_19, BBCH_91, and BBCH_65, were monitored during a 14-year time period. The data of the weeks corresponding to the first appearance of each phenological phase and the respective heat accumulations for each species were cross-referenced with the meteorological data recorded by the stations in the two considered areas. Based on average temperature, calculated over reference periods, the species were divided by creating "warm" year groups and "cold" year groups so as to better highlight any differences in the behavior of the same species. In addition, a strong correlation was shown between the maximum temperatures in February and the advances of phenological phases BBCH_11 and BBCH_65. Most of the tree species have shown strong adaptation to climate warming, changing the period of occurrence of the phases themselves.
C1 [Fornaciari, Marco; Marrapodi, Silvia; Ruga, Luigia; Proietti, Chiara; Orlandi, Fabio] Univ Perugia, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Borgo XX Giugno 74, I-06121 Perugia, Italy.
C3 University of Perugia
RP Orlandi, F (corresponding author), Univ Perugia, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Borgo XX Giugno 74, I-06121 Perugia, Italy.
EM fabio.orlandi@unipg.it
RI Fornaciari, Marco/L-9354-2015; Orlandi, Fabio/F-6017-2012
OI Orlandi, Fabio/0000-0003-4021-8664
CR Bonofiglio T, 2009, AEROBIOLOGIA, V25, P227, DOI 10.1007/s10453-009-9128-4
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NR 26
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0020-7128
EI 1432-1254
J9 INT J BIOMETEOROL
JI Int. J. Biometeorol.
PD 2023 AUG 1
PY 2023
DI 10.1007/s00484-023-02522-3
EA AUG 2023
PG 11
WC Biophysics; Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Physiology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biophysics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences; Physiology
GA O0LL0
UT WOS:001040821100003
PM 37526762
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Eisenack, K
   Moser, SC
   Hoffmann, E
   Klein, RJT
   Oberlack, C
   Pechan, A
   Rotter, M
   Termeer, CJAM
AF Eisenack, Klaus
   Moser, Susanne C.
   Hoffmann, Esther
   Klein, Richard J. T.
   Oberlack, Christoph
   Pechan, Anna
   Rotter, Maja
   Termeer, Catrien J. A. M.
TI Explaining and overcoming barriers to climate change adaptation
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; LOCAL-GOVERNMENT; POLICY; GOVERNANCE; FRAMEWORK;
   LIMITS; VULNERABILITY; INSTITUTIONS; SECTOR; LEVEL
AB The concept of barriers is increasingly used to describe the obstacles that hinder the planning and implementation of climate change adaptation. The growing literature on barriers to adaptation reveals not only commonly reported barriers, but also conflicting evidence, and few explanations of why barriers exist and change. There is thus a need for research that focuses on the interdependencies between barriers and considers the dynamic ways in which barriers develop and persist. Such research, which would be actor-centred and comparative, would help to explain barriers to adaptation and provide insights into how to overcome them.
C1 [Eisenack, Klaus; Pechan, Anna] Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Dept Econ, D-26129 Oldenburg, Germany.
   [Moser, Susanne C.] Susanne Moser Res & Consulting, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 USA.
   [Hoffmann, Esther] Inst Ecol Econ Res, D-10785 Berlin, Germany.
   [Klein, Richard J. T.] Stockholm Environm Inst, S-10451 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Klein, Richard J. T.] Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Klein, Richard J. T.] Linkoping Univ, Dept Themat Studies, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Oberlack, Christoph] Univ Freiburg, Dept Econ, D-79085 Freiburg, Germany.
   [Rotter, Maja] Deutsch Gesell Int Zusammenarbeit GIZ, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
   [Termeer, Catrien J. A. M.] Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, NL-6700 EW Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Carl von Ossietzky Universitat Oldenburg; Stockholm Environment
   Institute; Linkoping University; Linkoping University; University of
   Freiburg; Wageningen University & Research
RP Eisenack, K (corresponding author), Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Dept Econ, Ammerlander Heerstr 114-118, D-26129 Oldenburg, Germany.
EM klaus.eisenack@uni-oldenburg.de
RI ; Klein, Richard J.T./B-1148-2009
OI Oberlack, Christoph/0000-0003-2813-7327; Klein, Richard
   J.T./0000-0002-9458-0944
FU German Ministry for Education and Research [01UU0910]; Norden Top-level
   Research Initiative sub-programme "Effect Studies and Adaptation to
   Climate Change" through the Nordic Centre of Excellence for Strategic
   Adaptation Research (NORD-STAR)
FX Parts of this paper are work of the Chameleon Research Group
   (www/climate-chameleon.de), funded by the German Ministry for Education
   and Research under grant 01UU0910. Further parts have been supported by
   the Norden Top-level Research Initiative sub-programme "Effect Studies
   and Adaptation to Climate Change" through the Nordic Centre of
   Excellence for Strategic Adaptation Research (NORD-STAR). We thank M.
   Steinhauser for his support in coding of case studies, and all
   participants of the International Research Workshop on the Barriers to
   Adaptation to Climate Change.
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NR 81
TC 365
Z9 408
U1 3
U2 167
PU NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
PI LONDON
PA MACMILLAN BUILDING, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD OCT
PY 2014
VL 4
IS 10
BP 867
EP 872
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE2350
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA AS9ZO
UT WOS:000344597000018
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Masud, MM
   Azam, MN
   Mohiuddin, M
   Banna, H
   Akhtar, R
   Alam, ASAF
   Begum, H
AF Masud, Muhammad Mehedi
   Azam, Mohammad Nurul
   Mohiuddin, Muhammad
   Banna, Hasanul
   Akhtar, Rulia
   Alam, A. S. A. Ferdous
   Begum, Halima
TI Adaptation barriers and strategies towards climate change: Challenges in
   the agricultural sector
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Agriculture; Climate change; Adaptation; Barriers; Strategies; Farmers'
   perception
ID MAINTENANCE CONTRACTORS; ENVIRONMENTAL BEHAVIOR; WORK PERFORMANCE;
   FARMERS; PERCEPTIONS; MANAGEMENT; RESPONSES
AB This paper explores farmers' perceptions of climate change vulnerability as well as the effects of socioeconomic factors and adaptation barriers on climate change adaptation practices in the Malaysian agricultural sector. To accomplish these aims, a multiple regression analysis was performed, and the severity index (SI) was estimated to measure perceived vulnerability context. The results revealed that age, education level, farm income, farm experience, limited access to agricultural extension, lack of credit facilities, limited access to agricultural markets, and farm size are factors which have significant impacts on adaptation practices. The value of the SI suggests that farmers have favourable attitudes towards climate change adaptation and they are agreeable to addressing climate change issues through appropriate adaptation strategies. However, the study found several adaptation barriers that hinder farmers from implementing climate change adaptation policies. It is realized that at present, no specific policy in Malaysia seeks to counter the impacts of climate change on individual sectors and their productivity. Therefore, the findings of this study will assist policymakers to make an appropriate policy framework considering most suitable adaptation strategies to overcome all the barriers associated with adaptation practices to tackle the adverse effects of climate change in Malaysian agriculture sector. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Masud, Muhammad Mehedi] Univ Malaya, Fac Econ & Adm, Dept Dev Studies, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia.
   [Masud, Muhammad Mehedi; Banna, Hasanul] Univ Malaya, Fac Econ & Adm, Ctr Poverty & Dev Studies, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia.
   [Azam, Mohammad Nurul] King Saud Univ, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
   [Azam, Mohammad Nurul] Daffodil Int Univ, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Mohiuddin, Muhammad] Thompson Rivers Univ, Sch Business & Econ, Kamloops, BC V2C 0C8, Canada.
   [Banna, Hasanul] Univ Malaya, Fac Business & Accountancy, Dept Finance & Banking, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia.
   [Akhtar, Rulia] Int Islamic Univ Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Malaysia.
   [Alam, A. S. A. Ferdous] Univ Utara Malaysia, Sch Int Studies, Kedah, Malaysia.
   [Masud, Muhammad Mehedi; Banna, Hasanul; Alam, A. S. A. Ferdous] Institute Integrated Res Soc Bangladesh IIRB, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Begum, Halima] Natl Univ Malaysia, Fac Social Sci & Humanities, Selangor, Malaysia.
C3 Universiti Malaya; Universiti Malaya; King Saud University; Daffodil
   International University; Universiti Malaya; International Islamic
   University Malaysia; Universiti Utara Malaysia; Universiti Kebangsaan
   Malaysia
RP Masud, MM (corresponding author), Univ Malaya, Fac Econ & Adm, Dept Dev Studies, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia.
EM mehedi@um.edu.my; mazamd@gmail.com; mmohiuddin@tru.ca;
   bannaje@yahoo.com; rulia.aktar@yahoo.com; rial.ferdous@gmail.com;
   halima.shilpi@gmail.com
RI Masud, Muhammad Mehedi/Q-6565-2016; Akhtar, Rulia/AAD-1252-2021; Begum,
   HALIMA/ABG-7850-2021; Alam, A. S. A./I-4594-2014; Azam,
   Maryam/HNP-4769-2023; Mohiuddin, Muhammad/GVU-2001-2022; Banna,
   Hasanul/F-7482-2011
OI Mohiuddin, Muhammad/0000-0003-2009-027X; Begum,
   Halima/0000-0002-6424-4966; Azam, Mohammad/0000-0002-4274-2796; Masud,
   Mehedi/0000-0003-0476-4481; Banna, Hasanul/0000-0002-6902-8525; akhtar,
   rulia/0000-0002-6980-4096
FU Deanship of Scientific Research at King Saud University, KSA
   [RG-1435-028]
FX Mohammad Nurul Azam extends his sincere appreciation to the Deanship of
   Scientific Research at King Saud University, KSA, for funding his
   research (No. RG-1435-028).
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NR 80
TC 141
Z9 147
U1 6
U2 97
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD JUL 10
PY 2017
VL 156
BP 698
EP 706
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.04.060
PG 9
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA EX2AS
UT WOS:000403028500067
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tadgell, A
   Mortsch, L
   Doberstein, B
AF Tadgell, Anne
   Mortsch, Linda
   Doberstein, Brent
TI Assessing the feasibility of resettlement as a climate change adaptation
   strategy for informal settlements in Metro Manila, Philippines
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Resettlement; Disaster risk reduction;
   Philippines
ID POSTDISASTER RESETTLEMENT; FORCED DISPLACEMENT; RISKS; MODEL
AB The existing resettlement infrastructure for informal settlements in Manila, Philippines provide an opportunity to facilitate future climate change adaptation in the city. This research assesses the feasibility of using resettlement as climate change adaptation (CCA) in Manila using the 5 Principles for climate-related resettlement developed by Tadgell, Doberstein and Mortsch (2017 forthcoming). Data from key informant interviews (n=27) with resettlement, CCA, and DRR professionals, addresses the topic in three phases. First, it investigates the role of resettlement in existing CCA and DRR projects to understand if movement from environmental hazards is already occurring. Next, the research gathers interviewee perspectives on the applicability of the 5 Principles in relation to Manila's existing resettlement landscape, and identifies any amendments or foreseen challenges to them. Finally, it explores the perceptions of resettlement, DRR, and CCA actors on the feasibility of employing resettlement as CCA in Manila, including any challenges that may impede the strategy. The findings suggest that existing resettlement infrastructure could be enhanced to provide effective CCA as identified by the 5 Principles, such as initiatives with in-city relocation sites and vertical housing. Poverty is the greatest challenge to implementing any successful adaptation strategy, including resettlement. Thus, poverty reduction should the foundation of CCA planning for some urban poor communities in Manila.
C1 [Tadgell, Anne; Mortsch, Linda; Doberstein, Brent] Univ Waterloo, 200 Univ Ave W, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
C3 University of Waterloo
RP Tadgell, A (corresponding author), Univ Waterloo, 200 Univ Ave W, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
EM atadgell@gmail.com; ldmortsch@uwaterloo.ca; bdoberst@uwaterloo.ca
FU Coastal Cities at Risk: Building Capacity for Managing Climate Change in
   Coastal Megacities (CCaR) project; Social Sciences and Humanities
   Research Council of Canada (SSHRC); Natural Sciences and Engineering
   Research Council of Canada (NSERC); Canadian Institutes for Health
   Research (CIHR); International Development Research Council (IDRC) under
   the International Research Initiative on Adaptation to Climate Change
   (IRIACC)
FX This collaboration was undertaken as part of work that is supported by
   the Coastal Cities at Risk: Building Capacity for Managing Climate
   Change in Coastal Megacities (CCaR) project. The project is supported by
   the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC),
   the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC),
   the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR) and the International
   Development Research Council (IDRC) under the International Research
   Initiative on Adaptation to Climate Change (IRIACC).
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NR 38
TC 19
Z9 22
U1 0
U2 38
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD JUN
PY 2017
VL 22
BP 447
EP 457
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2017.01.005
PG 11
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA EX8XL
UT WOS:000403533400041
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU MacDonald, BH
   Soomai, SS
   De Santo, EM
   Wells, PG
AF MacDonald, Bertrum H.
   Soomai, Suzuette S.
   De Santo, Elizabeth M.
   Wells, Peter G.
BE MacDonald, BH
   Soomai, SS
   DeSanto, EM
   Wells, PG
TI Understanding the Science-Policy Interface in Integrated Coastal and
   Ocean Management
SO SCIENCE, INFORMATION, AND POLICY INTERFACE FOR EFFECTIVE COASTAL AND
   OCEAN MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; GREY LITERATURE; ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION;
   SCIENTIFIC-INFORMATION; RISK-ASSESSMENT; MEDIA COVERAGE; PUBLIC-POLICY;
   MAINE COUNCIL; NEWS MEDIA; KNOWLEDGE
C1 [MacDonald, Bertrum H.] Dalhousie Univ, Informat Management, Sch Informat Management, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [MacDonald, Bertrum H.] Dalhousie Univ, Fac Management, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Soomai, Suzuette S.] Dalhousie Univ, Environm Informat Use & Influence EIUI Res Progra, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Soomai, Suzuette S.] Caribbean Reg Fisheries Mech, Rome, Italy.
   [Soomai, Suzuette S.] Food & Agr Org United Nations, Rome, Italy.
   [De Santo, Elizabeth M.] Franklin & Marshall Coll, Dept Earth & Environm, Lancaster, PA 17604 USA.
   [De Santo, Elizabeth M.; Wells, Peter G.] Dalhousie Univ, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [De Santo, Elizabeth M.] Dalhousie Univ, Marine Affairs Program, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [De Santo, Elizabeth M.] Dalhousie Univ, Coll Sustainabil, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [De Santo, Elizabeth M.] Int Union Conservat Nat IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.
   [De Santo, Elizabeth M.] World Environm Ctr, Washington, DC USA.
   [De Santo, Elizabeth M.] Amer Museum Nat Hist, New York, NY 10024 USA.
   [Wells, Peter G.] Int Ocean Inst, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Wells, Peter G.] Canadian Fed Govt, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Wells, Peter G.] Environm Canada, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Wells, Peter G.] Natl Acad Sci, 2101 Constitut Ave Nw, Washington, DC 20418 USA.
   [Wells, Peter G.] Org Econ Cooperat & Dev, Paris, France.
   [Wells, Peter G.] United Nations, New York, NY 10017 USA.
C3 Dalhousie University; Dalhousie University; Dalhousie University; Food &
   Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO); Franklin &
   Marshall College; Dalhousie University; Dalhousie University; Dalhousie
   University; American Museum of Natural History (AMNH); Environment &
   Climate Change Canada; National Academies of Sciences, Engineering &
   Medicine; Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development (OECD)
RP MacDonald, BH (corresponding author), Dalhousie Univ, Informat Management, Sch Informat Management, Halifax, NS, Canada.; MacDonald, BH (corresponding author), Dalhousie Univ, Fac Management, Halifax, NS, Canada.
RI De Santo, Elizabeth/AAM-2025-2020
OI De Santo, Elizabeth/0000-0003-0975-1874
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NR 127
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 3
PU CRC PRESS-TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP
PI BOCA RATON
PA 6000 BROKEN SOUND PARKWAY NW, STE 300, BOCA RATON, FL 33487-2742 USA
BN 978-1-4987-3171-3; 978-1-4987-3170-6
PY 2016
BP 19
EP 43
D2 10.1201/b21483
PG 25
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Fisheries; Management;
   Public Administration; Water Resources
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Fisheries; Business & Economics;
   Public Administration; Water Resources
GA BR7XS
UT WOS:000670406000004
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ding, YG
   Xu, JM
AF Ding, Yugang
   Xu, Jiangmin
TI Global vulnerability of agricultural commodities to climate risk:
   Evidence from satellite data
SO ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate risk; Climate change; Soil moisture; Agricultural commodities;
   Satellite data
ID ECONOMIC-IMPACTS; RICE YIELDS; TEMPERATURE; EVAPORATION; DAMAGES;
   WEATHER; ASIA
AB Using a new dataset of high-resolution satellite readings of soil moisture in conjunction with climate-economy econometric models and machine learning methods, we quantify the risk to global agricultural commodities from climate change. Our climate risk measure based on soil moisture fluctuations has a significantly negative impact on the yield of major cereals, and the effect is greater than temperature and precipitation. This impact concentrates on countries with lower income levels, harsher climate conditions, or less irrigated farmland. Moreover, we show agricultural commodities are less vulnerable to current drought risks in countries with higher frequencies of past droughts, suggesting that countries adapt to climate change through learning from prior experience. (c) 2023 Economic Society of Australia, Queensland. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Ding, Yugang] Guangdong Univ Foreign Studies, Sch Finance, Guangzhou 510006, Peoples R China.
   [Xu, Jiangmin] Peking Univ, Guanghua Sch Management, 5 Yiheyuan Rd, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China.
   [Ding, Yugang] Guangdong Univ Foreign Studies, Inst Financial Openness & Asset Management, Guangzhou 510006, Peoples R China.
C3 Guangdong University of Foreign Studies; Peking University; Guangdong
   University of Foreign Studies
RP Xu, JM (corresponding author), Peking Univ, Guanghua Sch Management, 5 Yiheyuan Rd, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China.
EM yding@oamail.gdufs.edu.cn; jiangminxu@gsm.pku.edu.cn
RI Ding, Yugang/JGM-7943-2023
OI Ding, Yugang/0000-0002-2493-4102
FU youth project of the National Social Science Fund of China [20CJY021];
   National Natural Science Foundation of China [72203052]; Humanities and
   Social Science Research Foundation of the Ministry of Education of China
   [22YJC790023]; Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation,
   China [2023A1515010861]
FX This work was supported by the youth project of the National Social
   Science Fund of China ("Climate risks to the agricultural economy and
   adaptation to climate risks through financial markets", Grant Number
   20CJY021) , the National Natural Science Foundation of China ("Research
   on the moderating effect and path optimization of agricultural insurance
   in response to climate change risks", Grant Number 72203052) , the
   Humanities and Social Science Research Foundation of the Ministry of
   Education of China ("Research on mechanisms and countermeasures for
   agricultural insurance to guarantee food security in the context of
   climate change", Grant Number 22YJC790023) , Guangdong Basic and Applied
   Basic Research Foundation, China ("Research on the income and risk
   redistribution and path optimization of agricultural insurance for
   common prosperity", Grant Number 2023A1515010861)
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NR 43
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 8
U2 21
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0313-5926
J9 ECON ANAL POLICY
JI Econ. Anal. Policy
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 80
BP 669
EP 687
DI 10.1016/j.eap.2023.09.013
EA SEP 2023
PG 19
WC Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA U2MB8
UT WOS:001083185800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Solín, L
AF Solin, L'ubomir
TI Flood risk governance in Slovakia: will we get change?
SO GEOGRAFICKY CASOPIS-GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL
LA Czech
DT Article
DE flood risk governance; policy ar rangement approach; flood defence;
   diversity; decentralization; Slovakia
ID MANAGEMENT; DYNAMICS; LESSONS
AB The aim of the paper is to apply the analytical framework of the EU-FP7 STAR-FLOOD project to analyse flood risk governance in Slovakia and to answer the question whether the change of the social and political system in Slovakia in 1989 as well as the ongoing climate change and the change of the flood risk paradigm has somehow been reflected in the governance flood risk. Despite many impulses for change, the analysis has shown that centralized flood risk governance by the state persists and the strategy of flood protection through technical flood infrastructure dominates in Slovakia. However it is argued that, this type of flood risk governance is unsustainable in the long term and some decentralization and diversification of flood risk governance is required to increase the societal resilience to flood risk and adapt to climate change.
C1 [Solin, L'ubomir] Geog Ustav SAV, Stefanikova 49, Bratislava 81473, Slovakia.
C3 Slovak Academy of Sciences; Earth Science Institute, SAS
RP Solín, L (corresponding author), Geog Ustav SAV, Stefanikova 49, Bratislava 81473, Slovakia.
EM geogsol@savba.sk
RI Solín, Ľubomír/AAC-8780-2019
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NR 41
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 11
PU SLOVAK ACAD SCIENCE, INST GEOGRAPHY
PI BRATISLAVA
PA STEFANIKOVA 49, BRATISLAVA, SLOVAKIA
SN 0016-7193
EI 2453-8787
J9 GEOGRAFICKY CASOPIS
JI Geograficky Casopis
PY 2020
VL 72
IS 4
BP 351
EP 370
DI 10.31577/geogrcas.2020.72.4.18
PG 20
WC Geography
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geography
GA QW7BA
UT WOS:000628802800003
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Both, C
   Ubels, R
   Ravussin, PA
AF Both, Christiaan
   Ubels, Richard
   Ravussin, Pierre-Alain
TI Life-history innovation to climate change: can single-brooded migrant
   birds become multiple breeders?
SO JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; life history; multiple breeding
ID SPRING ARRIVAL; MOLT; REPRODUCTION; SUCCESS
AB When climatic conditions change and become outside the range experienced in the past, species may show life-history innovations allowing them to adapt in new ways. We report such an innovation for pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca. Decades of breeding biological studies on pied flycatchers have rarely reported multiple breeding in this long-distance migrant. In two populations, we found 12 recent incidents of females with second broods, all produced by extremely early laying females in warm springs. As such early first broods are a recent phenomenon, because laying dates have gradually advanced over time, this innovation now allows individual females to enhance their reproductive success considerably. If laying dates continue advancing, potentially more females may become multiple breeders and selection for early (and multiple) breeding phenotypes increases, which may accelerate adaptation to climatic change.
C1 [Both, Christiaan; Ubels, Richard] Univ Groningen, Conservat Ecol Grp, Groningen, Netherlands.
C3 University of Groningen
RP Both, C (corresponding author), Univ Groningen, Conservat Ecol Grp, Groningen, Netherlands.
EM c.both@rug.nl
RI Both, Christiaan/E-6459-2011
FU Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, VIDI
FX Funding received from Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk
   Onderzoek, VIDI.
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NR 32
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 1
U2 18
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0908-8857
EI 1600-048X
J9 J AVIAN BIOL
JI J. Avian Biol.
PD MAY
PY 2019
VL 50
IS 5
AR e01951
DI 10.1111/jav.01951
PG 7
WC Ornithology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Zoology
GA IA0QV
UT WOS:000469262500002
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Takeuchi, K
   Saito, O
   Matsuda, H
   Mohan, G
AF Takeuchi, Kazuhiko
   Saito, Osamu
   Matsuda, Hirotaka
   Mohan, Geetha
BE Takeuchi, K
   Saito, O
   Matsuda, H
   Mohan, G
TI Conclusion: Synthesis, Recommendations, and Future Directions
SO RESILIENT ASIA: FUSION OF TRADITIONAL AND MODERN SYSTEMS FOR A
   SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
SE Science for Sustainable Societies
LA English
DT Editorial Material; Book Chapter
DE Climate risks; Food production systems; Adaptive capacity; Water
   management; Synthesis; Future directions
AB This chapter summarizes 3 years of widespread research conducted under Climate and Ecosystems Change Adaptation Research in Asia (CECAR-Asia). The main aim of this study was to build agroecological bioproduction systems that adapt to climate change and to propose measures to enhance the resilience of rural production systems in three countries in rural Asia. A mosaic system was proposed to sustain these systems such that a fusion of traditional and modern systems results in a more resilient Asia now and into the future. Some of the key findings suggest that an integration of efficient large-scale modern systems with resilient localized ancient systems is a key intervention and a unique opportunity to promote a harmonious relationship with nature, whereas, extension services, timely information, and knowledge sharing are highly relevant for communities, especially those in rural areas.
C1 [Takeuchi, Kazuhiko] Univ Tokyo, Inst Adv Study UTIAS, Integrated Res Syst Sustainabil Sci IR3S, Tokyo, Japan.
   [Takeuchi, Kazuhiko] Inst Global Environm Strategies IGES, Miura, Kanagawa, Japan.
   [Saito, Osamu] United Nations Univ, Inst Adv Study Sustainabil UNU IAS, Tokyo, Japan.
   [Saito, Osamu; Mohan, Geetha] Univ Tokyo, Integrated Res Syst Sustainabil Sci, Tokyo, Japan.
   [Matsuda, Hirotaka] Univ Tokyo, Integrated Res Syst Sustainabil Sci IR3S,Bunkyo K, Global Leadership Initiat GPSS GLI,Inst Adv Study, Grad Program Sustainabil Sci,Grad Sch Frontier Sc, 7-3-1 Hongo, Tokyo 1138654, Japan.
C3 University of Tokyo; United Nations University; University of Tokyo;
   University of Tokyo
RP Mohan, G (corresponding author), Univ Tokyo, Integrated Res Syst Sustainabil Sci, Tokyo, Japan.
EM matsuda@edu.k.u-tokyo.ac.jp; geetha@ir3s.u-tokyo.ac.jp
RI Saito, Osamu/AAU-1495-2021; Geetha, Mohan/P-8751-2019
OI Geetha, Mohan/0000-0001-6241-8750
FU Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17K15328] Funding Source: KAKEN
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   [No title captured]
NR 11
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU SPRINGER JAPAN
PI TOKYO
PA CHIYODA FIRST BLDG E, 3-8-1 NISHI-KANDA CHIYODA-KU, TOKYO, 101-0065,
   JAPAN
SN 2197-7348
BN 978-4-431-56597-0; 978-4-431-56595-6
J9 SCI SUSTAIN SOC
PY 2018
BP 189
EP 196
DI 10.1007/978-4-431-56597-0_9
D2 10.1007/978-4-431-56597-0
PG 8
WC Area Studies; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental
   Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Area Studies; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental
   Sciences & Ecology
GA BK7NJ
UT WOS:000441808000009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Piquet, M
   Frappat, B
   Gin, P
   Morel, K
   Sautier, M
   Duru, M
   Moreau, JC
   Martin, G
AF Piquet, M.
   Frappat, B.
   Gin, P.
   Morel, K.
   Sautier, M.
   Duru, M.
   Moreau, J. -C.
   Martin, G.
TI Learning to adapt to climate change together (farmers, farming
   consultants, researchers): Challenges and Tools - example of the Forage
   Rummy® board game
SO FOURRAGES
LA French
DT Article
DE Agricultural development; climatic change; climatic factor; farm; forage
   system; simulation
ID AGRICULTURE; VARIABILITY; EXTENSION
AB Climate change affects the entire sector of livestock farming and generates uncertainties for farmers, agricultural consultants and researchers, who overwhelmingly support systemic and dynamic approaches to agricultural activity. In this context of agricultural change, new support services and new tools need to be provided in order to help farmers find solutions that are adapted to their specific needs. In order to provide a synergy between scientific knowledge and agricultural practices, collective tools should be the preferred option, such as for example the Forage Rummy (R) board game - introduced below - which provides a systemic approach. This board game which also includes digital input allows participants (players, facilitators) to exchange and experiment with new farming practises. This game was successfully experimented during 10 workshops on climate change.
C1 [Piquet, M.; Gin, P.; Sautier, M.; Duru, M.; Martin, G.] INRA, UMR AGIR 1248, F-31326 Castanet Tolosan, France.
   [Frappat, B.] Inst Elevage, F-75595 Paris 12, France.
   [Morel, K.; Moreau, J. -C.] Inst Elevage, F-31321 Castanet Tolosan, France.
C3 INRAE
RP Piquet, M (corresponding author), INRA, UMR AGIR 1248, F-31326 Castanet Tolosan, France.
EM mathilde.piquet@toulouse.inra.fr
OI Martin, Guillaume/0000-0003-1875-0777
CR [Anonymous], 2007, SYNTHESIS REPORT CON
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NR 37
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 10
PU ASSOC FRANCAISE PRODUCTION FOURRAGERE
PI PARIS CEDEX 12
PA  MAISON NATIONALE DES ELEVEURS -149 RUE DE BERCY, PARIS CEDEX 12, FRANCE
SN 0429-2766
J9 FOURRAGES
JI Fourrages
PD SEP
PY 2013
IS 215
BP 247
EP 256
PG 10
WC Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA V35ZQ
UT WOS:000209183900009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Paleari, L
   Li, T
   Yang, YB
   Wilson, LT
   Hasegawa, T
   Boote, KJ
   Buis, S
   Hoogenboom, G
   Gao, YJ
   Movedi, E
   Ruget, F
   Singh, U
   Stöckle, CO
   Tang, L
   Wallach, D
   Zhu, Y
   Confalonieri, R
AF Paleari, Livia
   Li, Tao
   Yang, Yubin
   Wilson, Lloyd T.
   Hasegawa, Toshihiro
   Boote, Kenneth J.
   Buis, Samuel
   Hoogenboom, Gerrit
   Gao, Yujing
   Movedi, Ermes
   Ruget, Francoise
   Singh, Upendra
   Stockle, Claudio O.
   Tang, Liang
   Wallach, Daniel
   Zhu, Yan
   Confalonieri, Roberto
TI A trait-based model ensemble approach to design rice plant types for
   future climate
SO GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE AgMIP; climate change; crop modelling; genotypic adaptation; ideotype;
   Oryza sativa L
ID GLOBAL SENSITIVITY-ANALYSIS; GRAIN-YIELD; CROP; SIMULATION; WATER;
   WHEAT; PARAMETERIZATION; PRODUCTIVITY; PERFORMANCE; DISSECTION
AB Crop models are powerful tools to support breeding because of their capability to explore genotype x environmentxmanagement interactions that can help design promising plant types under climate change. However, relationships between plant traits and model parameters are often model specific and not necessarily direct, depending on how models formulate plant morphological and physiological features. This hinders model application in plant breeding. We developed a novel trait-based multi-model ensemble approach to improve the design of rice plant types for future climate projections. We conducted multi-model simulations targeting enhanced productivity, and aggregated results into model-ensemble sets of phenotypic traits as defined by breeders rather than by model parameters. This allowed to overcome the limitations due to ambiguities in trait-parameter mapping from single modelling approaches. Breeders' knowledge and perspective were integrated to provide clear mapping from designed plant types to breeding traits. Nine crop models from the AgMIP-Rice Project and sensitivity analysis techniques were used to explore trait responses under different climate and management scenarios at four sites. The method demonstrated the potential of yield improvement that ranged from 15.8% to 41.5% compared to the current cultivars under mid-century climate projections. These results highlight the primary role of phenological traits to improve crop adaptation to climate change, as well as traits involved with canopy development and structure. The variability of plant types derived with different models supported model ensembles to handle related uncertainty. Nevertheless, the models agreed in capturing the effect of the heterogeneity in climate conditions across sites on key traits, highlighting the need for context-specific breeding programmes to improve crop adaptation to climate change. Although further improvement is needed for crop models to fully support breeding programmes, a trait-based ensemble approach represents a major step towards the integration of crop modelling and breeding to address climate change challenges and develop adaptation options.
C1 [Paleari, Livia; Movedi, Ermes; Confalonieri, Roberto] Univ Milan, Cassandra Lab, ESP, Via Celoria 2, I-20133 Milan, Italy.
   [Li, Tao] DNDC Applicat Res & Training, Durham, NH USA.
   [Yang, Yubin; Wilson, Lloyd T.] Texas A&M AgriLife Res Ctr, Beaumont, TX USA.
   [Hasegawa, Toshihiro] Natl Agr & Food Res Org, Inst Agroenvironm Sci, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.
   [Boote, Kenneth J.; Hoogenboom, Gerrit; Gao, Yujing; Wallach, Daniel] Univ Florida, Dept Agr & Biol Engn, Gainesville, FL USA.
   [Buis, Samuel; Ruget, Francoise] INRAE, UMR1114 EMMAH, Avignon, France.
   [Singh, Upendra] Int Fertilizer Dev Ctr IFDC, Muscle Shoals, AL USA.
   [Stockle, Claudio O.] Washington State Univ, Biol Syst Engn, Pullman, WA 99164 USA.
   [Tang, Liang; Zhu, Yan] Nanjing Agr Univ, MARA Key Lab Crop Syst Anal & Decis Making, Jiangsu Key Lab Informat Agr, Nanjing, Peoples R China.
   [Wallach, Daniel] Natl Inst Agr Res INRA, UMR Agroecol Innovat & Terr AGIR 1248, Castanet Tolosan, France.
C3 University of Milan; National Agriculture & Food Research Organization -
   Japan; State University System of Florida; University of Florida; INRAE;
   Washington State University; Nanjing Agricultural University; INRAE
RP Paleari, L; Confalonieri, R (corresponding author), Univ Milan, Cassandra Lab, ESP, Via Celoria 2, I-20133 Milan, Italy.
EM livia.paleari@unimi.it; roberto.confalonieri@unimi.it
RI Li, Tao/N-2730-2019; Buis, Samuel/IAR-1793-2023; Zhu, Yan/AAK-6927-2020;
   Hoogenboom, Gerrit/F-3946-2010; Wilson, Lloyd/E-9971-2011; Hasegawa,
   Toshihiro/H-8211-2019; Gao, Yujing/HHC-0699-2022
OI Li, Tao/0000-0002-1360-1396; Hasegawa, Toshihiro/0000-0001-8501-5612;
   Buis, Samuel/0000-0002-8676-5447
FU Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan
   [JPMEERF20S11820]
FX Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan, Grant/Award
   Number: JPMEERF20S11820
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NR 86
TC 15
Z9 17
U1 2
U2 43
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1354-1013
EI 1365-2486
J9 GLOBAL CHANGE BIOL
JI Glob. Change Biol.
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 28
IS 8
BP 2689
EP 2710
DI 10.1111/gcb.16087
EA JAN 2022
PG 22
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZS9EB
UT WOS:000749649500001
PM 35043531
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wang, X
   Xu, Y
   Bao, Z
   Li, W
   Liu, F
   Jiang, YT
AF Wang, Xu
   Xu, Ye
   Bao, Zhe
   Li, Wei
   Liu, Feng
   Jiang, Yuntian
TI Operation optimization of a solar hybrid CCHP system for adaptation to
   climate change
SO ENERGY CONVERSION AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Load prediction; CCHP with the solar system; Operation
   optimization
ID OPTIMAL-DESIGN; GAS-TURBINE; PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS; ENERGY; DEMAND;
   SIMULATION; GENERATION; STRATEGY; IMPACTS; EXERGY
AB Combined cooling, heating, and power system (CCHP), coupled with solar energy, have been widely used in building energy supplies. This is because they have the advantages of high energy utilization efficiency and lower pollution emissions. However, there are many influencing factors, complicated structures, and fluctuations in renewable energy sources, which led to ineffective system scheme configurations. In particular, the fluctuations in meteorological elements, such as temperature and radiation under climate change, have increased the difficulty of forecasting user's load and estimating renewable energy output. This research used a five-star hotel in Shanghai, China, as a study case and established an improved version of operation optimization model of a solar hybrid CCHP system. There are two major innovations: (i) Regional climate simulation software PRECIS was applied to predict the temperature and radiation changes in this region over the next 80 years, and the predicted results were plugged as the inputs to the DeST software and solar system output calculation formulas to estimate the user load and the system output under climate change; (ii) the outputs from step (i) were incorporated into the operation optimization model of the hybrid system for generating appropriate operation schemes which could help adapt to climate change. The obtained results show that in the same RCP scenario, user-side cooling demand increases annually. In contrast, the heating demand decreases over time. Their variation degree in the RCP8.5 scenario exceeds those of the RCP4.5 scenario, which directly affect the system output. In addition to external meteorological elements, selected key parameters (such as step electricity price) and cascade utilization mechanism also affect equipments' output. Compared with traditional optimization model based on historical meteorological data, the optimal operational scheme under climate change could effectively avoid imbalance between energy supply and demand caused by the extremely high-temperature event, and also reduce excessive energy supply under "warm winter" condition.
C1 [Wang, Xu; Xu, Ye; Bao, Zhe; Li, Wei] North China Elect Power Univ, MOE, Key Lab Reg Energy & Environm Syst Optimizat, Resources & Environm Res Acad, Beijing 102206, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Feng; Jiang, Yuntian] Univ Sci & Technol Liaoning, Sch Met & Mat, Anshan 114051, Peoples R China.
C3 North China Electric Power University; University of Science &
   Technology Liaoning
RP Xu, Y (corresponding author), North China Elect Power Univ, MOE, Key Lab Reg Energy & Environm Syst Optimizat, Resources & Environm Res Acad, Beijing 102206, Peoples R China.
EM xuye@ncepu.edu.cn
RI xu, ye/GQO-8972-2022; 刘, 锋/JDX-0702-2023
FU Open Fund of Beijing Key Laboratory of Demand Side Multi-Energy Carriers
   Optimization and Interaction Technique [YDB 51201901516]
FX This research was supported by Open Fund of Beijing Key Laboratory of
   Demand Side Multi-Energy Carriers Optimization and Interaction Technique
   (YDB 51201901516).
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NR 33
TC 26
Z9 29
U1 0
U2 50
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0196-8904
EI 1879-2227
J9 ENERG CONVERS MANAGE
JI Energy Conv. Manag.
PD SEP 15
PY 2020
VL 220
AR 113010
DI 10.1016/j.enconman.2020.113010
PG 21
WC Thermodynamics; Energy & Fuels; Mechanics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Thermodynamics; Energy & Fuels; Mechanics
GA NG4NL
UT WOS:000563960500006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ohlson, DW
   McKinnon, GA
   Hirsch, KG
AF Ohlson, DW
   McKinnon, GA
   Hirsch, KG
TI A structured decision-making approach to climate change adaptation in
   the forest sector
SO FORESTRY CHRONICLE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; forest; impacts; adaptation; vulnerability; risk
   management; planning
ID VULNERABILITY
AB Climate change presents a risk to the composition, health, and vitality of Canada's forests and forest sector. Effects may be either negative or positive, and will interact in complex ways over many spatial and temporal scales depending on such factors as physical geography, forest type, and forest management practices. Given the apparent vulnerability of forests and the forest sector to climate change, it is prudent that forest and forest-based community managers begin to develop adaptive strategies to minimize the risks and maximize the benefits of climate change. A flexible planning framework that incorporates key principles of structured decision-making and risk management is presented as a practical way to integrate climate change adaptation into forest management planning.
C1 Nat Resources Canada, Canadian Climate Impacts & Adaptat Res Network Fo, No Forestry Ctr, Edmonton, AB T6H 3S5, Canada.
   Compass Resource Management Ltd, Vancouver, BC V6B 2S8, Canada.
   Nat Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Serv, No Forestry Ctr, Edmonton, AB T6H 3S5, Canada.
C3 Natural Resources Canada; Canadian Forest Service; Natural Resources
   Canada; Canadian Forest Service
RP McKinnon, GA (corresponding author), Nat Resources Canada, Canadian Climate Impacts & Adaptat Res Network Fo, No Forestry Ctr, Edmonton, AB T6H 3S5, Canada.
EM dohlson@compassrm.com; gmckinno@nrcan.gc.ca; khirsch@nrcan.gc.ca
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NR 19
TC 40
Z9 46
U1 0
U2 20
PU CANADIAN INST FORESTRY
PI OTTAWA
PA 151 SLATER ST, STE 606, OTTAWA, ONTARIO K1P 5H3, CANADA
SN 0015-7546
J9 FOREST CHRON
JI For. Chron.
PD JAN-FEB
PY 2005
VL 81
IS 1
BP 97
EP 103
DI 10.5558/tfc81097-1
PG 7
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 911MH
UT WOS:000228006400035
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chakraborty, R
   Rampini, C
   Sherpa, PY
AF Chakraborty, Ritodhi
   Rampini, Costanza
   Sherpa, Pasang Yangjee
TI Mountains of inequality: encountering the politics of climate adaptation
   across the Himalaya
SO ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; climate justice; climate politics; Himalaya;
   political ecology; social dimensions of climate change
ID HYDROPOWER DEVELOPMENT; LOCAL PERCEPTIONS; VULNERABILITY;
   SUSTAINABILITY; RESILIENCE; SYSTEMS; IMPACTS; ANTHROPOLOGY; AUTHORITY;
   POLICIES
AB . There has been a widespread call for the development of transformative adaptation knowledge and strategies in the Himalayan region because of the intensifying onset of climate change impacts. But such transformative thinking is absent in much of Himalayan climate knowledge production, which builds on environmental deterministic and techno-managerial renditions of exceptional precarity; advocates for an increase in the scientific and expert driven projects on the ground; and remains rooted in the scalar realities of the nation-state. This paper contributes to the rich scholarship that counterbalances depoliticized renditions of climate change adaptation, by presenting "everyday stories of adaptation" that have emerged from the authors' work alongside Himalayan communities. In this work we ask, who is the subject in Himalayan climate adaptation discourse and policies? And how can their stories help us envision an adaptation praxis, which challenges regional narratives of crisis and provides alternatives to climate reductionist thinking/planning, by foregrounding the intersectionality and plurality of communities and ecologies? The stories come from three parts of the Himalaya: Uttarakhand, Khumbu, and Assam, and highlight the daily labor for adaptation and its mercurial relationship with the labor for survival. We find that intertwined with changing climate-society relationships are, historical caste privileges and changing generational relationships to land; the complicated engagements between indigeneity, communal sovereignty, and exclusionary institutional mandates; and life with ethnoreligious othering in an aqueous and geopolitically fluid borderland. Together these stories witness the relational social-ecological worlds of regional inhabitants, challenging their powerless and pejorative depictions through climate reductive framings. We conclude with a set of objectives to enable more hopeful and just adaptation futures.
C1 [Chakraborty, Ritodhi] Univ Canterbury, Sch Earth & Environm, Canterbury, New Zealand.
   [Rampini, Costanza] San Jose State Univ, Environm Studies Dept, San Jose, CA USA.
   [Sherpa, Pasang Yangjee] Univ British Columbia, Dept Asian Studies, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
C3 University of Canterbury; California State University System; San Jose
   State University; University of British Columbia
RP Chakraborty, R (corresponding author), Univ Canterbury, Sch Earth & Environm, Canterbury, New Zealand.
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NR 148
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 5
U2 11
PU Resilience Alliance
PI Dedham
PA 231 Bussey St., Beckwith and Brown, Dedham, Massachusetts, UNITED STATES
SN 1708-3087
J9 ECOL SOC
JI Ecol. Soc.
PD OCT
PY 2023
VL 28
IS 4
AR 280406
DI 10.5751/ES-14399-280406
PG 17
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA U8GC4
UT WOS:001087121100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Islam, MS
   Zhang, YR
AF Islam, Md. Suzaul
   Zhang, Yanrong
TI The potential of strategic environmental assessment to reduce disaster
   risks through climate change adaptation in the coastal zone of
   Bangladesh
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Bangladesh; Disaster risk reduction; Climate change; Coastal zone;
   Strategic environmental assessment
AB Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyze the potential of strategic environmental assessment (SEA) to mainstream consideration of climate change adaptation (CCA) in Bangladesh, particularly for the coastal zone, to improve disaster risk reduction (DRR) strategies in this region. Continuing climate risks require adaptation at all levels of society. The densely populated and resource-rich coastal zone of Bangladesh is at risk to the impacts of climate change. Design/methodology/approach This research is based on secondary sources (gray and published literature) of information on climate change impacts on the coastal zone of Bangladesh. The sources include research reports, online publications, governmental reports, scientific journals, international reports, books, journal articles and other academic resources on SEA, climate change adaptation and mitigation, and DRR. In addition to examining SEA in Bangladesh, this paper investigates SEA cases in different countries to obtain insights from the successful application of SEA for CCA. Findings The paper draws on several cases from different countries demonstrating that SEA has a significant potential to coordinate CCA objectives. The findings reveal that the appropriate use of SEA can enable DRR through CCA. Originality/value This study argues that SEA has a potential role in supporting CCA.
C1 [Islam, Md. Suzaul; Zhang, Yanrong] Huazhong Univ Sci & Technol, Sch Environm Sci & Engn, Wuhan, Hubei, Peoples R China.
C3 Huazhong University of Science & Technology
RP Islam, MS (corresponding author), Huazhong Univ Sci & Technol, Sch Environm Sci & Engn, Wuhan, Hubei, Peoples R China.
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NR 59
TC 9
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 21
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-8692
EI 1756-8706
J9 INT J CLIM CHANG STR
JI Int. J. Clim. Chang. Strateg. Manag.
PD JAN 14
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 1
BP 137
EP 153
DI 10.1108/IJCCSM-11-2017-0201
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HF8QG
UT WOS:000454506700009
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Regmi, BR
   Star, C
   Leal, W
AF Regmi, Bimal Raj
   Star, Cassandra
   Leal Filho, Walter
TI An overview of the opportunities and challenges of promoting climate
   change adaptation at the local level: a case study from a community
   adaptation planning in Nepal
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID GOVERNANCE; RESILIENCE
AB As the practice of Community Based Adaptation (CBA) to climate change in countries like Nepal is growing, the literature has pointed out the need for more research in order to test the effectiveness of CBA in reaching the most vulnerable households and its wider applicability. This paper reviews a Community Adaptation Plan (CAP) piloted and implemented in Nepal. The study involved interviews and interaction with a wide range of relevant stakeholders, in order to map their perceptions on the effectiveness of CAP. The findings show that the CAP process and implementation provided for recognition of the role of local communities in climate change adaptation, and ensured their participation and leadership in the planning process. However, due to issues related to the local structure and governance of community-based organizations, the benefits of climate change adaptation support were enjoyed mostly by elites and powerful individuals. The paper suggests that more inclusive approaches are needed, so as to ensure the planning and governance of local institutions is more accountable and responsive to vulnerable households. This could be achieved by devolving decision-making power to the vulnerable households and ensuring inclusive provisions in membership, representation and resource allocation that encourage more equitable sharing of benefits.
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   [Leal Filho, Walter] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Sch Sci & Environm, Manchester, Lancs, England.
C3 Flinders University South Australia; Manchester Metropolitan University
RP Leal, W (corresponding author), Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Sch Sci & Environm, Manchester, Lancs, England.
EM bimal.regmi@icimod.org; Cassandra.star@flinders.edu.au;
   walter.leal@haw-hamburg.de
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NR 51
TC 23
Z9 25
U1 0
U2 23
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD OCT
PY 2016
VL 138
IS 3-4
BP 537
EP 550
DI 10.1007/s10584-016-1765-3
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA DW4LS
UT WOS:000383615200013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Blackwood, L
   Renaud, FG
   Gillespie, S
AF Blackwood, Lorraine
   Renaud, Fabrice G.
   Gillespie, Steven
TI Rail industry knowledge, experience and perceptions on the use of
   nature-based solutions as climate change adaptation measures in
   Australia and the United Kingdom
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH: INFRASTRUCTURE AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE nature-based solutions; rail infrastructure; climate change adaptation;
   sustainability
AB Nature-based solutions (NbS) have been identified as sustainable adaptation measures which could be applied to rail infrastructure in response to the impacts of climate change whilst also providing highly valued co-benefits. To date, however, only a limited number of examples of their use have been found in rail, and there has been little investigation into barriers to their uptake. We use an online questionnaire to examine rail industry professionals' knowledge, experience and thoughts in relation to perceived and/or actual obstacles to the use of NbS as climate change adaptation (CCA) measures for railways, and establish what could aid their wider implementation. This research confirms multiple examples of NbS being used in rail which are not included in the literature, and identifies a lack of awareness of NbS as the largest perceived barrier to their uptake. Education on and promotion of NbS in the industry will therefore be key to its successful widespread deployment. Policy, standards, and client specification were viewed as the best vehicles to enable greater NbS uptake; rail NbS case studies are therefore recommended as means of gathering robust evidence and examples to inform the development of these instruments. Demonstration sites could be used to inform rail stakeholders and communities to garner wider support for the concept. These may also be valuable to the work of researchers and practitioners investigating the wider development and deployment of NbS as sustainable CCA measures across wider (non-rail) sectors and scenarios.
C1 [Blackwood, Lorraine; Renaud, Fabrice G.; Gillespie, Steven] Univ Glasgow, Sch Interdisciplinary Studies, Dumfries, Scotland.
C3 University of Glasgow
RP Blackwood, L (corresponding author), Univ Glasgow, Sch Interdisciplinary Studies, Dumfries, Scotland.
EM l.blackwood.2@research.gla.ac.uk
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NR 62
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 6
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
EI 2634-4505
J9 ENVIRON RES-INFRASTR
JI Environ. Res.-Infrastruct. Sustain.
PD DEC 1
PY 2023
VL 3
IS 4
AR 045011
DI 10.1088/2634-4505/ad14ef
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CW9R1
UT WOS:001128393500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Scoville-Simonds, M
   Jamali, H
   Hufty, M
AF Scoville-Simonds, Morgan
   Jamali, Hameed
   Hufty, Marc
TI The Hazards of Mainstreaming: Climate change adaptation politics in
   three dimensions
SO WORLD DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Development aid; Mainstreaming; Politics;
   Anti-politics; Depoliticization
ID SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; MULTIPLE STRESSORS; VULNERABILITY; EMISSIONS;
   RESPONSIBILITY; POLICY; CO2; PARTICIPATION; INTERVENTIONS; NARRATIVES
AB Under the threat of climate change and with disproportional impacts expected for the world's poorest, the adaptation imperative confers renewed justification to development aid transfers, while the urgency of the problem lends itself to the uncritical application of existing solutions. Yet, an emerging body of work has raised critical questions about how adaptation is being conceived and implemented in the global South. We systematize and contribute to this critical scholarship by distinguishing three fundamental political dimensions of the adaptation problem, related to differential responsibility, the global uneven production of vulnerability, and unequal relations of power in adaptation decision-making itself. Further, based on research from across the global South, the paper suggests that the current program of 'mainstreaming' adaptation into existing development logics and structures perpetuates an anti politics machine, obscuring and depoliticizing rather than addressing the political dimensions of the adaptation problem. Mainstreaming risks not only reproducing development-as-usual, but in fact reinforcing technocratic patterns of control. The three-dimensional view of the politics of climate change adaptation is offered as an analytical perspective to sharpen and systematize future critical adaptation scholarship. In the conclusion, we highlight avenues toward enhanced attention to power and justice in climate change research and practice. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Scoville-Simonds, Morgan] Univ Oslo, Dept Sociol & Human Geog, Moltke Moes Vei 31, N-0851 Oslo, Norway.
   [Scoville-Simonds, Morgan; Hufty, Marc] Ctr Int Environm Studies, Grad Inst Int & Dev Studies, Chemin Eugene Rigot 2A,Case Postale 1672, CH-1211 Geneva 1, Switzerland.
   [Jamali, Hameed] Inst Management Sci, Dev Studies, 1-A,Sect E-5,Phase 7, Peshawar, Pakistan.
   [Jamali, Hameed] IHE Delft Inst Water Educ, Integrated Water Syst & Governance Dept, Westvest 7,POB 3015, NL-2601 DA Delft, Netherlands.
C3 University of Oslo; IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
RP Scoville-Simonds, M (corresponding author), Univ Oslo, Dept Sociol & Human Geog, Moltke Moes Vei 31, N-0851 Oslo, Norway.
EM morgans@sosgeo.uio.no; hameed.jama-li@imsciences.edu.pk;
   marc.hufty@graduateinstitute.ch
RI Scoville-Simonds, Morgan/Z-1707-2019
OI Scoville-Simonds, Morgan/0000-0001-5951-7926; Hufty,
   Marc/0000-0003-2502-6867; Jamali, Hameedullah/0000-0002-1577-5541
FU Swiss National Science Foundation under the "ADAPT2" project [134815,
   168266]; Experienced Water Postdoc Fellowship COFUND Programme under FP7
   [606838]; Research Council of Norway [250434]
FX Research for this paper was supported by the Swiss National Science
   Foundation under the "ADAPT2" project (grant number 134815) for all
   three authors, and a post-doc fellowship "Adapting to a changing
   discursive climate" (grant number 168266) for the lead author.
   Additional work of Hameed Jamali was funded by the Experienced Water
   Postdoc Fellowship COFUND Programme under FP7 (grant number 606838).
   Affiliation of the lead author with the AdaptationCONNECTS project
   funded by the Research Council of Norway (grant number 250434) has
   supported the final stages of this work. For comments on earlier drafts
   of this paper, we would like to thank Karen O'Brien, Andrea J.
   Nightingale, Elise Remling, Kirsten Ulsrud, and two anonymous reviewers.
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NR 140
TC 84
Z9 94
U1 2
U2 55
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0305-750X
EI 1873-5991
J9 WORLD DEV
JI World Dev.
PD JAN
PY 2020
VL 125
AR 104683
DI 10.1016/j.worlddev.2019.104683
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Business & Economics
GA JN0OZ
UT WOS:000496605200009
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bardsley, DK
   Palazzo, E
   Pütz, M
AF Bardsley, Douglas K.
   Palazzo, Elisa
   Putz, Marco
TI Regional path dependence and climate change adaptation: A case study
   from the McLaren Vale, South Australia
SO JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Viticulture; Path dependence; Innovation;
   Agrobiodiversity; South Australia
ID AGRICULTURAL SUSTAINABILITY; ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENT; RESILIENCE; SYSTEMS;
   FOOD; BIODIVERSITY; ECONOMIES; NETWORKS; LESSONS; AGROBIODIVERSITY
AB The adaptation of agricultural systems to climate change remains one of humanity's greatest challenges. Regions with complex, knowledge-intensive farming practices have many components that can be adjusted to increase systemic resilience. An argument for the importance of evolutionary adaptation pathways is developed with a case-study of the viticultural region of the McLaren Vale in South Australia. In a series of walk-and-talk interviews, farmers describe their business risks and the opportunities to adapt. Their responses suggest a sophisticated ecological understanding facilitated by their life-experiences, learning networks and relationships with governance, research and marketing organisations. In particular, a new exploitation of agrobiodiversity is generating on-farm resilience by spreading the risks of production and providing opportunities for the region to better respond to changing environmental and market conditions. Individual farmers have developed unique climate change adaptation pathways, but effective cooperation has also enabled the evolution of a regional adaptation cluster. Regions such as the McLaren Vale with a path dependence of innovation could have a cultural heritage that supports attempts at adaptation, which will in turn make them vital first-movers in the search for effective responses to climate change risk.
C1 [Bardsley, Douglas K.] Univ Adelaide, Sch Social Sci, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
   [Palazzo, Elisa] Univ New South Wales, UNSW Built Environm, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
   [Bardsley, Douglas K.; Putz, Marco] Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res WSL, Zurich, Switzerland.
C3 University of Adelaide; University of New South Wales Sydney; Swiss
   Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute for
   Forest, Snow & Landscape Research
RP Bardsley, DK (corresponding author), Univ Adelaide, Sch Social Sci, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
EM douglas.bardsley@adelaide.edu.au
RI Pütz, Marco/B-8389-2016; palazzo, elisa/AAM-5061-2020
OI palazzo, elisa/0000-0001-6189-8692; Puetz, Marco/0000-0001-7868-6864
FU Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources within the
   Government of South Australia, Australia through their Wildlife
   Conservation Fund Grants Program [2014/15]
FX This work was supported by the Department of Environment, Water and
   Natural Resources within the Government of South Australia, Australia
   through their Wildlife Conservation Fund Grants Program (Research)
   2014/15.
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NR 103
TC 26
Z9 26
U1 2
U2 66
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0743-0167
EI 1873-1392
J9 J RURAL STUD
JI J. Rural Stud.
PD OCT
PY 2018
VL 63
BP 24
EP 33
DI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2018.08.015
PG 10
WC Geography; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Public Administration
GA GX9DA
UT WOS:000448097500003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kumar, P
   Leonardi, N
AF Kumar, Pavitra
   Leonardi, Nicoletta
TI Exploring Mega-Nourishment Interventions Using Long Short-Term Memory
   (LSTM) Models and the <i>Sand Engine Surface</i> MATLAB Framework
SO GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
ID RADAR INTERFEROMETRY; STORAGE; WATER; LAKE
AB Coastal protection is of paramount importance because erosion and flooding affect millions of people living along the coast and can largely influence countries' economy. The implementation of nature-based solutions for coastal protection, such as sand engines, has become more popular due to these interventions' adaptability to climate change. This study explores synergies between Artificial Intelligence (AI) and hydro-morphodynamic models for the creation of efficient decision-making tools for the choice of optimal sand engines configurations. Specifically, we investigate the use of long-short-term memory (LSTM) models as predictive tools for the morphological evolution of sand engines. We developed different LSTM models to predict time series of bathymetric changes across the sand engine as well as the time-decline in the sand engine volume as a function of external forces and intervention size. Finally, a MATLAB framework was developed to return LSTM model results based on users' inputs about sand engine size and external forcings.
C1 [Kumar, Pavitra; Leonardi, Nicoletta] Univ Liverpool, Sch Environm Sci, Dept Geog & Planning, Liverpool, England.
C3 University of Liverpool
RP Kumar, P (corresponding author), Univ Liverpool, Sch Environm Sci, Dept Geog & Planning, Liverpool, England.
EM pavitra.kumar@liverpool.ac.uk
FU Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/V056042/1]; EPSRC
   [EP/V056042/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX We acknowledge the following funding source for this study: ENARM -
   Engineering with Nature: combining Artificial intelligence, Remote
   sensing and computer Models for the optimum design of coastal protection
   schemes EP/V056042/1. The Data driven models have been developed using
   the MATLAB libraries from the Deep Learning toolbox.
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NR 39
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 6
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
SN 0094-8276
EI 1944-8007
J9 GEOPHYS RES LETT
JI Geophys. Res. Lett.
PD FEB 28
PY 2024
VL 51
IS 4
AR e2023GL106042
DI 10.1029/2023GL106042
PG 10
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology
GA KA7Z3
UT WOS:001177318400021
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Khlebnikova, EI
   Shkolnik, IM
   Rudakova, YL
AF Khlebnikova, E. I.
   Shkolnik, I. M.
   Rudakova, Yu. L.
TI Probabilistic Estimates of Variations in Applied Indicators of the
   Thermal Regime for the Adaptation to Climate Change in Russia
SO IZVESTIYA ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC PHYSICS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; regional models; probabilistic assessments; risks;
   adaptation
ID PROJECTIONS; TERRITORY
AB Possibilities of using the basic technology of probabilistic scenario forecasting of the regional climate to obtain detailed estimates of future changes in applied indicators of the thermal regime in the territory of federal districts and individual subjects of the Russian Federation are considered. Probabilistic ensemble estimates of future changes are presented for climatic indicators such as seasonal extremes of air temperature for a given averaging period, the sum of active temperatures, energy consumption indices for cold and warm seasons, and other characteristics of intra-annual periods with air temperatures above/below threshold values. The changes in the considered parameters of the thermal regime have been analyzed. It is shown that the main features of changes expected by the middle of the 21st century detected by the results of modeling over most of the territory of Russia are well manifested based on the observational data in the interval 1961-2020.
C1 [Khlebnikova, E. I.; Shkolnik, I. M.; Rudakova, Yu. L.] Voeikov Main Geophys Observ, St Petersburg 194021, Russia.
RP Khlebnikova, EI (corresponding author), Voeikov Main Geophys Observ, St Petersburg 194021, Russia.
EM khlebnikova_e@mail.ru
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NR 20
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU MAIK NAUKA/INTERPERIODICA/SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013-1578 USA
SN 0001-4338
EI 1555-628X
J9 IZV ATMOS OCEAN PHY+
JI Izv. Atmos. Ocean. Phys.
PD NOV
PY 2023
VL 59
IS SUPPL 2
SU 2
BP S170
EP S180
DI 10.1134/S0001433823140086
PG 11
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Oceanography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Oceanography
GA AD2N6
UT WOS:001116458500002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Osterhoudt, S
AF Osterhoudt, Sarah
TI Remembered resilience: oral history narratives and community resilience
   in agroforestry systems
SO RENEWABLE AGRICULTURE AND FOOD SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Agroforestry; climate change; collective memory; oral history;
   resilience
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; DISASTERS; ANTHROPOLOGY; TRADITION; CULTURE
AB In this article, I consider how local oral history narratives provide smallholder farmers with both material and symbolic resources in adapting to climate change. I draw from the case study of an agrarian village in Madagascar that was struck by a destructive category 3 cyclone. In the weeks following the storm, oral history knowledge occupied an increasingly visible role within the community, as younger farmers interacted with elders to hear tales of past storms. Through these shared accounts, people discussed specific techniques on how to cope with environmental uncertainty. They also created a sense of shared history, which provided individuals across generations an entry point into the local historical record. Overall, the process of sharing oral history accounts can contribute to community resilience, with resiliency encompassing not only technical or ecological factors, but also the more affective realms of shared legacies, hope and belonging.
C1 [Osterhoudt, Sarah] Indiana Univ, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
C3 Indiana University System; Indiana University Bloomington
RP Osterhoudt, S (corresponding author), Indiana Univ, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
EM srosterh@indiana.edu
FU Wenner-Gren Foundation; Fulbright-Hays fellowship
FX I thank the members of the community of Imorona for the long-standing
   collaboration of this research. This work was supported by the
   Wenner-Gren Foundation and a Fulbright-Hays fellowship. All names have
   been changed to protect the identity of individuals. This research was
   approved by the IRB review at Yale University.
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NR 22
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 37
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 1742-1705
EI 1742-1713
J9 RENEW AGR FOOD SYST
JI Renew. Agr. Food Syst.
PD JUN
PY 2018
VL 33
IS 3
SI SI
BP 252
EP 255
DI 10.1017/S1742170517000679
PG 4
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture
GA GE2HZ
UT WOS:000431037500008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bocinsky, RK
   Kohler, TA
AF Bocinsky, R. Kyle
   Kohler, Timothy A.
TI A 2,000-year reconstruction of the rain-fed maize agricultural niche in
   the US Southwest
SO NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
ID SOUTHERN COLORADO PLATEAU; NORTH-AMERICA; PRECIPITATION; TEMPERATURE;
   ALGORITHM; PRODUCTIVITY; CHEMISTRY; NETWORKS; AREA
AB Humans experience, adapt to and influence climate at local scales. Paleoclimate research, however, tends to focus on continental, hemispheric or global scales, making it difficult for archaeologists and paleoecologists to study local effects. Here we introduce a method for high-frequency, local climate-field reconstruction from tree-rings. We reconstruct the rain-fed maize agricultural niche in two regions of the southwestern United States with dense populations of prehispanic farmers. Niche size and stability are highly variable within and between the regions. Prehispanic rain-fed maize farmers tended to live in agricultural refugia-areas most reliably in the niche. The timing and trajectory of the famous thirteenth century Pueblo migration can be understood in terms of relative niche size and stability. Local reconstructions like these illuminate the spectrum of strategies past humans used to adapt to climate change by recasting climate into the distributions of resources on which they depended.
C1 [Bocinsky, R. Kyle; Kohler, Timothy A.] Washington State Univ, Dept Anthropol, Pullman, WA 99164 USA.
   [Kohler, Timothy A.] Santa Fe Inst, Santa Fe, NM 87501 USA.
   [Kohler, Timothy A.] Crow Canyon Archaeol Ctr, Cortez, CO 81321 USA.
C3 Washington State University; The Santa Fe Institute
RP Bocinsky, RK (corresponding author), Washington State Univ, Dept Anthropol, Pullman, WA 99164 USA.
EM bocinsky@wsu.edu
RI Kohler, Tim/GSN-2779-2022
OI Bocinsky, R. Kyle/0000-0003-1862-3428
FU National Center for Preservation Technology and Training [R-047];
   Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research [CONF-217]; National
   Science Foundation [BCS-0119981, DEB-0816400, DGE-1347973]; School of
   Advanced Research; Washington State University; Santa Fe Institute; Crow
   Canyon Archaeological Center; Washington State University/University of
   Washington [DGE-0549425]; Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie; SBE
   Off Of Multidisciplinary Activities [1439516, 1439591] Funding Source:
   National Science Foundation; Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci;
   Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie [1248491] Funding Source:
   National Science Foundation; Division Of Environmental Biology; Direct
   For Biological Sciences [0816400] Funding Source: National Science
   Foundation; Office of Polar Programs (OPP); Directorate For Geosciences
   [1140106] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
FX Funding to support the Village Ecodynamics Project research and
   reporting has come from the National Center for Preservation Technology
   and Training (grant R-047 to Kohler), the Wenner-Gren Foundation for
   Anthropological Research (CONF-217 to Kohler and Gumerman), the National
   Science Foundation (BCS-0119981 to Kohler, Kolm, Reynolds and Varien,
   DEB-0816400 to Kohler, Allen, Kobti and Varien, and DGE-1347973 to
   Bocinsky) and from the School of Advanced Research for a Research Team
   Seminar (grant to Ortman and Kohler). We are indebted to support from
   Washington State University, the Santa Fe Institute, Crow Canyon
   Archaeological Center and the Washington State University/University of
   Washington NSF IGERT Program in Evolutionary Modeling (DGE-0549425). We
   especially acknowledge contributors to the International Tree-Ring Data
   Bank and North American Pollen Database, and the PRISM Climate Group at
   Oregon State University.
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NR 49
TC 80
Z9 99
U1 1
U2 40
PU NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
PI LONDON
PA MACMILLAN BUILDING, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 2041-1723
J9 NAT COMMUN
JI Nat. Commun.
PD DEC
PY 2014
VL 5
AR 5618
DI 10.1038/ncomms6618
PG 12
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA AX9MF
UT WOS:000347226100001
PM 25472022
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Keskitalo, ECH
AF Keskitalo, E. Carina H.
BE Keskitalo, ECH
TI Adapting to Climate Change in Sweden: National Policy Development and
   Adaptation Measures in Vastra Gotaland
SO DEVELOPING ADAPTATION POLICY AND PRACTICE IN EUROPE: MULTI-LEVEL
   GOVERNANCE OF CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Sweden; Vastra Gotaland; Gothenburg
AB Located in south-western Sweden, the Vastra Gotaland region is often seen as one of the areas of the country most vulnerable to flooding and erosion, and will be highly impacted by flooding and sea level rise as a result of climate change Drawing upon a literature study and semi-structured interviews with actors in climate policy, this chapter reviews the development of adaptation policy in Sweden The chapter focuses particularly on the Commission on Climate and Vulnerability (2007) and a government bill An Integrated Climate and Energy Policy Climate (2009) in which suggestions by the Commission were included The chapter describes the development of adaptation policy and measures on the regional and local levels in Vastra Gotaland and within select municipalities The study illustrates the national distribution of responsibility through which municipalities are given a large role in integrating adaptation measures, and describes some of the differentiated responses such responsibilities may elicit on the local level
C1 Umea Univ, Polit Sci Dept Social & Econ Geog, S-90187 Umea, Sweden.
C3 Umea University
RP Keskitalo, ECH (corresponding author), Umea Univ, Polit Sci Dept Social & Econ Geog, S-90187 Umea, Sweden.
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NR 49
TC 21
Z9 23
U1 1
U2 6
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
BN 978-90-481-9324-0
PY 2010
BP 189
EP 232
DI 10.1007/978-90-481-9325-7_5
D2 10.1007/978-90-481-9325-7
PG 44
WC Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BRZ48
UT WOS:000283952600005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Hartz-Karp, J
   Meister, HP
AF Hartz-Karp, Janette
   Meister, Hans-Peter
BE OttoZimmermann, K
TI Creating Resilient Cities Through Empowered, Deliberative Participation
SO RESILIENT CITIES: CITIES AND ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE - PROCEEDINGS
   OF THE GLOBAL FORUM 2010
SE Local Sustainability
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 1st Annual Global Forum on Cities and Adaptation to Climate Change.
   Resilient Cities 2010
CY MAY 28-30, 2010
CL ICLEI, Bonn, GERMANY
SP EU European Regional Dev Fund, State N Rhine Westphalia, Fdn Int Dialogue Savings Bank Bonn, Solar World, Rockefeller Fdn, UNISDR, USAID, World Bank Inst
HO ICLEI
DE Climate change adaptation; Collaborative governance; Deliberative
   democracy; Deliberative participation
AB Social and physical climate change scientists agree that to effectively address climate change, we will need new 'technologies' of cooperation. Placing collaborative governance at centre stage, this paper explores how best to develop resilient cities based on best practice and innovative design. After researching best practice stakeholder collaboration, this paper analyses the common themes that characterize climate adaptation strategies, and documents the success factors typifying best practice. Based on this research and experience, it outlines the IFOK model for new governance and supporting institutional strategies. In addition, the paper argues that a more radical redesign of engagement and governance will be critical in order to achieve community resilience and joint action. It outlines how this can be achieved through collaborative governance, involving the deliberated wisdom of ordinary citizens, i.e. by instituting deliberative democracy. Examples of deliberative democratic practice across the globe are highlighted, including an innovative initiative to develop a deliberative community and collaborative governance in regional Western Australia.
C1 [Hartz-Karp, Janette] Curtin Univ, Sustainabil Policy Inst, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.
   [Meister, Hans-Peter] IFOK GmbH, Bensheim, Germany.
C3 Curtin University
RP Hartz-Karp, J (corresponding author), Curtin Univ, Sustainabil Policy Inst, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.
EM j.hartz-karp@curtin.edu.au; hans-petermeister@ifok.com
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NR 16
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 31
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10013, UNITED STATES
BN 978-94-007-0784-9
J9 LOCAL SUSTAIN
PY 2011
VL 1
BP 177
EP +
DI 10.1007/978-94-007-0785-6_18
PG 2
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Urban Studies
GA BVQ12
UT WOS:000292277300018
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ramalho, M
   Ferreira, JC
   Santos, CJ
AF Ramalho, Margarida
   Ferreira, Jose Carlos
   Santos, Catarina Joia
TI Climate Change Adaptation Strategies at a Local Scale: The Portuguese
   Case Study
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE coastal areas; community-based adaptation; nature-based solutions; green
   infrastructure
ID GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE; RESILIENCE; KNOWLEDGE; LEVEL; PERSPECTIVE; IMPACTS
AB Coastal areas are home to more than 2 billion people around the globe and, as such, are especially vulnerable to climate change consequences. Climate change adaptation has proven to be more effective on a local scale, contributing to a bottom-up approach to the problems related to the changing climate. Portugal has approximately 2000 km of coastline, with 75% of the population living along the coast. Therefore, this research had the main objective of understanding adaptation processes at a local scale, using Portuguese coastal municipalities as a case study. To achieve this goal, document analysis and a questionnaire to coastal municipalities were applied, and the existence of measures rooted in nature-based solutions, green infrastructures, and community-based adaptation was adopted as a variable. The main conclusion from this research is that 87% of the municipalities that answered the questionnaire have climate change adaptation strategies implemented or in development. Moreover, it was possible to conclude that 90% of the municipalities are familiar with the concept of nature-based solutions and all the municipalities with adaptation strategies include green infrastructure. However, it was also possible to infer that community-based adaptation is a concept that most municipalities do not know about or undervalue.
C1 [Ramalho, Margarida; Ferreira, Jose Carlos; Santos, Catarina Joia] NOVA Univ Lisbon, NOVA Sch Sci & Technol, Dept Environm Sci & Engn, Campus Capar, P-2829516 Caparica, Portugal.
   [Ferreira, Jose Carlos; Santos, Catarina Joia] MARE Marine & Environm Sci Ctr, ARNET Aquat Res Network, Campus Capar, P-2829516 Caparica, Portugal.
C3 Universidade Nova de Lisboa
RP Ramalho, M (corresponding author), NOVA Univ Lisbon, NOVA Sch Sci & Technol, Dept Environm Sci & Engn, Campus Capar, P-2829516 Caparica, Portugal.
EM mf.ramalho@campus.fct.unl.pt
RI Ferreira, João/B-5351-2009
OI Joia Santos, Catarina/0000-0002-3012-1343; Ferreira, Jose
   Carlos/0000-0001-7917-7252
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NR 64
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 15
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 19
IS 24
AR 16687
DI 10.3390/ijerph192416687
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA 7E4WB
UT WOS:000901169200001
PM 36554567
OA Green Submitted, Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vidal-Cuellar, CL
   Chicmana-Zapata, V
   Arotoma-Rojas, I
   Meza, G
   Ford, JD
   Ferruchi, HR
   De-La-Cruz, E
   Lancha-Rucoba, G
   Borjas-Cavero, DB
   Loarte, S
   Mamani, OA
   Palma, VIP
   Coronel-Altamirano, MG
   Benites, I
   Pinasco, G
   Valera, R
   Huaman, MM
   Urteaga-Villanueva, A
   Munayco, C
   Zavaleta-Cortijo, C
AF Vidal-Cuellar, Claudia L.
   Chicmana-Zapata, Victoria
   Arotoma-Rojas, Ingrid
   Meza, Graciela
   Ford, James D.
   Ferruchi, Hugo Rodriguez
   De-La-Cruz, Elida
   Lancha-Rucoba, Guillermo
   Borjas-Cavero, Diego B.
   Loarte, Sonia
   Alencastre Mamani, Ofelia
   Palma, Victoria I. Pena
   Coronel-Altamirano, Maria G.
   Benites, Ivonne
   Pinasco, Giovanna
   Valera, Rosa
   Huaman, Marco Maguina
   Urteaga-Villanueva, Adolfo
   Munayco, Cesar, V
   Zavaleta-Cortijo, Carol
TI Pathways to strengthen the climate resilience of health systems in the
   Peruvian Amazon by working with Indigenous leaders, communities and
   health officers
SO BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE Health systems; Environmental health; Health services research; Health
   policies and all other topics
ID INUIT
AB Background Indigenous knowledge and responses were implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic to protect health, showcasing how Indigenous communities participation in health systems could be a pathway to increase resilience to emergent hazards like climate change. This study aimed to inform efforts to enhance climate change resilience in a health context by: (1) examining if and how adaptation to climate change is taking place within health systems in the Peruvian Amazon, (2) understanding how Indigenous communities and leaders' responses to climatic hazards are being articulated within the official health system and (3) to provide recommendations to increase the climate change resilience of Amazon health systems.Methods This study was conducted among two Peruvian Amazon healthcare networks in Junin and Loreto regions. A mixed methodology design was performed using a cross-sectional survey (13 healthcare facilities), semistructured interviews (27 official health system participants and 17 Indigenous participants) and two in-person workshops to validate and select key priorities (32 participants). We used a climate-resilient health system framework linked to the WHO health systems building blocks.Results Indigenous and official health systems in the Peruvian Amazon are adapting to climate change. Indigenous responses included the use of Indigenous knowledge on weather variability, vegetal medicine to manage health risks and networks to share food and resources. Official health responses included strategies for climate change and response platforms that acted mainly after the occurrence of climate hazards. Key pathways to articulate Indigenous and official health systems encompass incorporating Indigenous representations in climate and health governance, training the health work force, improving service delivery and access, strengthening the evidence to support Indigenous responses and increasing the budget for climate emergency responses.Conclusions Key resilience pathways call for a broader paradigm shift in health systems that recognises Indigenous resilience as valuable for health adaptation, moves towards a more participatory health system and broadens the vision of health as a dimension inherently tied to the environment.
C1 [Vidal-Cuellar, Claudia L.; Chicmana-Zapata, Victoria; Borjas-Cavero, Diego B.; Zavaleta-Cortijo, Carol] Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Fac Salud Publ & Adm, Unidad Ciudadania Intercultural & Salud Indigena U, San Martin De Porres, Peru.
   [Arotoma-Rojas, Ingrid; Ford, James D.; Zavaleta-Cortijo, Carol] Univ Leeds, Priestley Ctr Climate Futures, Leeds, England.
   [Meza, Graciela; Ferruchi, Hugo Rodriguez] Univ Nacl Amazonia Peruana, Fac Med, Iquitos, Peru.
   [De-La-Cruz, Elida] Org Mujeres Indigenas Amazon Ashaninkas Selva Cent, Satipo, Peru.
   [Lancha-Rucoba, Guillermo] Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Fac Salud Publ & Adm, Unidad Ciudadania Intercultural & Salud Indigena U, Yurimaguas, Peru.
   [Loarte, Sonia] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Direcc Promoc Salud, Lima, Peru.
   [Alencastre Mamani, Ofelia] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Direcc Pueblos Indigenas Originarios, Lima, Peru.
   [Palma, Victoria I. Pena; Coronel-Altamirano, Maria G.] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Direcc Salud Mental, Lima, Peru.
   [Benites, Ivonne; Pinasco, Giovanna] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Direcc Gest Riesgos & Desastres DIGERD, Lima, Peru.
   [Valera, Rosa] Gerencia Reg Salud Loreto, Coordinadora Reg Salud Pueblos Indigenas, Iquitos, Peru.
   [Huaman, Marco Maguina] Red Salud Satipo, Estrategia Pueblos Indigenas Originarios, Satipo, Peru.
   [Urteaga-Villanueva, Adolfo] Red Salud Satipo, Oficina Emergencias & Desastres, Satipo, Peru.
   [Munayco, Cesar, V] Estado Peruano Minist Salud, Ctr Nacl Epidemiol Prevenc & Control Enfermedades, Lima, Peru.
C3 Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia; University of Leeds; Universidad
   Nacional de la Amazonia Peruana; Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia
RP Zavaleta-Cortijo, C (corresponding author), Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Fac Salud Publ & Adm, Unidad Ciudadania Intercultural & Salud Indigena U, San Martin De Porres, Peru.; Zavaleta-Cortijo, C (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Priestley Ctr Climate Futures, Leeds, England.
EM claudia.vidal.c@upch.pe; victoria.chicmana@upch.pe; eeiear@leeds.ac.uk;
   graciela.meza@unapiquitos.edu.pe; j.ford2@leeds.ac.uk;
   hugo.rodriguez@unapiquitos.edu.pe; eleida_df@hotmail.com;
   guillermo.lancha@upch.pe; diego.borjas@upch.pe; sloarte@minsa.gob.pe;
   ofeliaestudio75@gmail.com; vpena@minsa.gob.pe; mcoronela806@gmail.com;
   ibenites@minsa.gob.pe; pinascogiovanna@hotmail.com;
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FU The Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research (WHO) [2022/1249873-
   1]; National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) (using the UK's
   Official Development Assistance (ODA) Funding); Wellcome under the NIHR-
   Wellcome Partnership for Global Health Research [218743_Z_19_Z]; UK
   Research and Innovation (UKRI) agency under a Global Challenges Research
   Fund; Newton Fund Consolidation Account (GCNA) award, via the University
   of Leeds
FX The Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research (WHO contract-
   Reference 2022/1249873- 1) was the main funder of this study. CZ- C was
   partially supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)
   (using the UK's Official Development Assistance (ODA) Funding) and
   Wellcome 218743_Z_19_Z under the NIHR- Wellcome Partnership for Global
   Health Research. The views expressed are those of the authors and not
   necessarily those of Wellcome, the NIHR or the Department of Health and
   Social Care. JF and CZC were partially supported with funds from UK
   Research and Innovation (UKRI) agency under a Global Challenges Research
   Fund and Newton Fund Consolidation Account (GCNA) award, via the
   University of Leeds, to complete the current research in Peru. Award
   number: N/A. Funders did not participate in the design, implementation,
   interpretation or in reporting of the results.
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NR 61
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
PI LONDON
PA BRITISH MED ASSOC HOUSE, TAVISTOCK SQUARE, LONDON WC1H 9JR, ENGLAND
SN 2059-7908
J9 BMJ GLOB HEALTH
JI BMJ Glob. Health
PD SEP 6
PY 2024
VL 8
IS SUPPL 3
SU 3
AR e014391
DI 10.1136/bmjgh-2023-014391
PG 17
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA H0B6P
UT WOS:001320190500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lobanov, MM
   Lobanova, JZ
   Zvezdanovic, M
AF Lobanov, M. M.
   Lobanova, Je. Z. V. E. Z. D. A. N. O. V. I. C.
   Zvezdanovic, M.
TI Climate Discourse in Russia: From the Dichotomy of Climate Consciousness
   to Four Forms of Climate Policy
SO MIR ROSSII-UNIVERSE OF RUSSIA
LA English
DT Article
DE climate policy; the green transition; climate consciousness; climate
   change; climate indifference; decarbonization; low-carbon development;
   carbon neutrality; adaptation to climate change; he technological
   modernization of the economy; environmental sociology
ID SKEPTICISM
AB This article investigates features of climate discourse in Russia, which is developing along with the increasing global risks of climate change. The participants of the discourse are scientists, officials, entrepreneurs, and representatives of other social groups, who are balanced between two extreme forms of climate consciousness-climate skepticism and climate alarmism. In accordance with the assessment of climate challenges, an attitude is formed towards the state climate policy being developed for the elimination of and adaptation to emerging threats. The analysis of the positions that have developed in society resulted in the identification of four approaches to the state climate policy. Climate skepticism causes the rejection of climate policy in Russian society (due to its negative impact on economics, the inefficiency of measures, the unfavorable conditions of international agreements on decarbonization). Support for the theory of anthropogenic climate change distinguishes proponents of a climate policy based on the introduction of "green transition" principles, the formation of a circular economy, the intention to achieve carbon neutrality through carbon regulation, the technological modernization of electricity generation, and industrial processes characterized by a large carbon footprint (cast iron and steel, aluminum, cement, ammonia, etc.). However, the implementation of low-carbon development programs in Russia shows that the goals run counter to the objectives of economic security, which the authorities consider to be a priority in a resource-based development model (e.g. measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions should not limit the national economic potential or affect the competitiveness of key industries). The third approach, which we call a differentiated or selective climate policy, considers both the negative and positive effects of climate change. Depending on the type of environmental risks for certain territories, climate policy should be based on selective measures. Finally, a fourth approach is to abandon low-carbon development strategies in favor of adapting to climate change. The features of these four approaches are analyzed in detail in our work.
C1 [Lobanov, M. M.] Inst Econ Russian Acad Sci, Inst Econ, Moscow, Russia.
   [Lobanov, M. M.] Lomonosov Moscow State Univ, Moscow Sch Econ, Moscow, Russia.
   [Lobanova, Je. Z. V. E. Z. D. A. N. O. V. I. C.] Inst Social Sci, Ctr Econ Res, Belgrade, Serbia.
   [Zvezdanovic, M.] Acad Natl Secur, Belgrade, Serbia.
C3 Lomonosov Moscow State University
RP Lobanov, MM (corresponding author), Inst Econ Russian Acad Sci, Inst Econ, Moscow, Russia.
EM m.m.lobanov@yandex.ru; jzvezdanovic@idn.org.rs; ezdanovicmilan@gmail.com
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NR 32
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU NATL RESEARCH UNIV HIGHER SCH ECONOMICS
PI MOSCOW
PA SHABOLOVKA, 26, MOSCOW, 119049, RUSSIA
SN 1811-038X
EI 1811-0398
J9 MIR ROSS
JI Mir Ross.
PY 2024
VL 33
IS 3
BP 141
EP 169
DI 10.17323/1811-038X-2024-33-3-141-169
PG 29
WC Area Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Area Studies
GA UU4X1
UT WOS:001250571600007
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Beridze, B
   Sekiewicz, K
   Walas, L
   Danelia, I
   Farzaliyev, V
   Kvartskhava, G
   Szmyt, J
   Dering, M
AF Beridze, Berika
   Sekiewicz, Katarzyna
   Walas, Lukasz
   Danelia, Irina
   Farzaliyev, Vahid
   Kvartskhava, Giorgi
   Szmyt, Janusz
   Dering, Monika
TI Niche modelling suggests low feasibility of assisted gene flow for a
   Neogene relict tree, <i>Castanea sativa</i> Mill.
SO DENDROBIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; Caucasus; sweet chestnut; range modelling;
   maladaptation; adaptive management
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; DIVERSITY; MIGRATION; POPULATIONS; ADAPTATION; DROUGHT;
   FORESTS; FUTURE; REGION
AB As many tree species populations are being degraded by climate change, adaptive conservation, and forest management, such as assisted gene flow (AGF), can provide the genetic variation needed to adapt to climate change. The core of this strategy is to assist the adaptation process in populations at risk of climate maladaptation by introducing individuals with beneficial alleles to cope with expected climate changes. Castanea sativa Mill. (sweet chestnut) is an essential component of natural forests in the Mediterranean and Caucasian regions, with a long history of cultivation. Current climate change may seriously threaten the long-term persistence of the species, particularly in the Caucasus region, where the largest range reductions are predicted. Here, we used Species Distribution Models (SDMs) to assess the feasibility of AGF in European and Caucasian populations of Castanea sativa. Bioclimatic variables for present (1981-2010) and future (2071-2100) conditions were obtained from the CHELSA climate database. The final models of future species ranges were averaged across three climate models (IPSL-CM6A-LR, MPI-ESM1-2-HR and UKESM1-0-L) and three climate change scenarios - SSP1-2.6, SSP3-7.0 and SSP5-8.5. There are marked differences in the climatic niches of the Iberian, Alpine-Apennine, Balkan, and Caucasian populations, with significant implications for AGF. The most suitable European areas for the Caucasian populations were found only in the Adriatic region. The Iberian populations were not compatible with the predicted future climate in the Caucasus in any of the scenarios tested. Suitable areas for Alpine-Apennine populations within the AGF strategy were predicted in the Colchic lowlands, the eastern Pontic mountains and the Hyrcanian forests in the SSP1-2.6 and SSP3-7.0 climate change scenarios. In contrast, the Balkan populations would be compatible at most with the western Pontic mountains and, to a lesser extent, with the Hyrcanian forests. According to the most damaging climate scenario SSP5-8.5, the potential of AGF in the Caucasus with Alpine-Apennine and Balkan populations could be very limited. Our study showed limited applicability of AGF for Castanea sativa between the European and Caucasian populations due to low climate match. Genomic modelling is needed to fully assess the feasibility of this strategy in the species.
C1 [Beridze, Berika; Sekiewicz, Katarzyna; Walas, Lukasz; Dering, Monika] Polish Acad Sci, Inst Dendrol, Parkowa 5, PL-62035 Kornik, Poland.
   [Beridze, Berika] Adam Mickiewicz Univ, Fac Biol, Uniwersytetu Poznanskiego 6, PL-61614 Poznan, Poland.
   [Danelia, Irina] Natl Bot Garden Georgia, Botanikuri St 1, Tbilisi, Georgia.
   [Danelia, Irina; Kvartskhava, Giorgi] Georgian Tech Univ, Fac Agr Sci & Biosyst Engn, Guramishvili St 17, Tbilisi, Georgia.
   [Farzaliyev, Vahid] Minist Ecol & Nat Resources Azerbaijan, Dev Serv, Baku, Azerbaijan.
   [Szmyt, Janusz; Dering, Monika] Poznan Univ Life Sci, Dept Silviculture, Wojska Polskiego 69, PL-60625 Poznan, Poland.
C3 Polish Academy of Sciences; Adam Mickiewicz University; Georgian
   Technical University; Poznan University of Life Sciences
RP Dering, M (corresponding author), Polish Acad Sci, Inst Dendrol, Parkowa 5, PL-62035 Kornik, Poland.; Dering, M (corresponding author), Poznan Univ Life Sci, Dept Silviculture, Wojska Polskiego 69, PL-60625 Poznan, Poland.
EM monika.dering@up.poznan.pl
RI Szmyt, Janusz/AAT-5767-2020; Dering, Monika/G-1247-2013; Walas,
   Łukasz/GQO-8855-2022; Beridze, Berika/AHA-7323-2022; Sekiewicz,
   Katarzyna/AAE-8074-2020
OI Sekiewicz, Katarzyna/0000-0002-1830-0816; Dering,
   Monika/0000-0001-7017-5541; Beridze, Berika/0000-0003-4189-5392;
   Farzaliyev, Vahid/0000-0002-4004-234X; Kvartskhava,
   Giorgi/0000-0002-6954-3287; Walas, Lukasz/0000-0002-4060-9801
FU National Science Centre, Poland [2017/26/E/NZ8/01049]; Institute of
   Dendrology Polish Academy of Sciences; Poznan University of Life
   Sciences
FX The authors thank V. Metreveli for sharing C. sativa occurrences from
   the Caucasus ecoregion. This study was financially supported by the
   National Science Centre, Poland (grant number: 2017/26/E/NZ8/01049),
   Institute of Dendrology Polish Academy of Sciences and Poznan University
   of Life Sciences.
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NR 87
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 5
PU BOGUCKI WYDAWNICTWO NAUKOWE
PI POZNAN
PA GORNA WILDA 90, POZNAN, 61-576, POLAND
SN 1641-1307
EI 2083-8387
J9 DENDROBIOLOGY
JI Dendrobiology
PY 2023
VL 90
BP 58
EP 75
DI 10.12657/denbio.090.005
PG 18
WC Plant Sciences; Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences; Forestry
GA HG6T8
UT WOS:001158385700005
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Olsson, A
   Lind, M
   Yan, JY
AF Olsson, Alexander
   Lind, Marten
   Yan, Jinyue
BE Yan, J
   Lee, DJ
   Chou, SK
   Desideri, U
   Li, H
TI PV Water Pumping for Carbon Sequestration in Dry Land Agriculture
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON APPLIED ENERGY, ICAE2014
SE Energy Procedia
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 6th International Conference on Applied Energy (ICAE)
CY MAY 30-JUN 02, 2014
CL Taipei, TAIWAN
DE Adaptation to climate change; solar energy; irrigation of grasslands;
   carbon sequestration; nexus approach
ID GREEN
AB This paper is inspired by theory related to the water-food-energy-climate nexus and suggests a novel model, suited for analysing carbon sequestration in dry land agriculture using irrigation. The model is applied specifically to photovoltaic water pumping (PVWP) systems for irrigation of grasslands in China. We argue against the narrow approaches to analysing the water issue often found in literature and propose that carbon sequestration, energy security, food security together with local moisture recycling patterns should be included within the system boundary in order to make analyses of dry land agricultural activities more relevant and accurate. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Olsson, Alexander; Yan, Jinyue] Royal Inst Technol, Sch Chem Engn & Technol, Teknikringen 42, SE-10044 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Lind, Marten] ZeroMission, SE-11127 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Yan, Jinyue] Malardalen Univ, Sch Sustainable Dev Soc & Technol, SE-72123 Vasteras, Sweden.
C3 Royal Institute of Technology; Malardalen University
RP Olsson, A (corresponding author), Royal Inst Technol, Sch Chem Engn & Technol, Teknikringen 42, SE-10044 Stockholm, Sweden.
EM alols@kth.se
RI Olsson, Alexander/KUG-8044-2024; YAN, JINYUE/Y-3099-2019
OI Olsson, Alexander/0000-0003-2878-8656; Yan, Jinyue/0000-0003-0300-0762
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NR 17
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 12
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1876-6102
J9 ENRGY PROCED
PY 2014
VL 61
BP 1037
EP 1041
DI 10.1016/j.egypro.2014.11.1019
PG 5
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Energy & Fuels
GA BE7UT
UT WOS:000375936100234
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Christoplos, I
AF Christoplos, Ian
TI Climate advice and extension practice
SO GEOGRAFISK TIDSSKRIFT-DANISH JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; path dependency; institutional bricolage; agricultural
   extension
ID RISK
AB This article unpacks the problematic relationship between emerging climate change adaptation norms and changes underway in agricultural extension. It is increasingly recognised that in order to apply new knowledge about climate change in rural development practice a more institutional perspective is needed, but there is no clear consensus on what this implies. This article looks at agricultural extension as an example of a meso-level institution that is frequently assumed to be a major potential "implementing partner" in climate adaptation efforts, at the same time as it is also often portrayed as a worst-case example of the obstacles encountered in changing the focus of a path dependent bureaucracy. This article contrasts the perspectives of normative climate adaptation frameworks (exemplified by the 2011 World Resources Report) with what is known about prevailing extension trends and realities. It is suggested that long lists of recommended climate adaptation tasks and technologies may distract from an understanding of the institutional change processes underway within meso-level institutions, wherein the climate agenda would need to be merged with other agendas related to pluralistic, pragmatic, accountable, sustainable and market-oriented rural development.
C1 [Christoplos, Ian] Danish Inst Int Studies, DK-1401 Copenhagen K, Denmark.
C3 Aarhus University; Danish Institute for International Studies
RP Christoplos, I (corresponding author), Danish Inst Int Studies, Strandgade 56, DK-1401 Copenhagen K, Denmark.
EM ich@diis.dk
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NR 41
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 6
PU ROYAL DANISH GEOGRAPHICAL SOC
PI COPENHAGEN K
PA OSTER VOLDGADE 10, COPENHAGEN K, DK 1350, DENMARK
SN 0016-7223
EI 1903-2471
J9 GEOGR TIDSSKR-DEN
JI Geogr. Tidsskr.
PY 2012
VL 112
IS 2
SI SI
BP 183
EP 193
DI 10.1080/00167223.2012.741882
PG 11
WC Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA 070HT
UT WOS:000313497900010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cha, YH
   Donovan, K
   Shackley, S
   van der Horst, D
AF Cha, YoungHwa
   Donovan, Kate
   Shackley, Simon
   van der Horst, Dan
TI Place-Based Adaptation through Network Governance
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change resilience; climate change adaptation; place-based
   adaptation; network governance; policy implementation; Scotland
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK; MANAGEMENT; SCALES
AB Following the inception of Climate Change Adaptation (CCA) within the UNFCCC in 1992, national CCA plans began to emerge around 2008. However, identifying successful cases of adaptation remains challenging. This is because CCA policies often stop at planning, with selective reporting of relevant projects. Recognizing that planning is not the same as actual delivery, substantial gaps persist in connecting these plans to concrete actions, hindering successful adaptation. This paper explores this implementation deficit through the examination of three different governance modes (hierarchies, markets, and networks). Drawing on a policy review (desk study), a qualitative online survey, and semi-structured interviews with professionals engaged in local CCA policies, we identified enablers of effective adaptation policy progress by comparing the Edinburgh and Glasgow city regions. Despite their close spatial and relational proximity, these two city regions have distinct administrative geographies, political leadership, and adaptation-related networks, which identify unique local contexts sufficient to drive different CCA progress. We noted more CCA progress when specific resources included coordinators (dedicated staff) and fiscal supplements, along with regional networks connecting local communities and strengthening partnerships while sharing common values such as reputational opportunities in the Glasgow city region. These findings shed light on effective adaptation governance modes that require not only a deep understanding of place-based contexts but also the presence or nurturing of broader and reinforced networks.
C1 [Cha, YoungHwa; Donovan, Kate; Shackley, Simon; van der Horst, Dan] Univ Edinburgh, Edinburgh Climate Change Inst, Sch Geosci, Drummond St, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, Scotland.
   [Cha, YoungHwa] Univ Strathclyde, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, 75 Montrose St, Glasgow G1 1XJ, Scotland.
C3 University of Edinburgh; University of Strathclyde
RP Cha, YH (corresponding author), Univ Edinburgh, Edinburgh Climate Change Inst, Sch Geosci, Drummond St, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, Scotland.; Cha, YH (corresponding author), Univ Strathclyde, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, 75 Montrose St, Glasgow G1 1XJ, Scotland.
EM younghwa.cha@strath.ac.uk
RI van der Horst, Dan/AGN-5512-2022
OI Cha, YoungHwa/0000-0002-9677-3889
FU UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
FX The authors would like to thank all interviewees and online survey
   responders who participated in this study, as well as the anonymous
   reviewers whose comments helped shape the final version of this paper.
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NR 63
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 5
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAR
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 5
AR 2155
DI 10.3390/su16052155
PG 17
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KW4U7
UT WOS:001182994700001
OA gold, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU King, JP
AF King, Julie P.
TI Sixteen ways to adapt: a comparison of state-level climate change
   adaptation strategies in the federal states of Germany
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Germany; Policy analysis; State-level;
   Climate governance; Cluster analysis
ID OVERCOMING BARRIERS; POLICY; CITIES; GOVERNANCE; FRAMEWORK; CAPACITY;
   DOCUMENT; PLANS
AB Climate change adaptation (CCA) to reduce or prevent negative climate change impacts and, in some cases, maximize potential benefits is a complex challenge demanding multi-level policy action. In federalist systems, sub-national governments are among key actors for enabling adaptation and their clear commitments can increase collaboration and innovation at the local level. Germany serves as a particularly insightful case for observing the variance among sub-national approaches due to its role as a "leader" in CCA at the national level. This paper provides the first systematic assessment of all sixteen state adaptation strategies in Germany and examines how German states are fostering adaptation, the extent to which their approaches vary, and which patterns have emerged. Based on a qualitative document analysis of over 30 documents, this assessment focuses on five indicators synthesized from literature climate policy analyses and on barriers and facilitating factors of adaptation. Results find that German state strategies are often non-committal sets of recommendations and identify three clusters displaying different degrees of institutionalization and guidance. While federalism allows for flexibility among state responses, the absence of federal mandates and policy standards allows some states to fall behind while others continue to develop their strategies to foster adaptation. These sixteen diverse approaches each have implications for adaptation governance at other levels.
C1 [King, Julie P.] Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Ammerlander Heerstr 114-118, D-26129 Oldenburg, Germany.
C3 Carl von Ossietzky Universitat Oldenburg
RP King, JP (corresponding author), Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Ammerlander Heerstr 114-118, D-26129 Oldenburg, Germany.
EM Julie.king@uol.de
FU Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [396892926]
FX Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. This research
   was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Grant Number
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NR 67
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 1
U2 26
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 22
IS 2
AR 40
DI 10.1007/s10113-021-01870-3
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZP6ZB
UT WOS:000766568000002
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Segge, S
   Mauerhofer, V
AF Segge, Sebastian
   Mauerhofer, Volker
TI Progress in local climate change adaptation against sea level rise: A
   comparison of management planning between 2013 and 2022 of Swedish
   municipalities
SO URBAN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Sea level rise; Climate change adaptation; Municipal governance;
   Municipal planning
ID CITIES; EUROPE; PLANS
AB This paper uses content analysis of urban planning and guiding documents to research and evaluate relative adaptation approaches by categorising and comparing relevant indicators of progress. The scope of the paper is covering the 33 coastal municipalities that experience particularly exposure to negative consequences of climate change induced sea level rise. The findings indicate that the number of municipalities that address sea level rise has increased notably (similar to 43%) based on planning documents during the past ten years (2013-2022), which supports international trends of increased attention to urban climate change adaptation. Furthermore, the content analysis qualitatively shows based on a newly developed categorization the large variation in planning documents used by municipalities in terms of purpose and approach. Lastly, a comparison of the municipalities indicates that, while there are notable differences in approach and progress, municipalities with established adaptation plans are similarly structured in terms of ambition and level of detail, and could be considered frontrunners in sea level rise adaptation work. Thus, paper provides - based on a replicable and innovative method current comparative results about progress in latest practices of planning management, relevant as a potential benchmark and/or blueprint for similar adaptation measures of urban coastal communities worldwide.
C1 [Segge, Sebastian; Mauerhofer, Volker] Mid Sweden Univ, Dept Ecotechnol & Sustainable Bldg Engn, Akademigatan 1, Bldg Q room Q317, SE-83125 Ostersund, Sweden.
C3 Mid-Sweden University
RP Mauerhofer, V (corresponding author), Mid Sweden Univ, Dept Ecotechnol & Sustainable Bldg Engn, Akademigatan 1, Bldg Q room Q317, SE-83125 Ostersund, Sweden.
EM volker.mauerhofer@miun.se
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NR 70
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Z9 1
U1 3
U2 12
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0955
J9 URBAN CLIM
JI Urban CLim.
PD MAY
PY 2023
VL 49
AR 101555
DI 10.1016/j.uclim.2023.101555
EA MAY 2023
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA Q5OB0
UT WOS:001058003700001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Clement, F
   Sugden, F
AF Clement, Floriane
   Sugden, Fraser
TI Unheard vulnerability discourses from Tarai-Madhesh, Nepal
SO GEOFORUM
LA English
DT Article
DE Vulnerability; Farmers; Participatory video; Discourses; Nepal
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SITUATED KNOWLEDGES; POLITICS; POLICY;
   SUBJECTIVITY; GOVERNANCE; SCIENCE; POVERTY; WATER; NEOLIBERALISM
AB Climate change has produced new knowledge production systems, heavily dominated by global discourses, in-stitutions and values. Scholars have long called for integrating local knowledge in the design and implementation of climate change adaptation policy responses. Yet integrating local knowledges requires addressing issues related with power and authority, and critically examining which knowledge counts and at which scale. In this regard, a relatively under-explored research area is to assess how local representations and experiences of vulnerability fit with or disrupt dominant policy discourses. This is the focus of our study, conducted in the Tarai-Madhesh region of Nepal. We relied on an original methodology, combining participatory video research with a discourse analysis of national policy documents and of the films produced by farmers. Our analysis shows that farmers' discourses appear on the surface congruent with some features of national policy story-lines. Yet their underlying narratives seriously challenge several core assumptions of national and international climate change adaptation policies, rooted in ecological modernization, technocentrism and neoliberalism. This seeming contradiction indicates both knowledge co-production and performance, underlying the need to closely under -stand the context in which local knowledges on climate change vulnerability are produced. We conclude with a few promising research areas to explore strategies to increase the authority of local knowledge into political arenas across scales.
C1 [Clement, Floriane] Univ Toulouse, UMR DYNAFOR, INRAE, Castanet Tolosan, France.
   [Sugden, Fraser] Univ Birmingham, Sch Geog Earth & Environm Sci, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England.
C3 Universite de Toulouse; INRAE; University of Birmingham
RP Clement, F (corresponding author), INRAE, UMR DYNAFOR, 24 Chemin Borde Rouge, F-31326 Castanet Tolosan, France.
EM floriane.clement@inrae.fr
RI Sugden, Fraser/JPL-1806-2023; Clement, Floriane/F-8459-2017
OI Clement, Floriane/0000-0003-4195-222X
FU CGIAR Research Programme on Climate Change Adaptation and Food Security
   (CCAFS); CGIAR Research Programme on Water, Land, and Ecosystems (WLE)
FX The research was conducted while the authors worked at (anonymous for
   blind review). This study received the financial support of the CGIAR
   Research Programme on Climate Change Adaptation and Food Security
   (CCAFS) and the CGIAR Research Programme on Water, Land, and Ecosystems
   (WLE). The authors would like to deeply thank the filmmakers who trained
   the farmers to video-making: Preeya Nair and Pawan Kumar, the field
   assistants: Lalita Sah, Ashok Rai and Laxmi Mandal, and all the farmers
   from Thadhi Jhijha and Machi Jhitkaiya, Dhanusa District, whose films
   have provided the primary data for this study. Our sincere thanks to
   Krishna Kumar Sah for his transcript and litteral translation of the
   films from Maithili/Hindi to English. An earlier version of this paper
   benefited from comments from Hari Dhungana, Elizabeth Weight and two
   reviewers. We are also very grateful to the two anonymous reviewers who
   provided detailed and insightful comments on this version.
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NR 139
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 10
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0016-7185
EI 1872-9398
J9 GEOFORUM
JI Geoforum
PD NOV
PY 2021
VL 126
BP 68
EP 79
DI 10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.07.016
EA AUG 2021
PG 12
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA WK1ZS
UT WOS:000709531700007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU de Wit, R
   Kainz, A
   Goler, R
   Zuvela-Aloise, M
   Hahn, C
   Zuccaro, G
   Leone, M
   Loibl, W
   Tötzer, T
   Hager, W
   Geyer-Scholz, A
   Havlik, D
AF de Wit, Rosmarie
   Kainz, Astrid
   Goler, Robert
   Zuvela-Aloise, Maja
   Hahn, Claudia
   Zuccaro, Giulio
   Leone, Mattia
   Loibl, Wolfgang
   Toetzer, Tanja
   Hager, Wilfried
   Geyer-Scholz, Andrea
   Havlik, Denis
TI Supporting climate proof planning with CLARITY's climate service and
   modelling of climate adaptation strategies - the Linz use-case
SO URBAN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; Climate service; CLARITY digital workflow; Urban
   modelling; Urban climate
ID URBAN HEAT LOAD; MITIGATION; CITIES; GREEN; TEMPERATURE; ISLAND
AB In recent years, the representation of climate information in a way to support decision making has been gaining momentum. Worldwide, these so-called climate services are emerging as an essential tool to connect the advances in climate science with the domains of climate change adaptation. The methodology developed within the CLARITY project (funded through European Union funding program Horizon 2020) is aimed at implementing a new generation of climate services specifically designed to assess adaptation measures at the city level under the effects of extreme weather events in the context of climate change. These effects are assessed based on observations as well as climate projections, and the subsequent derivation of climate indices to address changes in climate extremes. The dynamical-statistical downscaling of regional climate model results is used to obtain this information on fine spatial scales (100 m), hence providing urban scale projections and enabling climate sensitivity simulations of adaptation measures on the urban scale. The climate adaptation strategies encompass, among others, green roofs, increasing roof albedo, as well as changes in soil sealing. Here, the climate assessment methodology developed within CLARITY will be discussed in detail, and results for the city of Linz (Austria) presented. In addition, the usage of these methods and results within the CLARITY climate service as well as the connection to urban climate change resilience will be highlighted.
C1 [de Wit, Rosmarie; Kainz, Astrid; Goler, Robert; Zuvela-Aloise, Maja; Hahn, Claudia] Zentralanstalt Meteorol & Geodynam ZAMG, Vienna, Austria.
   [Zuccaro, Giulio; Leone, Mattia] Univ Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy.
   [Loibl, Wolfgang; Toetzer, Tanja; Havlik, Denis] Austrian Inst Technol AIT, Vienna, Austria.
   [Hager, Wilfried] Magistrat Stadt Linz, Linz, Austria.
   [Geyer-Scholz, Andrea] Smart Cities Consulting, Vienna, Austria.
C3 University of Naples Federico II; Austrian Institute of Technology (AIT)
RP de Wit, R (corresponding author), Zentralanstalt Meteorol & Geodynam ZAMG, Vienna, Austria.
EM rosmarie.dewit@zamg.ac.at
RI Leone, Mattia/L-4807-2018
OI Totzer, Tanja/0000-0001-6140-0655; LEONE, MATTIA
   FEDERICO/0000-0003-2434-509X; Zuccaro, Giulio/0000-0001-8572-067X;
   Havlik, Denis/0000-0001-9224-7542
FU European Union [730355]; H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [730355]
   Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme
FX The CLARITY project has received funding from the European Union's
   Horizon-2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no
   730355. The content of this article does not reflect the official
   opinion of the European Union. Responsibility for the information and
   views expressed in the article lies entirely with the authors, and the
   European Union is not liable for any use that may be made of the
   information contained herein. The document referenced to in the EU-GL
   (2013) reference is from the European Comission.
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NR 45
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 14
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0955
J9 URBAN CLIM
JI Urban CLim.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 34
AR 100675
DI 10.1016/j.uclim.2020.100675
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA OY6WQ
UT WOS:000594385700003
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU ten Dam, R
   Vellinga, P
   Negacz, K
AF ten Dam, Renee
   Vellinga, Pier
   Negacz, Katarzyna
TI From experiment to market development: A case study of prospects and
   value chain of saline agriculture in Terschelling, the Netherlands
SO NJAS-IMPACT IN AGRICULTURAL AND LIFE SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Saline agriculture; climate change adaptation; halophytes; tourism;
   islands; innovation
ID WATER REUSE; ECONOMICS
AB Saline agriculture, understood as production of food and biomass on salt-affected soils, also including adaptive soil, water and crop management, is a promising climate-adaptive strategy. However, it is difficult to create a dedicated food chain and to develop a business model in the North Sea countries. This study aims to explore whether islands can be an incubator for saline agriculture by looking at a saline agriculture initiative on Terschelling, the Netherlands, which focusses on the touristic niche market. We conducted semi-structured interviews to map the value chain on the island and identify opportunities and constraints for its development. Drawing on the innovation theory, we analyse to what extent small islands can be considered a favourable niche for sustainability innovations such as saline agriculture. Our results confirm the potential for production and marketing of local saline food specialities on Terschelling, although the market and value chain still require further development. The potential of this initiative is considered positive, although at this stage external support is needed in the form of voluntary labour or subsidies. We conclude that islands are a favourable niche for the introduction saline agriculture as such island initiatives can be a stepping stone for a wider introduction of saline agriculture as a climate adaptive strategy.
C1 [ten Dam, Renee] Wageningen Univ & Res, Soil Phys & Land Management Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Vellinga, Pier; Negacz, Katarzyna] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies IVM, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
RP Negacz, K (corresponding author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies IVM, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
EM k.e.negacz@vu.nl
OI Negacz, Katarzyna/0000-0002-6817-5259
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NR 36
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Z9 2
U1 0
U2 11
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
EI 2768-5241
J9 NJAS-IMP AGR LIFE SC
JI NJAS-Impact Agric. Life Sci.
PD DEC 31
PY 2023
VL 95
IS 1
AR 2211541
DI 10.1080/27685241.2023.2211541
PG 19
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA G9VX6
UT WOS:000992558200001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Heazle, M
   Tangney, P
   Burton, P
   Howes, M
   Grant-Smith, D
   Reis, K
   Bosomworth, K
AF Heazle, Michael
   Tangney, Peter
   Burton, Paul
   Howes, Michael
   Grant-Smith, Deanna
   Reis, Kim
   Bosomworth, Karyn
TI Mainstreaming climate change adaptation: An incremental approach to
   disaster risk management in Australia
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Disaster risk management; Resilience;
   Rational policy making; Brisbane floods
ID POLICY; SCIENCE; RESILIENCE
AB In this paper we argue that rationalist 'predict then act' approaches to disaster risk management (DRM) policy promote unrealistic public expectations of DRM provisions, the avoidance of decision making by political elites, an over-reliance on technical expertise and engineering solutions to reducing exposure to natural events, and a reactive approach to DRM overall. We propose an alternative incrementalist approach that focuses on managing uncertainties rather than reducing them and building resilience not simply through the reduction of hazard exposure, but also through the ongoing reduction of community vulnerability, the explicit consideration of normative priorities, and more effective community engagement in climate risk debates. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Heazle, Michael] Griffith Univ, Griffith Sch Govt & Int Relat, Mt Gravatt, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Heazle, Michael] Griffith Univ, Griffith Asia Inst, Mt Gravatt, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Tangney, Peter; Burton, Paul; Howes, Michael; Grant-Smith, Deanna; Reis, Kim] Griffith Univ, Griffith Sch Environm, Urban Res Program, Mt Gravatt, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Bosomworth, Karyn] RMIT Univ, Sch Math & Geospatial Sci, Ctr Risk & Community Safety, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia.
C3 Griffith University; Griffith University - Mount Gravatt Campus;
   Griffith University; Griffith University - Mount Gravatt Campus;
   Griffith University; Griffith University - Mount Gravatt Campus; Royal
   Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT)
RP Heazle, M (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Griffith Sch Govt & Int Relat, Nathan Campus,170 Kessels Rd, Mt Gravatt, Qld 4111, Australia.
EM m.heazle@griffith.edu.au
RI Reis, Kimberley/AAE-8779-2019; Howes, Michael/S-2804-2019; Grant-Smith,
   Deanna/I-3463-2019; /CAE-0280-2022; Bosomworth, Karyn/A-6435-2016;
   Burton, Paul Andrew/AAG-3436-2020; Tangney, Peter/O-2153-2015
OI Grant-Smith, Deanna/0000-0001-5935-2690; Bosomworth,
   Karyn/0000-0001-9907-0858; Burton, Paul Andrew/0000-0002-6092-0779;
   Tangney, Peter/0000-0003-3878-4034; Howes, Michael/0000-0003-1102-1483;
   Reis, Kimberley/0000-0002-6713-1908
FU Australian Government (Department of Climate Change and Energy
   Efficiency); National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility
FX This work was carried out with financial support from the Australian
   Government (Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency) and the
   National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility. The views
   expressed herein are not necessarily the views of the Commonwealth, and
   the Commonwealth does not accept responsibility for any information or
   advice contained herein.
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NR 39
TC 65
Z9 71
U1 0
U2 53
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD NOV
PY 2013
VL 33
SI SI
BP 162
EP 170
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2013.05.009
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 261TC
UT WOS:000327686500015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dolinska, A
   Hassenforder, E
   Loboguerrero, AM
   Sultan, B
   Bossuet, J
   Cottenceau, J
   Bonatti, M
   Hellin, J
   Mekki, I
   Drogoul, A
   Vadez, V
AF Dolinska, Aleksandra
   Hassenforder, Emeline
   Loboguerrero, Ana Maria
   Sultan, Benjamin
   Bossuet, Jerome
   Cottenceau, Jeanne
   Bonatti, Michelle
   Hellin, Jon
   Mekki, Insaf
   Drogoul, Alexis
   Vadez, Vincent
TI Co-production opportunities seized and missed in decision-support
   frameworks for climate-change adaptation in agriculture - How do we
   practice the "best practice"?
SO AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Co-production; Climate-change adaptation; Decision-support framework;
   Usability-gap; Non-academic actors
ID SMART AGRICULTURE; FARMING SYSTEMS; LOCAL KNOWLEDGE; SCIENCE;
   MANAGEMENT; FARMERS; MODELS; POLICY; TOOLS; GOVERNANCE
AB CONTEXT: To contribute to building sustainable and effective climate change adaptation solutions avoiding usability gap, it is largely recommended to engage in the process of co-production, integrating expertise and knowledge from various academic and non-academic actors.OBJECTIVE: We want to learn if and how co-production, believed to effectively link knowledge and decision -making, and thus suggested as the best practice in building decision-support frameworks, is really applied in the frameworks that are being implemented on the ground.METHODS: A literature review allowed us to identify integrated decision-support frameworks for climate-change adaptation in agriculture developed and used over the period of the last 10 years and involving non-academic stakeholders. To analyse them, we chose as an assessment tool the four co-production principles proposed by Norstro center dot m and colleagues: context-based, pluralistic, goal-oriented and interactive.RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The useful entry points for incorporating co-production in the design of decision -support that we found in the reviewed frameworks include among the others adequate participants selection strategy, building on existing interaction spaces, developing a theory of change with the participants, and involving participants in the design of different elements of the method. The architectures of the analyzed frameworks contained more elements that responded to pluralistic and interactive principles than to context -based and goal oriented principles, we have also identified gaps in the design, such as taking into account the personal characteristics of researchers that could strengthen a framework's implementation and its impact, or attempts at bridging different levels of decision making, to cover the triad of science, policy and practice. A detailed look at the decision-frameworks that are actually being applied allows for a critical reflection whether and how we as researchers use what we preach as an effective way of responding to sustainability challenges in agriculture. Co-production principles turn out to be a useful tool for analysis and we suggest they can be used as a check-list when designing decision-support frameworks for climate-change adaptation.SIGNIFICANCE: This papers offers useful examples of how to shift the research-led processes of decision-support towards more co-production with non-academic actors, to increase chances of bridging the gaps between science, policy and practice.
C1 [Dolinska, Aleksandra; Bossuet, Jerome; Vadez, Vincent] Univ Montpellier, French Natl Res Inst Sustainable Dev IRD, UMR DIADE, Montpellier, France.
   [Dolinska, Aleksandra; Sultan, Benjamin] Univ Montpellier, French Natl Res Inst Sustainable Dev IRD, UMR ESPACE DEV, Montpellier, France.
   [Hassenforder, Emeline] CIRAD, UMR G EAU, Tunis 01800, Tunisia.
   [Hassenforder, Emeline] Univ Montpellier, Inst Agro, G EAU, AgroParisTech,CIRAD,INRAE,IRD, Montpellier, France.
   [Hassenforder, Emeline] Inst Natl Agron Tunisie INAT, Tunis, Tunisia.
   [Loboguerrero, Ana Maria] Biovers Int, Via San Domenico 1, I-00153 Rome, Italy.
   [Cottenceau, Jeanne; Drogoul, Alexis] Thuyloi Univ, ACROSS Int Joint Lab IRD, 175 Tay Son, Hanoi, Vietnam.
   [Cottenceau, Jeanne; Drogoul, Alexis] Sorbonne Univ, UMI UMMISCO, IRD, 32 Ave H Varagnat Bondy, Paris, France.
   [Bonatti, Michelle] Leibniz Ctr Agr Landscape Res ZALF eV, Muncheberg, Germany.
   [Bonatti, Michelle] Humboldt Univ, Dept Agr Econ, Berlin, Germany.
   [Hellin, Jon] Int Rice Res Inst IRRI, Los Banos, Philippines.
   [Mekki, Insaf] Univ Carthage, INRGREF, BP 10, Ariana 2080, Tunisia.
   [Vadez, Vincent] Ctr Etud Reg Ameliorat Adaptat Secheresse CERAAS, Lab Mixte Int, Campus ENSA, Thies, Senegal.
   [Dolinska, Aleksandra] 11 rue Fontaine, F-30440 St Laurent Le Minier, France.
C3 Universite de Montpellier; Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement
   (IRD); Universite de Montpellier; Universite des Antilles; University of
   La Reunion; Aix-Marseille Universite; CIRAD; CIRAD; Universite de
   Montpellier; INRAE; Institut Agro; Institut de Recherche pour le
   Developpement (IRD); AgroParisTech; Alliance; Bioversity International;
   Thuyloi University; Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD);
   Sorbonne Universite; Leibniz Association; Leibniz Zentrum fur
   Agrarlandschaftsforschung (ZALF); Humboldt University of Berlin; CGIAR;
   International Rice Research Institute (IRRI); Universite de Carthage
RP Dolinska, A (corresponding author), 11 rue Fontaine, F-30440 St Laurent Le Minier, France.
EM ola.dolinska@protonmail.com
RI Sultan, Benjamin/C-8957-2012; Hassenforder, Emeline/H-3004-2019;
   Chevelev-Bonatti, Michelle/JFJ-8529-2023; Mekki, Insaf/HMV-6192-2023;
   Loboguerrero, Ana/AAK-1072-2020; Vadez, Vincent/GLU-8981-2022
OI Bossuet, Jerome/0009-0005-1671-482X; Vadez, Vincent/0000-0003-2014-0281
FU CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change Agriculture and Food Security
   (CCAFS) - French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs; ClimBeR
   initiative of One CGIAR - French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs;
   Action Plan between France
FX The work was supported by the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change
   Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) , and by the ClimBeR initiative of
   One CGIAR, both supported by the Action Plan between France and CGIAR on
   climate change from the French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs.
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NR 112
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 4
U2 15
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0308-521X
EI 1873-2267
J9 AGR SYST
JI Agric. Syst.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 212
AR 103775
DI 10.1016/j.agsy.2023.103775
EA OCT 2023
PG 18
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA U8EX1
UT WOS:001087089800001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Leone, A
   Grassini, L
   Balena, P
AF Leone, Antonio
   Grassini, Laura
   Balena, Pasquale
TI Urban Planning and Sustainable Storm Water Management: Gaps and
   Potential for Integration for Climate Adaptation Strategies
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE urban planning; storm water management; climate change adaptation
ID CHALLENGES; MITIGATION
AB While climate change urges cities to define appropriate strategies for climate adaptation, urban planning practices are still unable to encompass a broader understanding of hydraulic hazards and to exploit the mitigation potential of nature-based solutions (NBS) for stormwater management. This inability is particularly deep in the Italian context, where the integration of climate adaptation strategies within urban planning is very limited; thus, one of the planner's overriding needs is to determine where NBS can be most effective. The objective of this paper is to identify key drivers and tools for the introduction of hydrological resilience assessments and sustainable storm water management in urban planning practices, as a contribution to climate adaptation strategies. Through a case study in the city of Bari, the paper proposes a method for identifying the most suitable urban areas for implementing NBS, i.e., areas where NBS are able to intercept runoff. On the other hand, the same approach allows one to evaluate in advance the impact of urban planning choices, or rather of the planned land use change. Finally, the planning tools that may favor the adoption of a NBS approach in urban planning are analyzed, with particular reference to the territorial landscape plan of the Apulia region and urban regeneration plans.
C1 [Leone, Antonio] Univ Salento, Dept Innovat Engn, I-73100 Lecce, Italy.
   [Grassini, Laura; Balena, Pasquale] Polytech Univ Bari, Dept Civil Environm Land Bldg Engn & Chem DICATEC, I-70125 Bari, Italy.
C3 University of Salento; Politecnico di Bari
RP Grassini, L (corresponding author), Polytech Univ Bari, Dept Civil Environm Land Bldg Engn & Chem DICATEC, I-70125 Bari, Italy.
EM laura.grassini@poliba.it
RI Grassini, Laura/HCI-3286-2022
OI Balena, Pasquale/0000-0002-2599-0122; LEONE,
   Antonio/0000-0002-6314-5878; GRASSINI, Laura/0000-0002-5375-5461
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NR 38
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 5
U2 36
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 24
AR 16870
DI 10.3390/su142416870
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 7G8AA
UT WOS:000902738600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ndiritu, SW
AF Ndiritu, S. Wagura
TI Drought responses and adaptation strategies to climate change by
   pastoralists in the semi-arid area, Laikipia County, Kenya
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation strategies; Climate extremes; Climate change; Early warning
   information; Pastoralist; Kenya
ID DETERMINANTS; VARIABILITY; PERCEPTIONS; MANAGEMENT; CHOICE
AB This study was undertaken in Laikipia County, Kenya, to identify factors influencing the choices of strategies by pastoralists to adapt to climate change. The study particularly evaluates the role of perceived climate extremes (frequency of dry spells and droughts), early warning information, and access to private ranch grazing, in determining response decisions to climate change. Besides, we test if households jointly adopt climate change adaptation strategies. The primary data collected from 440 sample households was analyzed using the multivariate probit (MVP) model. In the MVP model, we consider the following measures: increased mobility (distance & frequency), storage/purchase of fodder, change in water management, partial shift to other livelihoods, and herd management. The results reveal that these adaptation strategies are jointly adopted by pastoralists as complements and substitutes. From the empirical result, the perceived increase in the number of dry spells and drought, access to early warning information, access to private ranch grazing, main market distance from homesteads, and the highest level of education in the household are the key determinants of the choices of adaptation strategies to cope with drought and climate change. From a policy perspective, this research contributes to the ongoing debate on best practices by addressing climate change-related challenges in semi-arid land management. Therefore, there is a need for early warning institutions to increase their visibility in the semi-arid areas by exploring effective methods of delivering climate risk information in good time. Improving access to market and private ranch grazing should be promoted in the Kenyan semi-arid areas. Given that pastoralists' perceptions of climate change and climate risk is a decisive variable in adaptation decision-making, there is need to improve the understanding of pastoralists' changing climatic conditions. Furthermore, since the results indicate that mobility and storage of fodder are substitutes, the adoption of hay production could become a key production strategy for pastoralists which will increase the competitiveness of their livestock in the market and increase milk production.
C1 [Ndiritu, S. Wagura] Strathmore Univ, Sch Business, Ole Sangale Rd,Madaraka Estate,POB 59857, Nairobi 00200, Kenya.
C3 Strathmore University
RP Ndiritu, SW (corresponding author), Strathmore Univ, Sch Business, Ole Sangale Rd,Madaraka Estate,POB 59857, Nairobi 00200, Kenya.
EM Sndiritu@strathmore.edu
OI Ndiritu, S. Wagura/0000-0002-8463-3758
FU Department for International Development (DFID); Canadian International
   Development Research Centre (IDRC) through the Pathways to Resilience in
   Semi-arid Economies (PRISE)
FX This data used in this study was supported by the Department for
   International Development (DFID) and Canadian International Development
   Research Centre (IDRC) through the Pathways to Resilience in Semi-arid
   Economies (PRISE) project led by Overseas Development Institute (ODI)
   and Kenya Market Trust. I also would like to thank Elizabeth Carabine
   and Catherine Simonet for providing helpful comments and suggestions at
   different stages of my research agenda. Climate data provided by Mohamed
   Said is highly appreciated. I also would like to thank the editor and
   the anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions. In addition,
   I gratefully thank Harry Bett for the English language editing of the
   final submission.
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NR 60
TC 19
Z9 19
U1 0
U2 12
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD MAR
PY 2021
VL 26
IS 3
AR 10
DI 10.1007/s11027-021-09949-2
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA RM6LP
UT WOS:000639771600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Robb, A
   Payne, M
   Stocker, L
   Middle, G
   Trosic, A
AF Robb, Ashley
   Payne, Michele
   Stocker, Laura
   Middle, Garry
   Trosic, Andrew
TI Development Control And Vulnerable Coastal Lands: Examples Of Australian
   Practice
SO URBAN POLICY AND RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Coastal erosion; coastal inundation; climate change adaptation; urban
   planning; development control
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SEA-LEVEL RISE; UNCERTAINTY; RETREAT; HARD
AB A range of regulatory instruments can be used to modify development-control frameworks for the purposes of adapting urban areas to climate change-induced coastal erosion and inundation. This article investigates the approach of three local governments across Australia. It finds that local governments are modifying development-control frameworks to ensure the appropriate development of vulnerable coastal lands. However, the article also demonstrates the limitations in relying on development control to achieve adaptation objectives such as preserving public beach amenity, and highlights the need for legislative reform or the emergence of incentive-based instruments to complement development control.
C1 [Robb, Ashley; Stocker, Laura] Curtin Univ, Sustainabil Policy Inst, Perth, WA, Australia.
   [Middle, Garry] Curtin Univ, Dept Environm & Agr, Perth, WA, Australia.
   [Trosic, Andrew] Curtin Univ, Dept Planning & Geog, Perth, WA, Australia.
C3 Curtin University; Curtin University; Curtin University
RP Robb, A (corresponding author), Suite 38,2 Mayfair St, Perth, WA 6005, Australia.
EM ashley.robb.coastal@gmail.com
OI Middle, Garry/0000-0003-3342-6529
FU Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship
FX This research is supported by an Australian Government Research Training
   Program (RTP) Scholarship.
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NR 49
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 8
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0811-1146
EI 1476-7244
J9 URBAN POLICY RES
JI Urban Policy Res.
PD APR 3
PY 2019
VL 37
IS 2
DI 10.1080/08111146.2018.1489791
PG 16
WC Environmental Studies; Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban
   Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Public Administration;
   Urban Studies
GA IE2CW
UT WOS:000472193100006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lutz, W
   Striessnig, E
AF Lutz, Wolfgang
   Striessnig, Erich
TI Demographic aspects of climate change mitigation and adaptation
SO POPULATION STUDIES-A JOURNAL OF DEMOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; mitigation; climate change; education; behavioural change;
   demographic change
ID EDUCATION; VULNERABILITY; POPULATION
AB This paper addresses the contribution of changes in population size and structures to greenhouse gas emissions and to the capacity to adapt to climate change. The paper goes beyond the conventional focus on the changing composition by age and sex. It does so by addressing explicitly the changing composition of the population by level of educational attainment, taking into account new evidence about the effect of educational attainment in reducing significantly the vulnerability of populations to climatic challenges. This evidence, which has inspired a new generation of socio-economic climate change scenarios, is summarized. While the earlier IPCC-SRES (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change-Special Report on Emissions Scenarios) scenarios only included alternative trajectories for total population size (treating population essentially as a scaling parameter), the Shared Socio-economic Pathways (SSPs) in the new scenarios were designed to capture the socio-economic challenges to climate change mitigation and adaptation, and include full age, sex, and education details for all countries.
C1 [Lutz, Wolfgang; Striessnig, Erich] Wittgenstein Ctr Demog & Global Human Capital IIA, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
RP Lutz, W (corresponding author), Wittgenstein Ctr Demog & Global Human Capital IIA, Schlosspl 1, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
EM striess@iiasa.ac.at
RI Striessnig, Erich/LFT-8876-2024
OI Striessnig, Erich/0000-0001-5419-9498
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NR 32
TC 13
Z9 16
U1 0
U2 41
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0032-4728
EI 1477-4747
J9 POP STUD-J DEMOG
JI Popul. Stud.-J. Demogr.
PD APR 30
PY 2015
VL 69
SU 1
SI SI
BP S69
EP S76
DI 10.1080/00324728.2014.969929
PG 8
WC Demography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Demography
GA CG8QJ
UT WOS:000353574400002
PM 25912918
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Bajaj, HL
AF Bajaj, Harbans L.
BE Putra, NA
   Han, E
TI India's Efforts to Maintain and Enhance Energy Security While Reducing
   Greenhouse Gas Emissions
SO GOVERNMENTS' RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHANGE: SELECTED EXAMPLES FROM ASIA
   PACIFIC
SE SpringerBriefs in Environment Security Development and Peace
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Conference on Policy Responses to Climate Change and Energy Security
   Post-Cancun - Implications for the Asia-Pacific Region's Energy Security
CY MAR, 2011
CL Singapore, SINGAPORE
SP Natl Univ Singapore, Energy Studies Inst
DE Clean development mechanism; Climate change; Coal beneficiation; Energy
   conservation; Energy efficiency; Environmentally benign policies;
   Greenhouse gas emissions; Renewable energy sources; Supercritical
   technology
AB India faces the twin challenges of sustaining its fast economic growth, which is essential for improving the quality of life of its 1.21 billion people, and adapting to climate change. India has an abundance of coal and strong potential in hydroenergy, but limited oil and gas reserves. Coal will thus continue to play a major role in meeting India's growing energy demands. To reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the government will focus on developing the country's renewable energy sources such as hydro and nuclear energy, deploying clean coal technologies, as well as improving energy conservation and enhancing energy efficiency. To this end, the Prime Minister's Council on Climate Change has inter alia suggested three key national missions namely, National Solar Mission, National Mission for Enhanced Energy Efficiency and National Mission for a "Green India''.
EM BAJAJHL@gmail.com
CR [Anonymous], 2010, World Energy Outlook 2010
   [Anonymous], ALL IND EL STAT GEN
   CEA (Central Electricity Authority), 2008, ALL IND EL STAT 2006
   CEA (Central Electricity Authority), 2010, REP 18 EL POW SURV I
   MIB (Ministry of Information and Broadcasting), 2013, IND 2013
   MOP (Ministry of Power) India, 2012, REP WORK GROUP POW 1
   World Commission on Environment and Development, 1987, Our Psychiatric Future
NR 7
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 3
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG SINGAPORE PTE LTD
PI SINGAPORE
PA SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE
SN 2193-3162
BN 978-981-4451-12-3; 978-981-4451-11-6
J9 SPRINGERBR ENV SECUR
PY 2014
BP 25
EP 53
DI 10.1007/978-981-4451-12-3_3
PG 29
WC Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BC0UY
UT WOS:000349669900003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rübbelke, D
   Vögele, S
AF Ruebbelke, Dirk
   Voegele, Stefan
TI Short-term distributional consequences of climate change impacts on the
   power sector: who gains and who loses?
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID AIR-TEMPERATURE; WATER; ENERGY; SYSTEM
AB Climate change tends to negatively affect the power sector, inter alia, by causing cooling problems in power plants and impairing the water supply required for hydropower generation. In the future, when global warming is expected to increase, autonomous adaptation to climate change via international electricity markets inducing reallocations of power generation may not be sufficient to prevent supply disruptions anymore. Furthermore, the consequent changes of supply patterns and electricity prices might cause an undesirable redistribution of wealth both between individual power suppliers and between suppliers and consumers. This study ascertains changes in European power supply patterns and electricity prices caused by on-going global warming as well as the associated redistribution of wealth for different climate change scenarios. The focus of the analysis is on short-term effects. Our results confirm that autonomous adaptation in the power sector should be complemented by planned public adaptation in order to preserve energy security and to prevent undesired distributional effects.
C1 [Voegele, Stefan] Forschungszentrum Julich, Inst Energy & Climate Res Syst Anal & Technol Eva, D-52425 Julich, Germany.
   [Ruebbelke, Dirk] BC3, Bilbao 48008, Spain.
   [Ruebbelke, Dirk] Basque Fdn Sci, IKERBASQUE, Bilbao 48011, Spain.
C3 Helmholtz Association; Research Center Julich; Basque Centre for Climate
   Change (BC3); Basque Foundation for Science
RP Vögele, S (corresponding author), Forschungszentrum Julich, Inst Energy & Climate Res Syst Anal & Technol Eva, D-52425 Julich, Germany.
EM dirk.ruebbelke@bc3research.org; s.voegele@fz-juelich.de
RI Vögele, Stefan/AAO-7167-2020; Rubbelke, Dirk/M-5604-2013
OI Vogele, Stefan/0000-0002-5804-0203; Rubbelke, Dirk/0000-0002-9934-8570
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   [Anonymous], POW STAT 2010
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NR 39
TC 24
Z9 26
U1 0
U2 34
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JAN
PY 2013
VL 116
IS 2
BP 191
EP 206
DI 10.1007/s10584-012-0498-1
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 059OS
UT WOS:000312715500003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Wilhelm, M
AF Wilhelm, Mario
BE OttoZimmermann, K
TI The Role of Community Resilience in Adaptation to Climate Change: The
   Urban Poor in Jakarta, Indonesia
SO RESILIENT CITIES: CITIES AND ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE - PROCEEDINGS
   OF THE GLOBAL FORUM 2010
SE Local Sustainability
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 1st Annual Global Forum on Cities and Adaptation to Climate Change.
   Resilient Cities 2010
CY MAY 28-30, 2010
CL ICLEI, Bonn, GERMANY
SP EU European Regional Dev Fund, State N Rhine Westphalia, Fdn Int Dialogue Savings Bank Bonn, Solar World, Rockefeller Fdn, UNISDR, USAID, World Bank Inst
HO ICLEI
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Jakarta; Megacity; Slum; Urban planning
AB Megacities are particularly vulnerable to the future challenges of population growth and climate change. The majority of people living in megacities are poor and reside within slums. Rather than seeing slums as a problem, though, this paper suggests that they be considered as a solution to the challenges arising from mega-urban complexity. Results based on a case study of Jakarta show that the urban poor have developed forms of resilience that are mainly based on collective action, or so-called social capital. At the same time, empirical data show that technocratic approaches to urban planning are unable to keep up with the dynamic nature of urban sprawl. Instead of increasing the transfer of expert knowledge and technology to megacities, this paper suggests that urban planning should start from solutions already developed on the ground. Promoting a citizen perspective might also be more efficient in economic terms.
C1 [Wilhelm, Mario] Univ Passau, D-94032 Passau, Germany.
C3 University of Passau
EM mariowilhelm@gmx.net
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NR 20
TC 15
Z9 18
U1 1
U2 39
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10013, UNITED STATES
BN 978-94-007-0784-9
J9 LOCAL SUSTAIN
PY 2011
VL 1
BP 45
EP 53
DI 10.1007/978-94-007-0785-6_5
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Urban Studies
GA BVQ12
UT WOS:000292277300005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ramos-Meza, CS
   Jain, V
   Imran, M
   Khan, HUR
   Chawla, C
   Sriyanto, S
   Khan, A
   Jabor, MK
   Zaman, K
AF Ramos-Meza, Carlos Samuel
   Jain, Vipin
   Imran, Muhammad
   Khan, Haroon Ur Rashid
   Chawla, Chanchal
   Sriyanto, Sriyanto
   Khan, Aqeel
   Jabor, Mohd Khata
   Zaman, Khalid
TI Sustainable growth strategy promoting green innovation processes, mass
   production, and climate change adaptation: A win-win situation
SO FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article; Data Paper
DE carbon emissions; industrial value added; population growth; R&D
   expenditures; GDP per capita; Indonesia
ID EFFICIENCY
C1 [Ramos-Meza, Carlos Samuel] Bina Nusantara Univ, Fac Humanities, Primary Teacher Educ Dept, Jakarta, Indonesia.
   [Ramos-Meza, Carlos Samuel] Univ Andina Cusco, Res Inst IC UAC, Cuzco, Peru.
   [Jain, Vipin; Chawla, Chanchal] Teerthanker Mahaveer Univ, Dept Management, Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, India.
   [Imran, Muhammad; Zaman, Khalid] Univ Haripur, Dept Econ, Haripur Khyber Pakhtunkhw, Pakistan.
   [Khan, Haroon Ur Rashid] Univ Wollongong Dubai, Fac Business, Dubai, U Arab Emirates.
   [Sriyanto, Sriyanto] Univ Muhammadiyah Purwokerto, Social Studies Dept, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia.
   [Khan, Aqeel; Jabor, Mohd Khata] Univ Teknol Malaysia UTM, Fac Social Sci & Humanities, Skudai, Malaysia.
C3 Universitas Bina Nusantara; Universidad Andina del Cusco; Teerthanker
   Mahaveer University; University of Wollongong; Universitas Muhammadiyah
   Purwokerto; Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
RP Zaman, K (corresponding author), Univ Haripur, Dept Econ, Haripur Khyber Pakhtunkhw, Pakistan.
EM khalid_zaman786@yahoo.com
RI Chawla, Chanchal/HGE-6842-2022; Zaman, Khalid/P-1727-2015; Jabor,
   Mohd/AAG-1029-2019; Ramos-Meza, Carlos/AAU-6862-2021; Khan,
   Aqeel/B-5208-2010; Jain, Vipin/JCD-7627-2023; Sriyanto, S/AAE-2558-2020;
   Khan, Haroon/B-6188-2016
OI Khan, Haroon/0000-0001-9731-8573; Jain, Professor
   (Dr.)Vipin/0000-0001-5519-5704; Zaman, Khalid/0000-0002-2585-2790; Ramos
   Meza, Carlos Samuel/0000-0002-8103-6704; Sriyanto,
   Sriyanto/0000-0002-0819-4132
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NR 29
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 1
U2 14
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-665X
J9 FRONT ENV SCI-SWITZ
JI Front. Environ. Sci.
PD OCT 31
PY 2022
VL 10
AR 1059975
DI 10.3389/fenvs.2022.1059975
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6H4VP
UT WOS:000885439600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Vasseur, L
   Thornbush, MJ
   Plante, S
AF Vasseur, Liette
   Thornbush, Mary J.
   Plante, Steve
BA Vasseur, L
   Thornbush, MJ
   Plante, S
BF Vasseur, L
   Thornbush, MJ
   Plante, S
TI Background Research
SO ADAPTATION TO COASTAL STORMS IN ATLANTIC CANADA
SE SpringerBriefs in Geography
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Multiple site (multisite) approach; Participatory action research (PAR)
   approach; Longitudinal (cross-temporal) study; Resilience;
   Sustainability
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SUSTAINABLE ADAPTATION; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE;
   RESILIENCE; PERCEPTIONS; VULNERABILITY; COMMUNITY; GENDER; HEALTH;
   CAPACITY
AB The main research objective of this study and the approaches used to collect the data are outlined in this chapter. In particular, it focuses on the participatory action research (PAR) and multiple site (multisite) approaches used in this project. It also conveys the longitudinal aspect of the project. The long-term perspective adopted here serves from a sustainability standpoint to inform planning and policy. In particular, one of the greatest contributions so far in the published literature from this project has been that of gender-based adaptation. Using demographics, the consideration of gender roles and experiences as well as specific impacts and responses, it has been possible to examine how men and women are both affected and responded to the winter storms and the implications for gender mainstreaming in climate change adaptation research.
C1 [Vasseur, Liette] Brock Univ, Dept Biol Sci, St Catharines, ON, Canada.
   [Thornbush, Mary J.] Brock Univ, Dept Geog, St Catharines, ON, Canada.
   [Plante, Steve] Univ Quebec Rimouski, Dept Dev Reg & Terr, Rimouski, PQ, Canada.
C3 Brock University; Brock University; University of Quebec; Universite du
   Quebec a Rimouski
RP Vasseur, L (corresponding author), Brock Univ, Dept Biol Sci, St Catharines, ON, Canada.
RI Thornbush, Mary/AAM-8401-2021
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NR 52
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2211-4165
EI 2211-4173
BN 978-3-319-63492-0; 978-3-319-63491-3
J9 SPRINGERBRIEF GEOGR
PY 2018
BP 17
EP 27
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-63492-0_3
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-63492-0
PG 11
WC Environmental Studies; Geography; Geography, Physical; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Physical Geography;
   Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA BK2TI
UT WOS:000433935500004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Concu, GB
   Atzeni, G
   Meleddu, M
   Vannini, M
AF Concu, Giovanni Battista
   Atzeni, Gianfranco
   Meleddu, Marta
   Vannini, Marco
TI Policy design for climate change mitigation and adaptation in sheep
   farming: Insights from a study of the knowledge transfer chain
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Attitudes; Technology transfer chain; GHG emission mitigation; Climate
   change adaptation; Policy design; Equality-of-distribution tests;
   Partial-least square structural equation modelling
ID CHANGE BELIEFS; PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS; RISK PERCEPTIONS; ADOPTION; FARMERS;
   DROUGHT; ROLES; SCIENTISTS; CHALLENGES; MANAGEMENT
AB Low innovation adoption rates in agriculture have spurred intense research on farmers' attitudes and motivations. Little attention has been paid to attitudes of other important actors in the knowledge transfer chain. Evidence indeed suggests that adoption rarely happens at the farm level, but requires the right inputs from science and extension services. Divergent attitudes among actors in the knowledge transfer chain may hence contribute to low adoption rates by transferring insufficient, outdated, irrelevant and/or incorrect information. This study is an investigation on attitudes towards climate change mitigation and adaptation of three classes of actors: sheep farmers, researchers involved in fields related to sheep farming and extension officers from private companies and public agencies. The investigation is based on data collected through self-administered questionnaires submitted to 165 participants to agricultural field days in Sardinia (Italy). The sample consists of sheep farmers (37,5%), researchers (16,4%), extension officers (32,1%) and other agricultural workers or students (14 %). In order to assess differences in attitude and identify the sources of attitudinal divergence, the study adopts Kolmogorov - Smirnov (KS) equality-of-distribution tests and Partial-least square structural equation modelling (PLS-SEM). Comparing and contrasting attitudes towards several topics related to GHG emission mitigation and adaptation to climate change reveal that researchers and extension officers have different attitudes towards innovation for mitigating GHG, that in turn depend on different information and beliefs on the causes and effects of climate change. This context is less than optimal to promote adoption of climate change mitigation or adaptation strategies. Climate change science and policy design need to recognise the complexity of knowledge transmission and the multiplicity of attitudes and beliefs that inform and affect the process. To mitigate the impact of diverging attitudes and beliefs among researchers and extension officers tailored communication strategies should avoid controversial issues and focus on benefits of innovation on farm efficiency. In turn, this would build trust and cooperation among all the actors in the knowledge transfer chain. Only when cooperation is assured, one could be confident that the information delivered to farmers is scientifically sound, relevant, value-neutral and useful in changing farmers' behaviour.
C1 [Concu, Giovanni Battista; Atzeni, Gianfranco; Meleddu, Marta; Vannini, Marco] Univ Sassari, Sassari, Italy.
   [Concu, Giovanni Battista; Atzeni, Gianfranco; Meleddu, Marta; Vannini, Marco] CRENoS, Cagliari, Italy.
C3 University of Sassari
RP Concu, GB (corresponding author), Univ Sassari, Sassari, Italy.
EM gbconcu@uniss.it
RI Vannini, Marco/LZG-9438-2025; Meleddu, Marta/HFZ-7852-2022
OI Vannini, Marco/0000-0001-9685-0736; Meleddu, Marta/0000-0003-3081-0584
FU European Union [LIFE15 CCM/IT/000123]
FX This study was supported by the LIFE financial instrument of the
   European Union (project SheepToShip LIFE - Looking for an
   eco-sustainable sheep supply chain: environmental benefits and
   implications, LIFE15 CCM/IT/000123)
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NR 68
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 3
U2 24
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD MAY
PY 2020
VL 107
BP 99
EP 113
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2020.02.014
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LC5GO
UT WOS:000525353800010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ji, H
   Shin, SH
AF Ji, Hyunjung
   Shin, Su Hyun
TI Health benefits of local government sustainability efforts: A social
   cognitive perspective
SO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainability practices; Health benefits; Social cognitive theory;
   Physical and psychological health; Local governments
ID SELF-EFFICACY; ENVIRONMENT; PSYCHOLOGY; PROMOTION
AB Since climate change presents an unprecedented threat to public health, creating environmentally sustainable communi ties has become an important policy goal. Many local governments have voluntarily implemented sustainability practices to mitigate and adapt to climate change at community levels. Because of the potential benefits, scholars and practitioners are paying increasing attention to the sustainability practices of local government. This study provides evidence for their health benefits after analyzing data of more than 3000 older adults between 2012 and 2016. Our findings suggest that home weatherization assistance programs are associated with an increased likelihood that older adults will view life expectancy optimistically. Moreover, installing charging stations for electric vehicles is associated with increased physical activities. Our findings have important implications for local governments by linking climate change and community health issues.
C1 [Ji, Hyunjung] Univ Alabama, Dept Polit Sci, Ten Hoor Hall,Suite 310, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 USA.
   [Shin, Su Hyun] Univ Utah, Dept Family & Consumer Studies, 225 South 1400 East,Alfred Emery Bldg,Room 236, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA.
C3 University of Alabama System; University of Alabama Tuscaloosa; Utah
   System of Higher Education; University of Utah
RP Ji, H (corresponding author), Univ Alabama, Dept Polit Sci, Ten Hoor Hall,Suite 310, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 USA.
EM hji4@ua.edu; su.shin@fcs.utah.edu
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NR 41
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 8
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-8009
EI 1873-6106
J9 ECOL ECON
JI Ecol. Econ.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 190
AR 107207
DI 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.107207
EA AUG 2021
PG 10
WC Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics
GA UR4OI
UT WOS:000696730300020
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pérez, JJM
   Cantos, JO
AF Miro Perez, Juan Javier
   Olcina Cantos, Jorge
TI Climatic change and thermal comfort. Effects on the tourism industry in
   the region of Valencia
SO INVESTIGACIONES TURISTICAS
LA Spanish
DT Article
DE climate change; thermal comfort; tourism; Valencian region (Spain);
   adaptation measures
ID SEA-SURFACE TEMPERATURE; URBAN HEAT-ISLAND; IBERIAN PENINSULA;
   AIR-TEMPERATURE; MASS TOURISM; PATTERNS; TRENDS; BARCELONA; NIGHTS
AB Climate change is beginning to have an impact on the economic activities of the Region of Valencia. Tourism is a fundamental activity of this region's economy, representing 15% of its GDP. The "sun and beach" tourism product constitutes the main tourist activity in the region, hence the importance of analyzing the changes occurring in climatic elements because of their effects on tourism resources and demand preferences. The loss of "climatic comfort", the increase of "tropical" nights (T degrees C > 20), the rise in seawater temperatures and the adaptation to atmospheric extremes (heat waves, intense rains, droughts) are the main challenges faced by Valencia's tourism industry when designing policies to adapt to climate change.
C1 [Miro Perez, Juan Javier] Univ Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
   [Olcina Cantos, Jorge] Univ Alicante, Alicante, Spain.
C3 University of Valencia; Universitat d'Alacant
RP Pérez, JJM (corresponding author), Univ Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
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NR 75
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 2
U2 17
PU UNIV ALICANTE
PI ALICANTE
PA APARTADO DE CORREOS 99, ALICANTE, 3080, SPAIN
SN 2174-5609
J9 INVESTIG TUR
JI Investig. Tur.
PD JUL-DEC
PY 2020
IS 20
BP 1
EP 30
DI 10.14198/INTURI2020.20.01
PG 30
WC Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA QL6LO
UT WOS:000621195600001
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Anuev, EA
   Vais, AA
   Martynova, DO
AF Anuev, E. A.
   Vais, A. A.
   Martynova, D. O.
GP IOP
TI The role of mortality coefficients in planning and accounting for
   greenhouse gas emission reductions
SO 2ND INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE AGRIBUSINESS, ENVIRONMENTAL
   ENGINEERING AND BIOTECHNOLOGIES ( AGRITECH-II-2019)
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 2nd International Scientific Conference on Agribusiness, Environmental
   Engineering and Biotechnologies (AGRITECH)
CY NOV 13-14, 2019
CL Krasnoyarsk State Agrarian Univ, Krasnoyarsk, RUSSIA
HO Krasnoyarsk State Agrarian Univ
AB The article presents tables of growth of fir plantations in the southern part of Siberia supplemented by carbon parameters. The dependences of the mortality coefficients on the stock and the number of trunks are considered. The obtained dependences will help determine what determines the relationship between the mortality coefficient and the stock and the number of trunks. Quantitative and qualitative characteristics of fir plantations of the South Siberian mountain forestry region considered in this paper will determine their production potential. The calculated coefficients will significantly reduce the uncertainty of carbon estimates, which will undoubtedly contribute to the development and implementation of forestry planning and practical measures for adaptation and adaptation to climate change. This will undoubtedly contribute to the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, since the possibility and accuracy of taking into account the possibility of forests to bind and accumulate atmospheric carbon will increase.
C1 [Anuev, E. A.; Vais, A. A.; Martynova, D. O.] Reshetnev Siberian State Univ Sci & Technol, Krasnoyarsk, Russia.
C3 Reshetnev Siberian State University of Science & Technology
RP Anuev, EA (corresponding author), Reshetnev Siberian State Univ Sci & Technol, Krasnoyarsk, Russia.
EM djekizion@mail.ru
RI Anuev, Eugenii/AAU-5682-2021; Vais, Andrey/AAC-7051-2019
OI Anuev, Evgenii/0000-0002-1822-0795; Vais, Andrey/0000-0003-4965-3670
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NR 8
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2020
VL 421
AR 022031
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/421/2/022031
PG 4
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Biodiversity Conservation; Engineering,
   Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Biodiversity & Conservation; Engineering; Environmental
   Sciences & Ecology
GA BR4MH
UT WOS:000651781000032
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Behnassi, M
   Kahime, K
   Boussaa, S
   Boumezzough, A
   Messouli, M
AF Behnassi, Mohamed
   Kahime, Kholoud
   Boussaa, Samia
   Boumezzough, Ali
   Messouli, Mohammed
BA Bouzid, M
BF Bouzid, M
TI Infectious Diseases and Climate Vulnerability in Morocco: Governance and
   Adaptation Options
SO EXAMINING THE ROLE OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE ON EMERGING INFECTIOUS
   DISEASES AND PANDEMICS
SE Advances in Human Services and Public Health
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CUTANEOUS LEISHMANIASIS; SCHISTOSOMA-MANSONI; MALARIA; NORTH;
   TRANSMISSION; HISTORY; TROPICA; AREA
AB Climate change is expected to affect the distribution, prevalence and life cycle of several infectious diseases. This scenario is relevant to Morocco since the country is considered by many IPCC assessments reports as a climate change hotspot with a high vulnerability to many expected impacts. Given this existing vulnerability, this chapter aims to highlight relevant vector-borne diseases, the risks of their reemergence in many vulnerable regions and the pressing need to understand their dynamics within a context marked by knowledge gaps and limited scientific evidence; underline the problematic aspects of health adaptation to climate change and the current difficulties in terms of policy and governance to manage climate-health linkages; and finally undertake an assessment of Morocco's adaptive capacity from a health perspective and formulate recommendations for effective climate-health governance and policy.
C1 [Behnassi, Mohamed] Ibn Zohr Univ Agadir, Res Lab Terr Governance Human Secur & Sustainabil, Agadir, Morocco.
   [Behnassi, Mohamed] Ibn Zohr Univ Agadir, Fac Law Econ & Social Sci, Publ Law Dept, Agadir, Morocco.
   [Kahime, Kholoud; Boumezzough, Ali; Messouli, Mohammed] Cadi Ayyad Univ Marrakesh, Marrakech, Morocco.
   [Boussaa, Samia] Higher Inst Nursing Profess Hlth Tech Marrakesh, Marrakech, Morocco.
C3 Ibn Zohr University of Agadir; Ibn Zohr University of Agadir; Cadi Ayyad
   University of Marrakech
RP Behnassi, M (corresponding author), Ibn Zohr Univ Agadir, Res Lab Terr Governance Human Secur & Sustainabil, Agadir, Morocco.; Behnassi, M (corresponding author), Ibn Zohr Univ Agadir, Fac Law Econ & Social Sci, Publ Law Dept, Agadir, Morocco.
RI Behnassi, Mohamed/AAE-4693-2022; BOUSSAA, Samia/F-2343-2014
OI Behnassi, Mohamed/0000-0002-1864-685X; BOUSSAA,
   Samia/0000-0002-5599-1097
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NR 52
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 1
PU IGI GLOBAL
PI HERSEY
PA 701 E CHOCOLATE AVE, STE 200, HERSEY, PA 17033-1240 USA
SN 2475-6571
EI 2475-658X
BN 978-1-5225-0554-9; 978-1-5225-0553-2
J9 ADV HUM SERV PUB H
PY 2017
BP 138
EP 162
DI 10.4018/978-1-5225-0553-2.ch006
D2 10.4018/978-1-5225-0553-2
PG 25
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Public, Environmental &
   Occupational Health; Infectious Diseases
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Infectious Diseases
GA BM9MF
UT WOS:000471127800007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Elmqvist, T
   Setälä, H
   Handel, SN
   van der Ploeg, S
   Aronson, J
   Blignaut, JN
   Gómez-Baggethun, E
   Nowak, DJ
   Kronenberg, J
   de Groot, R
AF Elmqvist, T.
   Setala, H.
   Handel, S. N.
   van der Ploeg, S.
   Aronson, J.
   Blignaut, J. N.
   Gomez-Baggethun, E.
   Nowak, D. J.
   Kronenberg, J.
   de Groot, R.
TI Benefits of restoring ecosystem services in urban areas
SO CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
ID GREEN SPACE; AIR-POLLUTION; HUMAN HEALTH; ENVIRONMENT; ECOLOGY;
   URBANIZATION; LANDSCAPES; COMPLEXITY; VALUATION; FRAMEWORK
AB Cities are a key nexus of the relationship between people and nature and are huge centers of demand for ecosystem services and also generate extremely large environmental impacts. Current projections of rapid expansion of urban areas present fundamental challenges and also opportunities to design more livable, healthy and resilient cities (e.g. adaptation to climate change effects). We present the results of an analysis of benefits of ecosystem services in urban areas. Empirical analyses included estimates of monetary benefits from urban ecosystem services based on data from 25 urban areas in the USA, Canada, and China. Our results show that investing in ecological infrastructure in cities, and the ecological restoration and rehabilitation of ecosystems such as rivers, lakes, and woodlands occurring in urban areas, may not only be ecologically and socially desirable, but also quite often, economically advantageous, even based on the most traditional economic approaches.
C1 [Elmqvist, T.] Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Setala, H.] Univ Helsinki, Dept Environm Sci, FIN-15140 Lahti, Finland.
   [Handel, S. N.] Rutgers State Univ, Dept Ecol Evolut & Nat Resources, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
   [van der Ploeg, S.; de Groot, R.] Wageningen Univ, Environm Syst Anal Grp, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Aronson, J.] CEFE, UMR 5175, F-34293 Montpellier, France.
   [Aronson, J.] Missouri Bot Garden, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
   [Blignaut, J. N.] Univ Pretoria, Dept Econ, ZA-0002 Pretoria, South Africa.
   [Gomez-Baggethun, E.] Norwegian Inst Nat Res NINA, N-0349 Oslo, Norway.
   [Gomez-Baggethun, E.] Autonomous Univ Barcelona, Inst Environm Sci & Technol ICTA, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Nowak, D. J.] SUNY ESF, USDA Forest Serv, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA.
   [Kronenberg, J.] Univ Lodz, Fac Econ & Sociol, PL-90255 Lodz, Poland.
C3 Stockholm University; University of Helsinki; Rutgers University System;
   Rutgers University New Brunswick; Wageningen University & Research;
   Universite PSL; Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE); Institut Agro;
   Montpellier SupAgro; CIRAD; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
   (CNRS); Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Universite
   Paul-Valery; Universite de Montpellier; CNRS - Institute of Ecology &
   Environment (INEE); Missouri Botanical Gardens; University of Pretoria;
   Norwegian Institute Nature Research; Autonomous University of Barcelona;
   State University of New York (SUNY) System; State University of New York
   (SUNY) College of Environmental Science & Forestry; United States
   Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States Forest Service;
   University of Lodz
RP Elmqvist, T (corresponding author), Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
EM thomas.elmqvist@su.se
RI Elmqvist, Thomas/AAY-6344-2021; de Groot, Rudolf/C-8666-2014;
   Kronenberg, Jakub/ABD-9941-2021; Setälä, Heikki/P-7354-2015;
   Gomez-Baggethun, Erik/LSL-9726-2024; Blignaut, James/U-1755-2017
OI Elmqvist, Thomas/0000-0002-4617-6197; Blignaut,
   James/0000-0001-7059-9010; Kronenberg, Jakub/0000-0003-4903-2401;
   Setala, Heikki Martti/0000-0002-5230-4001
FU Formas and Biodiversa through the URBES project; GREEN SURGE, EU FP7
   collaborative project [FP7-ENV.2013.6.2-5-603567]
FX We thank the TEEB team and team leader Pavan Sukhdev for inspiring
   discussions and crucial views. This study has been possible through
   support to T. Elmqvist from Formas and Biodiversa through the URBES
   project and to T. Elmqvist and J. Kronenberg by GREEN SURGE, EU FP7
   collaborative project, FP7-ENV.2013.6.2-5-603567.
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NR 81
TC 480
Z9 573
U1 40
U2 509
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1877-3435
EI 1877-3443
J9 CURR OPIN ENV SUST
JI Curr. Opin. Environ. Sustain.
PD JUN
PY 2015
VL 14
BP 101
EP 108
DI 10.1016/j.cosust.2015.05.001
PG 8
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CY3SP
UT WOS:000366330500013
OA Green Published, Green Submitted, hybrid
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Ponce, E
   Ponce, C
   Barraza, B
AF Ponce, Ernesto
   Ponce, Claudio
   Barraza, Bernardo
BE Filipe, J
   Cetto, JA
   Ferrier, JL
TI Design of neuronal network to control Spirulina aquaculture
SO ICINCO 2008: PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIFTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON
   INFORMATICS IN CONTROL, AUTOMATION AND ROBOTICS, VOL ICSO: INTELLIGENT
   CONTROL SYSTEMS AND OPTIMIZATION
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 5th International Conference on Informatics in Control, Automation and
   Robotics
CY MAY 11-15, 2008
CL Funchal, PORTUGAL
SP Inst Syst & Technol Informat, Control & Commun, Univ Madeira, IEEE Syst, Man & Cybernet Soc, Int Federat Automat Control, Assoc Advancement Artificial Intelligence
DE neural network; Spirulina; control; aquaculture; signal processing
   system
AB A neural network that was designed to control a Spirulina aquaculture process in a pilot plant in the north of Chile, is presented in this work. Spirulina is a super food, but is a delicate alga and its culture may be suddenly lost by rapid changes in the weather that can affect its temperature, salinity or pH. The neural network control system presented is complex and non linear, and has several variables. The previous automatic control system for the plant proved unable to cope with large climatic variations. The advantage of this new method is the improvement in efficiency of the process, and a reliable control system that is able to adapt to climatic changes. The future application of this work is related to the industrial production of food and fuel from micro algae culture, for the growing world population.
C1 [Ponce, Ernesto; Ponce, Claudio; Barraza, Bernardo] Tarapaca Univ, Dept Mech Engn, Dept Elect Engn, Arica, Chile.
C3 Universidad de Tarapaca
RP Ponce, E (corresponding author), Tarapaca Univ, Dept Mech Engn, Dept Elect Engn, 18 Septiembre 2222,Casilla 6-D, Arica, Chile.
OI Ponce, Ernesto/0000-0003-1917-2518
CR [Anonymous], CULTIVEZ VOTRE SPIRU
   Gutierrez JM, 2004, Monografias del Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia
   HAGAN M, 2002, RECURRENT NEURAL NET, P311
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   Henrikson R., 1994, Microalga Spirulina - Superalimento del futuro
   HUNT K, 2002, NEURAL NETWORKS CONT, V28, P1083
   NORVIG P, 2003, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGE
   PONCE C, 2001, THESIS TARAPACA U
   RIO BD, 2002, REDES NEURONALES Y S
   *SPIR COM, 2004, SPIR GREEN SUP LIF
NR 10
TC 0
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 2
PU INSTICC-INST SYST TECHNOLOGIES INFORMATION CONTROL & COMMUNICATION
PI SETUBAL
PA AVENIDA D MANUEL L, 27A 2 ESQUERDO, SETUBAL, 2910-595, PORTUGAL
BN 978-989-8111-30-2
PY 2008
BP 289
EP 292
PG 4
WC Automation & Control Systems; Computer Science, Cybernetics; Computer
   Science, Theory & Methods; Engineering, Electrical & Electronic;
   Robotics
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Automation & Control Systems; Computer Science; Engineering; Robotics
GA BIE34
UT WOS:000258902100042
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Niazy, D
   Ashraf, M
   Bodaghi, M
   Zolfagharian, A
AF Niazy, Dalia
   Ashraf, Mahmud
   Bodaghi, Mahdi
   Zolfagharian, Ali
TI Resilient city perspective: 4D printing in art, architecture and
   construction
SO MATERIALS TODAY SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE 4D printing; Smart materials; Adaptive structures; Responsive
   architecture; Sustainable morphing
ID COMPOSITE; BIOCOMPOSITES; FILAMENTS; SYSTEMS
AB Four-dimensional printing (4DP) improves material efficiency while enhancing the performance of the structure when subjected to external stimuli. Integrating stimulus -responsive materials with additive manufacturing offers a possible sustainable and environmental solution to mitigate current sustainability challenges. This perspective literature review comprehensively illustrates the research on 4DP conducted exclusively for art, architecture, and construction (4DPAAC). 3D printing responsive material research across buildings and construction is evaluated, resulting in the identification of seven research areas of 4DPAAC. They offer prospects for advanced building features, varying from fa & ccedil;ades to infrastructure, which are critically evaluated for their prospective contributions to reduce energy and material consumption and provide adaptability to climate change.
C1 [Niazy, Dalia; Ashraf, Mahmud; Zolfagharian, Ali] Deakin Univ, Sch Engn, Geelong 3216, Australia.
   [Niazy, Dalia] Ain Shams Univ, Fac Engn, Architecture Dept, Cairo, Egypt.
   [Bodaghi, Mahdi] Nottingham Trent Univ, Sch Sci & Technol, Dept Engn, Nottingham NG11 8NS, England.
C3 Deakin University; Egyptian Knowledge Bank (EKB); Ain Shams University;
   Nottingham Trent University
RP Zolfagharian, A (corresponding author), Deakin Univ, Sch Engn, Geelong 3216, Australia.
EM a.zolfagharian@deakin.edu.au
RI Ashraf, Mahmud/AAI-8346-2020; Zolfagharian, Ali/J-5167-2019
OI Zolfagharian, Ali/0000-0001-5302-360X; Niazy, Dalia/0000-0002-5497-181X
FU Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Award [DE240100960];
   Australian Government; Australian Research Council [DE240100960] Funding
   Source: Australian Research Council
FX Dr. Zolfagharian is the recipient of an Australian Research Council
   Discovery Early Career Award (project number DE240100960) funded by the
   Australian Government.
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NR 153
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 15
U2 22
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2589-2347
J9 MATER TODAY SUSTAIN
JI Mater. Today Sustain.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 26
AR 100708
DI 10.1016/j.mtsust.2024.100708
EA MAR 2024
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Materials Science,
   Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Materials Science
GA OJ6N5
UT WOS:001206943300001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Sugihardjo
   Lestari, E
   Setyowati, R
   Widiyanto
   Rusdiyana, E
AF Sugihardjo
   Lestari, Eny
   Setyowati, Retno
   Widiyanto
   Rusdiyana, Eksa
BE Juwaidah
   Saiyut, P
   Tjale, MM
   Rozaki, Z
TI Factors That Influence Farmer Adaptation to Climate Change (Case of Dry
   Land Farmers in Cemoro Watershed in Central Java)
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON AGRIBUSINESS AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT (ICONARD
   2020)
SE E3S Web of Conferences
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference on Agribusiness and Rural Development (IConARD)
CY OCT 13-14, 2020
CL Yogyakarta, INDONESIA
SP Univ Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta
ID IMPACTS
AB This study aims to determine the adaptation strategy of dry land farmers to climate change. The study was conducted in the Cemoro watershed area, Central Java, Indonesia with 120 respondents as dry land rice farmers. Sampling was done by proportional random sampling. Data were collected from March to November 2016. Data analysis was performed using the two-stage Heckman model approach. The results showed that farmers 'perceptions of climate change were significantly influenced by the area of farmland managed and farmers' income. The farmers' adaptation strategy to climate change is significantly affected by the level of education, the participation of farmers in social organizations, and the level of income.
C1 [Sugihardjo; Lestari, Eny; Setyowati, Retno; Widiyanto; Rusdiyana, Eksa] Univ Sebelas Maret, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Extens & Commun, Surakarta, Indonesia.
C3 Sebelas Maret University
RP Sugihardjo (corresponding author), Univ Sebelas Maret, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Extens & Commun, Surakarta, Indonesia.
RI Widiyanto, Widiyanto/AAF-8339-2019
OI Rusdiyana, Eksa/0000-0003-2400-1481
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NR 14
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 2
PU E D P SCIENCES
PI CEDEX A
PA 17 AVE DU HOGGAR PARC D ACTIVITES COUTABOEUF BP 112, F-91944 CEDEX A,
   FRANCE
SN 2267-1242
J9 E3S WEB CONF
PY 2021
VL 232
AR 04006
DI 10.1051/e3sconf/202123204006
PG 7
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Agriculture, Multidisciplinary;
   Business; Development Studies; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology;
   Economics
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics; Development Studies; Science &
   Technology - Other Topics
GA BR6VJ
UT WOS:000664284300104
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wynes, S
AF Wynes, Seth
TI Guidance for health professionals seeking climate action
SO JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE AND HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
ID BEHAVIOR; CRISIS
AB Climate change is a severe and growing threat to public health. Understandably, many health professionals are therefore committed to educating and advocating for better climate action. In this commentary I recommend concrete steps that health professionals can take to be more effective in these roles, highlighting policies and behaviors with the greatest benefits for both public health and the climate. These recommendations include advocating for government climate action that reduces airborne pollutants and car dependency, advising patients to adopt low-carbon diets and active transport while modeling those behaviors themselves, and cutting workplace emissions where possible. Though health professionals will continue to be called upon in helping communities adapt to climate change, they should also consider proactive strategies to preserve a habitable climate. (c) 2022 The Author. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
C1 [Wynes, Seth] Concordia Univ, Dept Geog Planning & Environm, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
C3 Concordia University - Canada
RP Wynes, S (corresponding author), Concordia Univ, Dept Geog Planning & Environm, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
EM christopherseth.wynes@concordia.ca
FU Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
FX SW was supported by a fellowship from the Social Sciences and Humanities
   Research Council of Canada. SW wishes to thank Kevin Liang for
   thoughtful comments on an earlier draft of this paper. SW agrees that he
   was responsible for the following: (1) the con- ception and design of
   the study, or acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation of
   data, (2) drafting the article or revising it critically for important
   intellectual content, (3) final approval of the version to be submitted.
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NR 45
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 1
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
EI 2667-2782
J9 J CLIM CHANGE HEALTH
JI J. Clim. Chang. Health
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 7
AR 100171
DI 10.1016/j.joclim.2022.100171
PG 3
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA YE9A6
UT WOS:001266914700005
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cundill, G
   Singh, C
   Adger, WN
   Campos, RSD
   Vincent, K
   Tebboth, M
   Maharjan, A
AF Cundill, Georgina
   Singh, Chandni
   Adger, William Neil
   Campos, Ricardo Safra de
   Vincent, Katharine
   Tebboth, Mark
   Maharjan, Amina
TI Toward a climate mobilities research agenda: Intersectionality,
   immobility, and policy responses
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Mobility; Climate change; Immobility; Gender; Migration
ID MIGRATION; ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; CONTEXT; ASIA
AB Mobility is a key livelihood and risk management strategy, including in the context of climate change. The COVID-19 pandemic has reinforced long standing concerns that migrant populations remain largely overlooked in economic development, adaptation to climate change, and spatial planning. We synthesize evidence across multiple studies that confirms the overwhelming preponderance of in-country and short distance rather than international migration in climate change hotspots in Asia and Africa. The emerging findings highlight the critical importance of addressing immobility and the intersecting social determinants that influence who can move and who cannot in development policy. This evidence suggests a more focused climate mobilities research agenda that includes understanding multiple drivers of mobility and multi-directional movement; intersecting social factors that determine mobility for some and immobility for others; and the implications for mobility and immobility under climate change and the COVID-19 recovery.
C1 [Cundill, Georgina] Int Dev Res Ctr, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
   [Singh, Chandni] Indian Inst Human Settlements, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.
   [Adger, William Neil; Campos, Ricardo Safra de] Univ Exeter, Exeter, Devon, England.
   [Vincent, Katharine] Kulima Integrat Dev Solut, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.
   [Tebboth, Mark] Univ East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk, England.
   [Maharjan, Amina] Int Ctr Integrated Mt Dev, Patan, Nepal.
C3 Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS); University of Exeter;
   University of East Anglia
RP Cundill, G (corresponding author), Int Dev Res Ctr, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
EM gkemp@idrc.ca
RI Vincent, Katharine/L-5669-2019; Singh, Chandni/H-8384-2019; Tebboth,
   Mark/AAK-9815-2020; Adger, William Neil/F-7676-2010
OI Tebboth, Mark/0000-0003-1193-8080; Vincent,
   Katharine/0000-0003-3152-1522; Adger, William Neil/0000-0003-4244-2854
FU UK Government's Foreign and Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO);
   International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Ottawa, Canada
   [109223-002, 109223-003]; UK Economic and Social Research Council
   [ES/R002371/1, ES/S007687/1]; ESRC [ES/S007687/1, ES/R002371/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX This work was carried out with financial support from the UK
   Government's Foreign and Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO) and the
   International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Ottawa, Canada (grant
   number 109223-002 and -003). WNA and RSdC acknowledge support from UK
   Economic and Social Research Council (Grant numbers ES/R002371/1 and
   ES/S007687/1). The views expressed herein are those of the creators and
   do not necessarily represent those of the FCDO, IDRC or its Board of
   Governors. Critical feedback on initial drafts of this paper from Dr
   Arjan De Haan are warmly acknowledged. We are grateful to Shouvik Das
   for supporting the design of Fig. 1, and to Justin Kemp for support with
   Fig. 2.
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NR 70
TC 74
Z9 78
U1 6
U2 46
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 69
AR 102315
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102315
EA JUL 2021
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA TX8JO
UT WOS:000683333100008
OA hybrid, Green Accepted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Eisenack, K
   Kähler, L
AF Eisenack, Klaus
   Kaehler, Leonhard
TI Adaptation to climate change can support unilateral emission reductions
SO OXFORD ECONOMIC PAPERS-NEW SERIES
LA English
DT Article
ID POLLUTION; MITIGATION; BARRIERS
AB Policy advocates frequently call for unilateral action to promote international climate protection. It is still conventional wisdom that unilateral action does not pay off for individual countries due to free-riding incentives for other countries. Does this conclusion change if damage can be reduced by adaptation measures? This article considers adaptation as an explicit decision variable and frames unilateral action as Stackelberg game with two countries. The sequence of play is determined endogenously. We show that the Stackelberg leader reduces adaptation expenditures and emissions if the follower's damage function has a specific convexity property where adaptation leads to strategic complements. Then, no country has an incentive to deviate from the sequence of play. Unilateral action in adaptation or in emissions leads to a strict Pareto improvement compared to the non-co-operative Nash solution. There are lower total emissions and less adaptation.
C1 [Eisenack, Klaus; Kaehler, Leonhard] Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Ammerlander Heerstr 114-118, D-26129 Oldenburg, Germany.
C3 Carl von Ossietzky Universitat Oldenburg
RP Eisenack, K (corresponding author), Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Ammerlander Heerstr 114-118, D-26129 Oldenburg, Germany.
EM klaus.eisenack@uni-oldenburg.de
FU Ev. Studienwerk Villigst e.V. [850772]
FX This work was supported by Ev. Studienwerk Villigst e.V. (grant no.
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   Zehaie F, 2009, ENVIRON RESOUR ECON, V44, P337, DOI 10.1007/s10640-009-9289-1
NR 38
TC 10
Z9 13
U1 1
U2 8
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0030-7653
EI 1464-3812
J9 OXFORD ECON PAP
JI Oxf. Econ. Pap.-New Ser.
PD JAN
PY 2016
VL 68
IS 1
BP 258
EP 278
DI 10.1093/oep/gpv057
PG 21
WC Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA DC9KC
UT WOS:000369539400013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tuvel, R
AF Tuvel, Rebecca
TI Sourcing Women's Ecological Knowledge: The Worry of Epistemic
   Objectification
SO HYPATIA-A JOURNAL OF FEMINIST PHILOSOPHY
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; GENDER; VOICES
AB In this paper, I argue that although it is important to attend to injustices surrounding women's epistemic exclusions, it is equally important to attend to injustices surrounding women's epistemic inclusions. Partly in response to the historical exclusion of women's knowledge, there has been increasing effort among first-world actors to seek out women's knowledge. This trend is apparent in efforts to mainstream gender in climate change negotiation. Here, one is told that women's superior knowledge about how to adapt to climate change makes them poised to help solve and overcome this daunting challenge. Pulling from the work of Miranda Fricker, I argue that such claims risk epistemically objectifying women. To illuminate the risk of women's epistemic objectification in climate change discourse, I offer a feminist analysis of current efforts to seek women's environmental knowledge, cautioning throughout that such efforts must reflect just epistemic relations.
C1 Rhodes Coll, Philosophy, Memphis, TN 38112 USA.
RP Tuvel, R (corresponding author), Rhodes Coll, Philosophy, Memphis, TN 38112 USA.
EM tuvelr@rhodes.edu
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NR 48
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 8
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI NEW YORK
PA 32 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, NY 10013-2473 USA
SN 0887-5367
EI 1527-2001
J9 HYPATIA
JI Hypatia
PD SPR
PY 2015
VL 30
IS 2
BP 319
EP 336
DI 10.1111/hypa.12141
PG 18
WC Philosophy; Women's Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Philosophy; Women's Studies
GA CG6JH
UT WOS:000353405900001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Di Falco, S
   Adinolfi, F
   Bozzola, M
   Capitanio, F
AF Di Falco, Salvatore
   Adinolfi, Felice
   Bozzola, Martina
   Capitanio, Fabian
TI Crop Insurance as a Strategy for Adapting to Climate Change
SO JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; climate change; crop diversification; insurance; panel data
ID ADVERSE SELECTION; MORAL HAZARD; RISK; VARIABILITY; DEMAND; TECHNOLOGY;
   FARMERS; MARKET; WHEAT; VULNERABILITY
AB Financial insurance for extreme events can play an important role in hedging against the implications of climate change. This paper combines a comprehensive estimation strategy and a unique panel dataset to study the role of financial insurance in farmers' welfare under uncertainty. Data are drawn from a large Italian farm panel dataset. We find that (i) demand for insurance products is likely to increase in response to climatic conditions, and (ii) that the use of insurance reduces the extent of risk exposure. We also find that farms growing more crops are less likely to adopt the insurance scheme. This confirms what is found in the theoretical literature. Crop diversification can be a substitute for financial insurance in hedging against the impact of risk exposure on welfare.
C1 [Di Falco, Salvatore] Univ Geneva, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland.
   [Adinolfi, Felice] Univ Bologna, I-40126 Bologna, Italy.
   [Bozzola, Martina] Grad Inst Int & Dev Studies, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Capitanio, Fabian] Univ Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy.
C3 University of Geneva; University of Bologna; University of Naples
   Federico II
RP Di Falco, S (corresponding author), Univ Geneva, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland.
EM salvatore.difalco@unige.ch
RI Bozzola, Martina/AAH-1483-2020; Capitanio, Fabian/E-7806-2011
OI Bozzola, Martina/0000-0002-0078-842X; ADINOLFI,
   FELICE/0000-0002-8181-5492; Capitanio, Fabian/0000-0003-0327-8019
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NR 95
TC 147
Z9 167
U1 4
U2 88
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0021-857X
EI 1477-9552
J9 J AGR ECON
JI J. Agric. Econ.
PD JUN
PY 2014
VL 65
IS 2
BP 485
EP 504
DI 10.1111/1477-9552.12053
PG 20
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Economics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics
GA AG9RZ
UT WOS:000335758500011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gosling, PG
   McCartan, SA
   Peace, AJ
AF Gosling, Peter G.
   McCartan, Shelagh A.
   Peace, Andrew J.
TI Seed dormancy and germination characteristics of common alder (<i>Alnus
   glutinosa</i> L.) indicate some potential to adapt to climate change in
   Britain
SO FORESTRY
LA English
DT Article
ID L GAERTN; MOISTURE-CONTENT; ECOLOGY
AB In today's climate, the above dormancy and germination characteristics minimize autumn germination and stimulate earlier and more synchronous emergence over a wider range of temperatures the following spring. But, it is interesting to note that they also illustrate how a proportion of the population will survive every sequence/combination of climate change that can be envisaged. For example, if climate change brings about longer, warmer autumns in the UK, then more seeds are likely to germinate before winter, and if the subsequent winter is also warmer, shorter or both, then these seedlings will thrive into the next spring. But even if a spell of sub-zero winter temperatures kills the delicate seedlings, there will always be a few seeds that remain dormant into the winter, benefit from the cold snap and emerge the following spring.
C1 [Gosling, Peter G.; McCartan, Shelagh A.; Peace, Andrew J.] Forestry Commiss Res Agcy, Alice Holt Lodge, Wrecclesham, Farnham GU10 4LH, Surrey, England.
RP McCartan, SA (corresponding author), Forestry Commiss Res Agcy, Alice Holt Lodge, Wrecclesham, Farnham GU10 4LH, Surrey, England.
EM shelagh.mccartan@forestry.gsi.gov.uk
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NR 25
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 28
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0015-752X
EI 1464-3626
J9 FORESTRY
JI Forestry
PD DEC
PY 2009
VL 82
IS 5
BP 573
EP 582
DI 10.1093/forestry/cpp024
PG 10
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 534WU
UT WOS:000272929000008
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tittensor, DP
   Beger, M
   Boerder, K
   Boyce, DG
   Cavanagh, RD
   Cosandey-Godin, A
   Crespo, GO
   Dunn, DC
   Ghiffary, W
   Grant, SM
   Hannah, L
   Halpin, PN
   Harfoot, M
   Heaslip, SG
   Jeffery, NW
   Kingston, N
   Lotze, HK
   McGowan, J
   McLeod, E
   McOwen, CJ
   O'Leary, BC
   Schiller, L
   Stanley, RRE
   Westhead, M
   Wilson, KL
   Worm, B
AF Tittensor, Derek P.
   Beger, Maria
   Boerder, Kristina
   Boyce, Daniel G.
   Cavanagh, Rachel D.
   Cosandey-Godin, Aurelie
   Crespo, Guillermo Ortuno
   Dunn, Daniel C.
   Ghiffary, Wildan
   Grant, Susie M.
   Hannah, Lee
   Halpin, Patrick N.
   Harfoot, Mike
   Heaslip, Susan G.
   Jeffery, Nicholas W.
   Kingston, Naomi
   Lotze, Heike K.
   McGowan, Jennifer
   McLeod, Elizabeth
   McOwen, Chris J.
   O'Leary, Bethan C.
   Schiller, Laurenne
   Stanley, Ryan R. E.
   Westhead, Maxine
   Wilson, Kristen L.
   Worm, Boris
TI Integrating climate adaptation and biodiversity conservation in the
   global ocean
SO SCIENCE ADVANCES
LA English
DT Article
ID MARINE PROTECTED AREAS; CORAL-REEFS; CHANGE THREATENS; MANAGEMENT;
   RESERVES; CONNECTIVITY; NETWORKS; LESSONS; VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE
AB The impacts of climate change and the socioecological challenges they present are ubiquitous and increasingly severe. Practical efforts to operationalize climate-responsive design and management in the global network of marine protected areas (MPAs) are required to ensure long-term effectiveness for safeguarding marine biodiversity and ecosystem services. Here, we review progress in integrating climate change adaptation into MPA design and management and provide eight recommendations to expedite this process. Climate-smart management objectives should become the default for all protected areas, and made into an explicit international policy target. Furthermore, incentives to use more dynamic management tools would increase the climate change responsiveness of the MPA network as a whole. Given ongoing negotiations on international conservation targets, now is the ideal time to proactively reform management of the global seascape for the dynamic climate-biodiversity reality.
C1 [Tittensor, Derek P.; Boerder, Kristina; Boyce, Daniel G.; Lotze, Heike K.; Wilson, Kristen L.; Worm, Boris] Dalhousie Univ, Dept Biol, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Tittensor, Derek P.; Harfoot, Mike; Kingston, Naomi; McOwen, Chris J.] UN Environm Programme World Conservat Monitoring, Cambridge, England.
   [Beger, Maria] Univ Leeds, Fac Biol Sci, Sch Biol, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Beger, Maria] Univ Queensland, Sch Biol Sci, Ctr Biodivers & Conservat Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Cavanagh, Rachel D.; Grant, Susie M.] British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, England.
   [Cosandey-Godin, Aurelie] WWF Canada, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
   [Crespo, Guillermo Ortuno; Dunn, Daniel C.; Halpin, Patrick N.] Duke Univ, Nicholas Sch Environm, Marine Geospatial Ecol Lab, Durham, NC 27708 USA.
   [Dunn, Daniel C.] Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Ghiffary, Wildan] Global Fishing Watch, Washington, DC USA.
   [Hannah, Lee] Conservat Int, Moore Ctr Sci, Arlington, VA USA.
   [Heaslip, Susan G.; Jeffery, Nicholas W.; Stanley, Ryan R. E.; Westhead, Maxine] Fisheries & Oceans Canada, Bedford Inst Oceanog, Dartmouth, NS, Canada.
   [McGowan, Jennifer; McLeod, Elizabeth] Nature Conservancy, 1815 N Lynn St, Arlington, VA USA.
   [O'Leary, Bethan C.] Univ Salford, Sch Environm & Life Sci, Manchester, Lancs, England.
   [O'Leary, Bethan C.] Univ York, Dept Environm & Geog, York, N Yorkshire, England.
   [Schiller, Laurenne] Dalhousie Univ, Marine Affairs Program, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Schiller, Laurenne] Ocean Wise, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
C3 Dalhousie University; University of Leeds; University of Queensland; UK
   Research & Innovation (UKRI); Natural Environment Research Council
   (NERC); NERC British Antarctic Survey; World Wildlife Fund; Duke
   University; University of Queensland; Conservation International;
   Fisheries & Oceans Canada; Bedford Institute of Oceanography; Nature
   Conservancy; University of Salford; University of Manchester; University
   of York - UK; Dalhousie University
RP Tittensor, DP (corresponding author), Dalhousie Univ, Dept Biol, Halifax, NS, Canada.; Tittensor, DP (corresponding author), UN Environm Programme World Conservat Monitoring, Cambridge, England.
EM derek.tittensor@dal.ca
RI Worm, Boris/ADW-9659-2022; Tittensor, Derek/AAV-1117-2021; Beger,
   Maria/ABC-5975-2022; Mcowen, Chris/KHY-3822-2024; Jeffery,
   Nicholas/J-5859-2019; McGowan, Jennifer/A-7752-2014; Heaslip,
   Susan/I-9137-2012; Beger, Maria/F-9049-2013
OI Grant, Susie/0000-0001-7941-3948; Worm, Boris/0000-0002-5742-8716;
   Ortuno Crespo, Guillermo/0000-0001-8029-5387; Beger,
   Maria/0000-0003-1363-3571; Boyce, Daniel/0000-0003-4363-0929; Cavanagh,
   Rachel/0000-0002-2474-9716; Cosandey-Godin, Aurelie/0000-0003-4257-5761;
   Tittensor, Derek/0000-0002-9550-3123; Lotze, Heike/0000-0001-6258-1304;
   Dunn, Daniel/0000-0001-8932-0681
FU Canada First Research Excellence Fund Ocean Frontier Institute (OFI):
   Safe and Sustainable Development of the Ocean Frontier (Module G);
   Jarislowsky Foundation; Global Environment Facility [GEF-5810]; Natural
   Environment Research Council (NERC); NERC [bas0100035] Funding Source:
   UKRI
FX This work was funded by the Canada First Research Excellence Fund Ocean
   Frontier Institute (OFI): Safe and Sustainable Development of the Ocean
   Frontier (Module G). D.P.T. acknowledges support from the Jarislowsky
   Foundation. Participation of L.H. was supported, in part, by a grant
   from the Global Environment Facility (GEF-5810). R.D.C. and S.M.G. were
   supported by Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) core funding to
   British Antarctic Survey.
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NR 167
TC 128
Z9 133
U1 8
U2 98
PU AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
PI WASHINGTON
PA 1200 NEW YORK AVE, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20005 USA
SN 2375-2548
J9 SCI ADV
JI Sci. Adv.
PD NOV
PY 2019
VL 5
IS 11
AR eaay9969
DI 10.1126/sciadv.aay9969
PG 15
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA JR6MC
UT WOS:000499736100101
PM 31807711
OA Green Published, gold, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barnett, J
AF Barnett, J
TI Adapting to climate change in Pacific Island Countries: The problem of
   uncertainty
SO WORLD DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; Pacific Islands; policy; resilience;
   uncertainty; vulnerability
ID VULNERABILITY; SUSTAINABILITY; TRENDS
AB This paper investigates the problem of scientific uncertainty and the way it impedes planning for climate change and accelerated sea-level rise (CC & ASLR) in Pacific Island Countries (PICs). The paper begins by discussing the problems CC & ASLR poses for PICs, and it explores the limitations of the dominant approach to vulnerability and adaptation. Next, the paper considers the way scientific uncertainty problematizes policies aimed at adaptation to CC & ASLR. It argues that the prevailing approach, which requires anticipation of impacts, is unsuccessful, and the paper proposes a complementary strategy aimed to enhance the resilience of whole island social-ecological systems. Recent developments in the theory and practice of resilience are discussed and then applied to formulate goals for adaptation policy in PICs. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 Univ Canterbury, Christchurch 1, New Zealand.
C3 University of Canterbury
RP Univ Canterbury, Christchurch 1, New Zealand.
RI Barnett, Jon/E-2122-2013
OI Barnett, Jon/0000-0002-0862-0808
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NR 91
TC 281
Z9 316
U1 3
U2 87
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0305-750X
EI 1873-5991
J9 WORLD DEV
JI World Dev.
PD JUN
PY 2001
VL 29
IS 6
BP 977
EP 993
DI 10.1016/S0305-750X(01)00022-5
PG 17
WC Development Studies; Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Business & Economics
GA 443PC
UT WOS:000169348700004
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mohtat, N
   Khirfan, L
AF Mohtat, Niloofar
   Khirfan, Luna
TI Epistemic justice in flood-adaptive green infrastructure planning: The
   recognition of local experiential knowledge in Thorncliffe Park, Toronto
SO LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate justice; Green infrastructure; Recognition; Climate change
   adaptation; Epistemic justice; Local experiential knowledge
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; VALUATION; POLITICS
AB Evidence shows that green infrastructure planning relies on technocratic and economic valuation approaches to protect lands of high monetary value against flooding without considering climate justice. Contrasting epistemic justice against recognition and socio-cultural valuation of ecosystem services, this study explores how flood adaptive green infrastructure planning may recognize and include the local experiential knowledge of underrepresented groups. We focus on Thorncliffe Park, a dense tower neighborhood with a low-income immigrant population in Toronto, Canada, to explore: (1) the local experiential knowledge of residents about floods, climate-adaptive green infrastructure, and structural vulnerabilities; (2) the root causes of epistemic injustice in previous adaptive green infrastructure interventions; (3) siting options for future adaptive green infrastructure. The methodology includes 199 online surveys-among Thorncliffe Park's residents and 20 in-depth interviews with local community leaders and Toronto-based planning experts, policy reviews. Additionally, a spatial component consists of 120 online participatory mapping activities and spatial analysis of surface run-offs. Our findings-reveal that Thorncliffe Park residents are excluded from adaptive green infrastructure planning because flood management-remains a technocratic process-grounded in economic valuation approaches and technical justifications. Our findings-indicate that decision-makers have not credited residents' needs and testimonies over decades due to-historical racial and socio-economic prejudice toward Thorncliffe Park's residents. We also-identify four hermeneutical barriers that prevent residents from impacting decisions, namely a lack of: social networks, citizenship rights, climate awareness opportunities, and communicational tools.
C1 [Mohtat, Niloofar; Khirfan, Luna] Univ Waterloo, Sch Planning, 200 Univ Ave W, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
C3 University of Waterloo
RP Mohtat, N (corresponding author), Univ Waterloo, Sch Planning, 200 Univ Ave W, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
EM nmohtat@uwaterloo.ca; lkhirfan@uwaterloo.ca
RI Khirfan, Luna/AAU-3891-2020
OI Mohtat, Niloofar/0000-0003-3838-7303
FU Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
   [435-2016-0243]
FX We are sincerely grateful to Toronto -based planning experts,
   Thorncliffe Park residents, and NGO staff who participated in the
   interviews and surveys. Their insights were valuable and enriching for
   our research. The funding for this research project was provided by
   the-Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
   under file number 435-2016-0243.
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NR 62
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 10
U2 59
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0169-2046
EI 1872-6062
J9 LANDSCAPE URBAN PLAN
JI Landsc. Urban Plan.
PD OCT
PY 2023
VL 238
AR 104834
DI 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2023.104834
EA JUN 2023
PG 14
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies; Geography; Geography, Physical; Regional
   & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Physical Geography; Public
   Administration; Urban Studies
GA M2VO8
UT WOS:001028810400001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Remling, E
   Veitayaki, J
AF Remling, Elise
   Veitayaki, Joeli
TI Community-based action in Fiji's Gau Island: a model for the Pacific?
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Development; Climate change adaptation; Community-based adaptation;
   Pacific; Fiji; Vulnerability
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; DISASTER RISK REDUCTION; AGGREGATING DEVICES
   FADS; TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE; INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE; VULNERABILITY;
   MANAGEMENT; LESSONS; VANUATU; TUVALU
AB Purpose - Drawing on qualitative fieldwork on a remote outer island in Fiji, this paper aims to address a shortcoming in the literature on climate adaptation in the Pacific. Internationally community-based adaptation (CBA) is recognised as a promising approach to help vulnerable populations adjust to climate change. However, with pilot projects in their infancy documented experience for Pacific Islands remains scarce. This limits the ability of the region - faced with persisting development challenges and predicted significant climate impacts - to learn from and build on previous experiences and develop robust responses to climate change.
   Design/methodology/approach - By using a community-based initiative in response to environmental challenges and unsustainable development as a proxy, the paper interrogates the potential usefulness of the CBA framework for the Pacific and identifies potential strengths and weaknesses. Sketching out the process and its outcomes, it shows how the initiative has resulted in a diversity of strategies, ranging from pollution control measures, to improved governance of resources and community participation in decision making, to livelihood and income diversification.
   Findings - Findings indicate that CBA could have a lot of potential for building more resilient communities in the face of climate change and other pressures associated with modernising Pacific societies. However, to be effective, interventions should pay attention to people's development aspirations; immediate economic, social and environmental benefits; dynamics of village governance, social rules and protocols; and traditional forms of knowledge that can inform sustainable solutions.
   Originality/value - The conclusions provide a reflection on the CBA framework in general and make concrete suggestions for practitioners on how the framework could be usefully implemented in the Pacific context.
C1 [Remling, Elise] Sodertorn Univ, Sch Nat Sci Technol & Environm Studies, Huddinge, Sweden.
   [Veitayaki, Joeli] USP, Sch Marine Studies, Suva, Fiji.
C3 Sodertorn University; University of the South Pacific
RP Remling, E (corresponding author), Sodertorn Univ, Sch Nat Sci Technol & Environm Studies, Huddinge, Sweden.
EM elise.remling@posteo.de
RI Remling, Elise/LDF-5305-2024; Veitayaki, Joeli/AAI-4520-2020
OI Remling, Elise/0000-0003-2466-3506
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NR 49
TC 32
Z9 34
U1 1
U2 47
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-8692
EI 1756-8706
J9 INT J CLIM CHANG STR
JI Int. J. Clim. Chang. Strateg. Manag.
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 3
BP 375
EP 398
DI 10.1108/IJCCSM-07-2015-0101
PG 24
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DR2ZW
UT WOS:000379773400004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Leal, W
AF Leal Filho, Walter
TI Will climate change disrupt the tourism sector?
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Tourism sector; Climate change; Temperatures; Adaptation; Resilience
AB Purpose This paper aims to explore the links between climate change and tourism and explores the connections between these themes. Design/methodology/approach The paper provides an analysis based on the literature and evidences from recent studies. Findings The tourism sector was already severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, and whereas it is now on a slow pathway to recover, climate change is adding an additional pressure to it. Social implications Knock-on effects could also trigger disruptions in various other sectors. This includes not only local agriculture but also important sources of income for people in tourist destinations such as service providers (e.g. drivers, tourism guides), local handicraft industries and many other small businesses, which rely on tourism as source of employment or of direct income. Originality/value The paper points out to the fact that, whereas adaptation to climate change is a long-term process, a strategic approach to handle its immediate impacts to the tourism sector are important.
C1 [Leal Filho, Walter] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Dept Nat Sci, Manchester, Lancs, England.
   [Leal Filho, Walter] Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, Res & Transfer Ctr Sustainable Dev & Climate Chan, Hamburg, Germany.
C3 Manchester Metropolitan University; Hochschule Angewandte Wissenschaft
   Hamburg
RP Leal, W (corresponding author), Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Dept Nat Sci, Manchester, Lancs, England.; Leal, W (corresponding author), Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, Res & Transfer Ctr Sustainable Dev & Climate Chan, Hamburg, Germany.
EM walter.leal2@haw-hamburg.de
RI Leal, Walter/ACX-9082-2022
OI Leal Filho, Walter/0000-0002-1241-5225
FU International Climate Change Information and Research Programme
FX This study was funded by the International Climate Change Information
   and Research Programme.
CR Atasoy Murat, 2020, Turkish Journal of Agriculture - Food Science and Technology, V8, P515, DOI 10.24925/turjaf.v8i2.515-519.3250
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NR 13
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 31
U2 206
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-8692
EI 1756-8706
J9 INT J CLIM CHANG STR
JI Int. J. Clim. Chang. Strateg. Manag.
PD FEB 25
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 2
BP 212
EP 217
DI 10.1108/IJCCSM-08-2021-0088
EA FEB 2022
PG 6
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZO2SW
UT WOS:000758195500001
OA Green Accepted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Reiskind, MOB
   Moody, ML
   Bolnick, DI
   Hanifin, CT
   Farrior, CE
AF Reiskind, Martha O. Burford
   Moody, Michael L.
   Bolnick, Daniel, I
   Hanifin, Charles T.
   Farrior, Caroline E.
TI Nothing in Evolution Makes Sense Except in the Light of Biology
SO BIOSCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE evolution; predictability; quantitative genetics; adaptive evolution;
   population genetics; reintegrating biology
ID PARALLEL EVOLUTION; GENOMIC LANDSCAPE; MUTATION-RATES; ADAPTATION;
   COMMUNITY; SELECTION; ECOLOGY; HISTORY; ARCHITECTURE; METAANALYSIS
AB A key question in biology is the predictability of the evolutionary process. If we can correctly predict the outcome of evolution, we may be better equipped to anticipate and manage species' adaptation to climate change, habitat loss, invasive species, or emerging infectious diseases, as well as improve our basic understanding of the history of life on Earth. In the present article, we ask the questions when, why, and if the outcome of future evolution is predictable. We first define predictable and then discuss two conflicting views: that evolution is inherently unpredictable and that evolution is predictable given the ability to collect the right data. We identify factors that generate unpredictability, the data that might be required to make predictions at some level of precision or at a specific timescale, and the intellectual and translational value of understanding when prediction is or is not possible.
C1 [Reiskind, Martha O. Burford] North Carolina State Univ, Evolutionary Biol & Conservat Sci, Dept Biol Sci, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
   [Reiskind, Martha O. Burford] North Carolina State Univ, Genet & Genom Scholars Grad Program, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
   [Moody, Michael L.] Univ Texas El Paso, Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Dept Biol Sci, El Paso, TX 79968 USA.
   [Moody, Michael L.] Univ Texas El Paso, Herbarium UTEP, El Paso, TX 79968 USA.
   [Bolnick, Daniel, I] Univ Connecticut, Evolutionary Biol, Mansfield, CT USA.
   [Hanifin, Charles T.] Utah State Univ, Biol, Logan, UT 84322 USA.
   [Farrior, Caroline E.] Univ Texas Austin, Integrat Biol, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
C3 North Carolina State University; North Carolina State University;
   University of Texas System; University of Texas El Paso; University of
   Texas System; University of Texas El Paso; University of Connecticut;
   Utah System of Higher Education; Utah State University; University of
   Texas System; University of Texas Austin
RP Reiskind, MOB (corresponding author), North Carolina State Univ, Evolutionary Biol & Conservat Sci, Dept Biol Sci, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.; Reiskind, MOB (corresponding author), North Carolina State Univ, Genet & Genom Scholars Grad Program, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
EM mbreiski@ncsu.edu
RI Moody, Michael/J-8997-2012; Reiskind, Michael/I-5614-2012; Bolnick,
   Daniel/G-4440-2015
OI Burford Reiskind, Martha/0000-0001-6826-9215
FU National Science Foundation Reintegrating Biology Jumpstart workshop;
   National Science Foundation [1940791]; Direct For Biological Sciences;
   Emerging Frontiers [1940791] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
FX This article is part of the National Science Foundation Reintegrating
   Biology Jumpstart workshop. The project was supported by National
   Science Foundation Grant no. 1940791. We would like to thank Michael H.
   Reiskind and Shana L. Geffeney for feedback on an earlier version of the
   manuscript.
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NR 76
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 2
U2 34
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0006-3568
EI 1525-3244
J9 BIOSCIENCE
JI Bioscience
PD APR
PY 2021
VL 71
IS 4
BP 370
EP 382
DI 10.1093/biosci/biaa170
EA FEB 2021
PG 13
WC Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
GA RZ9NX
UT WOS:000648926700010
PM 33867868
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ashenfelter, O
AF Ashenfelter, Orley
TI The Hedonic Approach to Vineyard Site Selection: Adaptation to Climate
   Change and Grape Growing in Emerging Markets
SO JOURNAL OF WINE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Vineyard Site; Hedonic Method; Grape Growing; Climate Change.
ID WINE; WEATHER; PRICES
AB This paper shows how the hedonic approach to vineyard site selection can be used in the adaptation of vineyard land to climate change, natural disasters or other exogenous events. The basic idea is that, if the relation between weather and grape quality is known for each grape type in existing growing areas, then it is possible to predict the quality of grapes that would be produced in other locations, or in the same location with a changed climate. This permits the optimization of grape type selection for a location and also provides an indication of the value that a particular planting should produce. The relation of grape quality to the weather is provided for several well-known viticultural areas, including Burgundy, Bordeaux, Rioja, and the Piedmont. An application of the method to a new vineyard area in the Czech Republic following the demise of Communism is used to demonstrate the method.
C1 [Ashenfelter, Orley] Princeton Univ, Firestone Lib, Ind Relat Sect, Econ Dept, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA.
C3 Princeton University
RP Ashenfelter, O (corresponding author), Princeton Univ, Firestone Lib, Ind Relat Sect, Econ Dept, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA.
EM c6789@princeton.edu
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NR 14
TC 10
Z9 11
U1 2
U2 19
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 1931-4361
EI 1931-437X
J9 J WINE ECON
JI J. Wine Econ.
PD FEB
PY 2017
VL 12
IS 1
BP 3
EP 15
DI 10.1017/jwe.2017.7
PG 13
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Economics; Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics; Food Science & Technology
GA EW8BH
UT WOS:000402742600002
OA Green Submitted, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gregersen, IB
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, K
AF Gregersen, I. B.
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, K.
TI Decision strategies for handling the uncertainty of future extreme
   rainfall under the influence of climate change
SO WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Bayesian decision support; climate change; minimax strategy; rainfall;
   the precautionary principle; uncertainty
ID INFRASTRUCTURE; IMPACTS
AB Several extraordinary rainfall events have occurred in Denmark within the last few years. For each event, problems in urban areas occurred as the capacity of the existing drainage systems were exceeded. Adaptation to climate change is necessary but also very challenging as urban drainage systems are characterized by long technical lifetimes and high, unrecoverable construction costs. One of the most important barriers for the initiation and implementation of the adaptation strategies is therefore the uncertainty when predicting the magnitude of the extreme rainfall in the future. This challenge is explored through the application and discussion of three different theoretical decision support strategies: the precautionary principle, the minimax strategy and Bayesian decision support. The reviewed decision support strategies all proved valuable for addressing the identified uncertainties, at best applied together as they all yield information that improved decision making and thus enabled more robust decisions.
C1 [Gregersen, I. B.; Arnbjerg-Nielsen, K.] Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Environm Engn, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
C3 Technical University of Denmark
RP Gregersen, IB (corresponding author), Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Environm Engn, Bldg 113, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
EM idbg@env.dtu.dk
RI Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten/J-7792-2012
OI Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten/0000-0002-6221-9505
FU Danish Strategic Research Council as part of the project 'Centre for
   Regional Change in the Earth System' [09-066868]
FX This work was partly carried out with the support of the Danish
   Strategic Research Council as part of the project 'Centre for Regional
   Change in the Earth System', contract no. 09-066868.
CR [Anonymous], 2000, Communication of the Commission: About the Precautionary Principle
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NR 26
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 23
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 0273-1223
EI 1996-9732
J9 WATER SCI TECHNOL
JI Water Sci. Technol.
PY 2012
VL 66
IS 2
BP 284
EP 291
DI 10.2166/wst.2012.173
PG 8
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA 961KK
UT WOS:000305463100007
PM 22699331
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Van den Pol-van Dasselaar, A
   Golinski, P
   Hennessy, D
   Huyghe, C
   Parente, G
   Peyraud, JL
   Pinxterhuis, JB
AF Van den Pol-van Dasselaar, A.
   Golinski, P.
   Hennessy, D.
   Huyghe, C.
   Parente, G.
   Peyraud, J. L.
   Pinxterhuis, J. B.
BE Golinski, P
   Warda, M
   Stypinski, P
TI Stakeholders' requirements and expectations with respect to
   multi-functionality of grasslands in Europe
SO GRASSLAND - A EUROPEAN RESOURCE?
SE Grassland Science in Europe
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 24th General Meeting of the European-Grassland-Federation
CY JUN 03-07, 2012
CL Lublin, POLAND
SP Kuhn, Ministerstwo Rolnictwa Rozwoju Wsi, Lubelski Wegiel Bogdanka S A, Karol Kania Synowie, Rolimpex, Dept Rolnictwa Srodowiska Urzedu Marszalkowskiego Wojewodztwa, Lubelskiego, Linia Hutnicza Szerokotorowa, Powiat Bilgorajski, Centinas, DSV Polska, Perla Browary Lubelskie, Lubella, Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Lublinie, Miasto Lublin, Apis, Herbapol Lublin S A, OSM Krasnystaw, Powiat Krasnostawski, Powiat Lubelski, Powiat Krasnystaw, Lubelska Izba Rolnicza, Gmina Krasnystaw, Urzad Miasta Krasnystaw
DE economic function; grassland; multi-functionality; stakeholders
AB The European project Multisward aims to increase reliance on grasslands and on multi-species swards for competitive and sustainable ruminant production systems. This contributes to food security and enhanced environmental goods. As part of Multisward, an inventory was made of requirements and expectations of stakeholders with respect to the multi-functionality of grasslands in EU countries. The traditional foursome of primary producer, policy maker, research and advice were identified as the most important stakeholders, followed by non-governmental organisations (NGOs) (nature, environment), education and industry. A first international stakeholder consultation revealed the appreciation of current and future functions of grasslands in Europe. In general the economic functions of grasslands, mainly feed for herbivores, were considered the most important. Stakeholders expected this to remain unchanged in future. Environmental functions of grasslands were placed second: water quality and quantity, adaptation to climate change, mitigation and biodiversity. Finally, social services were mentioned.
C1 [Van den Pol-van Dasselaar, A.] Wageningen UR Livestock Res, NL-8200 AB Lelystad, Netherlands.
   [Golinski, P.] Poznan Univ Life Sci, Dept Grassland & Nat Landscape Sci, PL-60632 Poznan, Poland.
   [Hennessy, D.] TEAGASC, Grassland Sci Res Dept, Anim & Grassland Res & Innovat Ctr, Fermoy, Cork, Ireland.
   [Huyghe, C.] INRA, Ctr Rech Poitou Charentes, F-86600 Lusignan, France.
   [Parente, G.] Univ Udine, Dept Agr & Environm Sci, I-33100 Udine, Italy.
   [Peyraud, J. L.] INRA, Joint Res Unit Dairy Prod, UMR 1080, F-35590 St Gilles, France.
   [Pinxterhuis, J. B.] Lincoln Univ, Canterbury Agr & Sci Ctr, DairyNZ, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Poznan University of Life Sciences;
   Teagasc; INRAE; University of Udine; INRAE; DairyNZ; Lincoln University
   - New Zealand
RP Van den Pol-van Dasselaar, A (corresponding author), Wageningen UR Livestock Res, POB 65, NL-8200 AB Lelystad, Netherlands.
EM agnes.vandenpol@wur.nl
RI Golinski, Piotr/U-8261-2018
OI Golinski, Piotr/0000-0003-2696-0096
CR Peyraud J.L., 2010, GRASSLAND SCI EUROPE, V15, P865
   Pinxterhuis J.B, 2011, MSP GUIDE STAKEHOLDE
   Woodhill A.J., 2009, MSP GUIDE STAKEHOLDE
NR 3
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 6
PU POLISH GRASSLAND SOC-POLSKIE TOWARZYSTWO LAKARSKIE
PI POZNAN
PA DOJAZD 11, POZNAN, 60-632, POLAND
BN 978-83-89250-77-3
J9 GRASSLAND SCI EUR
PY 2012
VL 17
BP 762
EP 764
PG 3
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture
GA BD4XM
UT WOS:000361159300205
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU DeLacy, T
   Lipman, G
AF DeLacy, Terry
   Lipman, Geoffrey
BE Schott, C
TI CASE STUDY: MOVING TO CARBON CLEAN DESTINATIONS
SO TOURISM AND THE IMPLICATIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGE: ISSUES AND ACTIONS
SE Bridging Tourism Theory and Practice
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE destinations; adaptation; carbon clean tourism; sustainability criteria;
   green economy
AB GreenEarth.travel is an integrated, holistic destination strategy to assist the tourism industry move into the new green economy. This approach has evolved over the last 15 years through a number of strategies initiated by the authors in their policy, management, and research activities. This has involved development of Agenda 21 for Travel and Tourism, Green Globe, Earthcheck, Earthlung, and most recently GreenEarth.travel. The GreenEarth.travel approach has been developed while the authors worked on sustainable destination strategies for Sri Lanka, Turks and Caicos, and Sharm el Sheikh in Egypt. GreenEarth.travel includes a general set of criteria to guide development of destinations that seek to move to a green economy. The criteria identify key components that need to be addressed to put a destination onto a carbon clean pathway. The plan offers a structured, creative approach both to adapt to climate change risks and to take advantage of the opportunities provided by the broader "green economy" change gathering momentum globally.
C1 [DeLacy, Terry] Victoria Univ, Melbourne, Vic 8001, Australia.
C3 Victoria University
RP DeLacy, T (corresponding author), Victoria Univ, Melbourne, Vic 8001, Australia.
EM terry.delacy@vu.edu.au; glipman@gmail.com
NR 0
TC 10
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 5
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY, W YORKSHIRE BD16 1WA, ENGLAND
SN 2042-1443
BN 978-0-85724-619-6
J9 BRIDG TOUR THEOR PRA
PY 2010
VL 3
BP 299
EP 312
DI 10.1108/S2042-1443(2010)0000003020
PG 14
WC Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA BYT60
UT WOS:000300179000017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vescovi, L
   Rebetez, M
   Rong, F
AF Vescovi, L
   Rebetez, M
   Rong, F
TI Assessing public health risk due to extremely high temperature events:
   climate and social parameters
SO CLIMATE RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE public health risk; high temperature events; southern Quebec
ID FRANCE NURSING-HOMES; 2003 HEAT-WAVE; AIR-POLLUTION; MORTALITY;
   VARIABILITY; IMPACTS; CHICAGO; DEATHS; EUROPE; CITIES
AB The growing recognition of the need to plan institutional responses to the effects of climate change makes it essential to develop research support strategies and tools not only at global but also at regional scales. This paper analyses the feasibility and potential of a risk assessment framework for studies of regional impact of and adaptation to climate change. We assess the potential impact of high temperature events on humans in southern Quebec. We integrate climate variables and socio-economic parameters via a geographic information system (GIS) tool to produce maps of estimated present and future public health risk. A comparison of risk maps for present and future conditions shows that the number of locations where population will be at threat due to high temperature events will dramatically increase in Quebec over the next few decades.
C1 Ouranos Consortium, Montreal, PQ H3A 1B9, Canada.
   Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res SLF, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
C3 Ouranos Consortium; Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss
   Federal Institute for Forest, Snow & Landscape Research
RP Vescovi, L (corresponding author), Ouranos Consortium, 550 Sherbrooke St W,19th Floor, Montreal, PQ H3A 1B9, Canada.
EM vescovi.luc@ouranos.ca
OI Rebetez, Martine/0000-0002-3337-2025
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NR 48
TC 84
Z9 102
U1 9
U2 66
PU INTER-RESEARCH
PI OLDENDORF LUHE
PA NORDBUNTE 23, D-21385 OLDENDORF LUHE, GERMANY
SN 0936-577X
J9 CLIMATE RES
JI Clim. Res.
PD DEC 19
PY 2005
VL 30
IS 1
BP 71
EP 78
DI 10.3354/cr030071
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 015XK
UT WOS:000235584600008
OA Bronze, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Brewer, J
   Riede, F
AF Brewer, Joe
   Riede, Felix
TI Cultural heritage and climate adaptation: a cultural evolutionary
   perspective for the Anthropocene
SO WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Historical ecology; adaptation; vulnerability; resilience; niche
   construction; extended evolutionary synthesis
ID NICHE-CONSTRUCTION; SCIENCE; ARCHAEOLOGY; RESILIENCE; ECOLOGY;
   SUSTAINABILITY; COEVOLUTION; EXAPTATION; SELECTION; HISTORY
AB Terms such as resilience, vulnerability and adaptation are heterogeneously defined in the contemporary climate-change adaptation literature and, hence, remain difficult to operationalize. In this paper, the authors offer a cultural evolutionary perspective, where these terms are mapped onto the terminology of triple-inheritance theory, which clarifies how risks arise through the complex interplay of social and ecological feedbacks. Studies of past risk, vulnerability and resilience are often conducted within a historical ecological framework. As both ecological (synchronic) and evolutionary (diachronic) understandings of human culture ultimately derive from the same source of inspiration - Darwinian evolutionary theory - they are, the authors argue, readily integrated. They take steps towards such an integration, which not only offers a unified theoretical and conceptual framework for studies of past and present vulnerability and resilience, but also provides explicit mechanisms for how issues of future vulnerability and resilience can be approached.
C1 [Brewer, Joe] Oregon Res Inst Community & Evaluat Serv, Ctr Appl Cultural Evolut, Eugene, OR USA.
   [Riede, Felix] Aarhus Univ Moesgard, Dept Archaeol & Heritage Studies, LAPADIS Lab Disaster Sci, Moesgard Alle 20, DK-8270 Hojbjerg, Denmark.
RP Riede, F (corresponding author), Aarhus Univ Moesgard, Dept Archaeol & Heritage Studies, LAPADIS Lab Disaster Sci, Moesgard Alle 20, DK-8270 Hojbjerg, Denmark.
EM f.riede@cas.au.dk
RI Riede, Felix/N-5990-2019; Riede, Felix/C-1767-2008
OI Riede, Felix/0000-0002-4879-7157
FU Det Frie Forskningsrad [6107-00059B]
FX This work was supported by the Det Frie Forskningsrad [6107-00059B].
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NR 101
TC 19
Z9 20
U1 1
U2 15
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0043-8243
EI 1470-1375
J9 WORLD ARCHAEOL
JI World Archaeol.
PD AUG 8
PY 2018
VL 50
IS 4
SI SI
BP 554
EP 569
DI 10.1080/00438243.2018.1527246
PG 16
WC Archaeology
WE Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Archaeology
GA IG2JE
UT WOS:000473622300002
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ashley, L
   Zhumanova, M
   Isaeva, A
   Dear, C
AF Ashley, Laurie
   Zhumanova, Munavar
   Isaeva, Aiganysh
   Dear, Chad
TI Examining changes in local adaptive capacity resulting from climate
   change adaptation programming in rural Kyrgyzstan
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE community-based adaptation; climate change; adaptive capacity; rural
   development; Central Asia
AB The Mountain Societies Development Support Programme, a non-governmental organization, designed and facilitated a climate change adaptation programme to build local adaptive capacity (LAC) among agro-pastoral villages in remote mountain areas of Kyrgyzstan. This research evaluated the programme using the LAC framework of Jones et al. [2010. Towards a characterisation of adaptive capacity: A framework for analysing adaptive capacity at the local level. Background Note. Overseas Development Institute.] Research found the programme contributed to increased adaptive capacity related to the asset base, knowledge and information, and flexible forward-looking decision-making. There were less apparent changes in the characteristics of institutions and entitlements and innovation.
C1 [Ashley, Laurie; Zhumanova, Munavar; Isaeva, Aiganysh; Dear, Chad] Univ Cent Asia, Mt Soc Res Inst, 138 Toktogul, Bishkek 720001, Kyrgyzstan.
C3 University of Central Asia
RP Ashley, L (corresponding author), Univ Cent Asia, Mt Soc Res Inst, 138 Toktogul, Bishkek 720001, Kyrgyzstan.
EM laurie.ashley@gmail.com
RI ZHUMANOVA, Munavar/ITT-6562-2023
OI Zhumanova, Munavar/0000-0001-6690-5361
FU NERC [NE/K010239/1, NE/K010077/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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NR 3
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 12
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 3
BP 281
EP 287
DI 10.1080/17565529.2015.1034230
PG 7
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DK5ZU
UT WOS:000375000700009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Natoli, T
AF Natoli, Tommaso
TI Improving Coherence between Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk
   Reduction through Formal and Informal International Lawmaking
SO JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LEGAL STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE public international law; informal international lawmaking; climate
   change adaptation; disaster risk reduction; international organisations
ID LAW
AB Resolutions and other key documents adopted in the last few years by the international community provide that greater coherence and integration between law and policies on climate change adaptation (CCA) and disaster risk reduction (DRR) can lead to more efficient use of available resources, and more effective action in reducing human vulnerabilities and exposure to climate and disaster risks. Moving from the analytical background provided by the 'informal international law' theory (IN-LAW), the purpose of this study is to evaluate how the combination of formal and informal law-making processes affects the coherent implementation of different normative instruments defining the current global agenda on climate risk governance. Normative developments in three different institutional contexts (the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction - 'Sendai system'; and the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement) will be assessed, in light of recent developments on the drafting, endorsement and implementation of relevant normative instruments. The analysis will be corroborated by references to the effects that greater synergies between these frameworks can generate at the regional and domestic levels, as demonstrated by evidence collected in three different countries (Fiji, the Philippines, and Dominica) between 2019 and 2021.
C1 [Natoli, Tommaso] Int Federat Red Cross & Red Crescent Soc, Geneva, Switzerland.
RP Natoli, T (corresponding author), Int Federat Red Cross & Red Crescent Soc, Geneva, Switzerland.
EM tommaso.natoli@ifrc.org
FU Irish Research Council; European Union [713279]
FX The IFRC accepts no responsibility for the accuracy of the facts
   asserted in this study and the opinions and recommendations expressed in
   it do not necessar-ily represent its official policy. This research has
   received funding from the Irish Research Council and the European
   Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie
   Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 713279.
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NR 109
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 7
PU BRILL
PI LEIDEN
PA PLANTIJNSTRAAT 2, P O BOX 9000, 2300 PA LEIDEN, NETHERLANDS
SN 1878-1373
EI 1878-1527
J9 J INT HUMANIT LEG ST
JI J. Int. Humanit. Legal Studies
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 13
IS 1
BP 78
EP 109
DI 10.1163/18781527-BJA10049
PG 32
WC Law
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Government & Law
GA 2R3EP
UT WOS:000820994800005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Antwi-Agyei, P
   Stringer, LC
AF Antwi-Agyei, Philip
   Stringer, Lindsay C.
TI Improving the effectiveness of agricultural extension services in
   supporting farmers to adapt to climate change: Insights from
   northeastern Ghana
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Extension services; West Africa; Climate vulnerability; Crop production;
   Capacity building; Training; Climate services
ID SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; SAVANNA ECOSYSTEM; TENURE SYSTEMS; COCOA FARMERS;
   LAND; OPPORTUNITIES; VULNERABILITY; VARIABILITY; PERCEPTIONS; CAPACITY
AB The importance of extension services in helping smallholder farmers to address the many challenges of agricultural production cannot be over-emphasized. However, relatively few studies have been conducted that investigate how the capacities of agricultural extension agents can be built to more effectively assist smallholder farmers in managing climate risks and impacts. As climate change is a key threat to smallholder food production, addressing this issue is increasingly important. This paper aims to identify how agricultural extension agents in Ghana can better support smallholder farmers in navigating and addressing the effects of climate change on food production. It asks: (i) what are the sources of information used by agricultural extension agents in Ghana's Upper East region? (ii) what are the capacity building needs of agricultural extension agents for effective communication of climate information for building resilient agricultural systems? (iii) what are the key barriers to successful extension outcomes for climate change adaptation? The paper uses a mixed methods approach including three regional stakeholder workshops, expert interviews and surveys with 32 agricultural extension agents in northeastern Ghana. Results addressing question (i) indicated that radios and television are the dominant sources of climate information for agricultural extension agents in the Upper East region. Findings targeting question (ii) identified capacity building needs such as developing extension agents' technical skills, improving communication skills, improving knowledge and use of climate smart agricultural interventions such as soil moisture conservation methods, and training on information communication technologies (ICT) to deliver extension advice on climate change. Other needs included developing skills in field demonstration and project monitoring and evaluation. Addressing question (iii), key barriers confronted by agricultural extension agents in the delivery of extension on climate change included lack of transportation facilities for extension agents, lack of appropriate extension materials, high agricultural extension agent to farmer ratios, and inadequate funds to implement adaptation practices. Wider barriers reducing the effectiveness of extension efforts included farmer resistance to change and complex land tenure arrangements that do not allow investment. Periodic workshops should be organised for agricultural extension agents on the use of ICT to deliver extension services, whilst encouraging the use of audio-visuals in extension delivery. These efforts should be supported by regular assessments of extension agents' capacity building needs.
C1 [Antwi-Agyei, Philip] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Environm Sci, Kumasi, Ghana.
   [Stringer, Lindsay C.] Univ York, Dept Geog & Environm, Wentworth Way, York YO10 5NG, N Yorkshire, England.
C3 Kwame Nkrumah University Science & Technology; University of York - UK
RP Antwi-Agyei, P (corresponding author), Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Environm Sci, Kumasi, Ghana.
EM pantwi-agyei.sci@knust.edu.gh
RI Antwi-Agyei, Philip/AAI-7392-2020
FU Climate Research for Development (CR4D) Postdoctoral Fellowship
   [CR4D-19-06]; African Climate Policy Center (ACPC) of the United Nations
   Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA); United Kingdom's Department for
   International Development (DfID) Weather and Climate Information
   Services for Africa (WISER) programme; African Academy of Sciences (AAS)
FX This work was supported through the Climate Research for Development
   (CR4D) Postdoctoral Fellowship [CR4D19-06] , an initiative of the
   African Climate Policy Center (ACPC) of the United Nations Economic
   Commission for Africa (UNECA) in partnership with the United Kingdom's
   Department for International Development (DfID) Weather and Climate
   Information Services for Africa (WISER) programme and implemented by the
   African Academy of Sciences (AAS) .
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NR 74
TC 94
Z9 100
U1 3
U2 34
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2021
VL 32
AR 100304
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2021.100304
EA APR 2021
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA SU8EP
UT WOS:000663363800008
OA Green Accepted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Joshua, MDK
   Ngongondo, C
   Chipungu, F
   Malidadi, C
   Liwenga, E
   Majule, A
   Stathers, T
   Kosgei, JR
   Lamboll, R
AF Joshua, Miriam Dalitso Kalanda
   Ngongondo, Cosmo
   Chipungu, Felistus
   Malidadi, Charles
   Liwenga, Emma
   Majule, Amos
   Stathers, Tanya
   Kosgei, Job Rotich
   Lamboll, Richard
BE Matondo, JI
   Alemaw, BF
   Sandwidi, WJP
TI Strengthening Horticultural Innovation Systems for Adaptation to Effects
   of Urbanisation and Climate Variability in Peri-Urban Areas
SO CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND CHANGE IN AFRICA: PERSPECTIVES, EXPERIENCES AND
   SUSTAINABILITY
SE Sustainable Development Goals Series
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Agro-ecosystem services; Climate change; Urbanisation; Vegetable
   production; Vertical gardening; Adaptation
ID MIGRATION
AB The significance of urban agriculture is increasingly being recognised across the globe. Urban agriculture's contribution to food security and poverty reduction, especially for the urban poor, has received increasing attention in urban policy discourses (Satterthwaite et al. in Adapting to climate change in Urban areas; the possibilities and constraints in low- and middle-income countries. IIED, London, 2007; Mutonodzo in Agriculture in urban planning: generating livelihoods and food security. Earthscan, London, 2009; Mkwambisi in Agriculture in urban planning: generating livelihoods and food security. Earthscan, London, Mkwambisi 2009). The impacts of climate change, climate variability and urban growth reduce the benefits derived from agro ecosystem services in peri-urban areas in most developing countries. Peri-urban areas play a significant role in providing similar to 80% of the vegetables consumed in urban areas of Malawi. However, the vegetable production is dependent on stream water or residual moisture from wetlands, which are being affected by climate change. This study investigated the viability of multi-stakeholder experimentation with sustainable technologies for improving vegetable production in a peri-urban setting experiencing water shortages due to climate change and variability in the Mulanje district in Southern Malawi. Using a participatory action research (PAR) approach, farmers, researchers, extensionists and village leaders worked together to source, test and evaluate various different horticultural production practices. Over a two-year period, they experimented with technologies such as bag (vertical) gardening, differential use of manure and fertiliser, new crops and crop varieties, seed bed preparation techniques and judicial use of pesticides. Those practices identified as successful in 2011 were replicated in 2012 for further evaluation. In general, the study found considerable improvements in vegetable production resulting from the improved agronomic practices. Further, many farmers found bag gardening more convenient due to reduced irrigation requirements, lower labor demands, all year round seasonal production, ease of access and crop security. Improved quality of produce, earlier harvest and increased total number of harvests of leafy vegetables due to manure incorporation, use of improved varieties and high yields in general were among other advantages that were realised. In addition, the technologies promoted minimal use of chemicals, which resulted in reduced seepage of inputs, thereby maintaining agro-ecosystem health. Most communities in the area have adopted the technologies as strategies for climate change adaptation. Scaling up these practices can therefore improve vegetable supply challenges arising from urbanisation, climate change and variability while reducing impacts on agro-ecosystem services.
C1 [Joshua, Miriam Dalitso Kalanda; Ngongondo, Cosmo] Univ Malawi, Dept Geog & Earth Sci, Chancellor Coll, Zomba, Malawi.
   [Chipungu, Felistus; Malidadi, Charles] Malawi Minist Agr, Bvumbwe Agr Res Stn, Limbe, Malawi.
   [Liwenga, Emma; Majule, Amos] Univ Dar Es Salaam, Inst Resource Assessment, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
   [Stathers, Tanya; Lamboll, Richard] Univ Greenwich, Nat Resources Inst, Greenwich, England.
   [Kosgei, Job Rotich] Moi Univ, Eldoret, Kenya.
C3 University of Malawi; University of Dar es Salaam; University of
   Greenwich; Moi University
RP Joshua, MDK (corresponding author), Univ Malawi, Dept Geog & Earth Sci, Chancellor Coll, Zomba, Malawi.
EM madalitsojoshua@yahoo.com; cngongondo@cc.ac.mw; felichipungu@yahoo.com;
   charlesmalidadi@yahoo.com; liwenga99@gmail.com; amajule@gmail.com;
   T.E.Stathers@greenwich.ac.uk; masultiony@gmail.com;
   R.I.Lamboll@greenwich.ac.uk
RI Ngongondo, Cosmo/LBH-8357-2024; Majule, Amos/ABD-5185-2020; Stathers,
   Tanya/AAV-7154-2020; LIWENGA, EMMA/IWD-9972-2023
OI Ngongondo, Cosmo/0000-0003-3282-1260; Chipungu,
   Felistus/0000-0002-4926-8652; Stathers, Tanya/0000-0002-7767-6186;
   LIWENGA, EMMA/0000-0003-1731-3428
FU International Development Centre (IDRC)
FX This research work was financially supported by the International
   Development Centre (IDRC) through the project Exploring the Linkages
   Between Rural Localities and Centralised Urban Centres in Tanzania and
   Malawi under the Climate Change Adaptation in Africa (CCAA) Programme;
   funding period 2009-2012. We gratefully acknowledge this support. The
   findings and views expressed are, however, the sole responsibility of
   the authors.
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NR 68
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 6
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2523-3084
EI 2523-3092
BN 978-3-030-31543-6; 978-3-030-31542-9
J9 SUSTAIN DEV GOAL SER
PY 2020
BP 137
EP 156
DI 10.1007/978-3-030-31543-6_11
D2 10.1007/978-3-030-31543-6
PG 20
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA BR8KP
UT WOS:000672574000012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schmidt, NM
   Teschner, N
   Negev, M
AF Schmidt, Nicole M.
   Teschner, Na'ama
   Negev, Maya
TI Scientific Advice and Administrative Traditions: The Role of Chief
   Scientists in Climate Change Adaptation
SO REVIEW OF POLICY RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation; administrative traditions; chief scientist;
   science-policy interface; Israel
ID POLICY-MAKING; SCIENCE; TECHNOLOGY; BUREAUCRACY; KNOWLEDGE
AB The role of the chief scientist (CS), a key administrative position in various Israeli ministries, is to fund policy-oriented research and support evidence-based decision-making. Has the CS's role promoted or constrained incorporation of scientific advice regarding climate change adaptation into governmental policy? Have administrative traditions affected the adaptation planning process in Israel? Analysis of documents and 26 in-depth interviews with key stakeholders sheds light on the ongoing climate change adaptation policy formulation process. Our study reveals that the CS of the Ministry of Environmental Protection functions as a bridge at different interfaces and can be characterized as a boundary worker between institutions. The inherent independence of this position facilitates the CS's ability to initiate, foster, and prioritize complex issues such as adaptation. Our findings further suggest that the perception that Israel has already adapted, or will easily adapt, has negatively affected the adaptation process.
C1 [Schmidt, Nicole M.] Heidelberg Univ, Inst Polit Sci, Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Teschner, Na'ama] Technion Israel Inst Technol, Ctr Urban & Reg Studies, Haifa, Israel.
   [Negev, Maya] Univ Haifa, Sch Publ Hlth, Haifa, Israel.
C3 Ruprecht Karls University Heidelberg; Technion Israel Institute of
   Technology; University of Haifa
RP Schmidt, NM (corresponding author), Heidelberg Univ, Inst Polit Sci, Heidelberg, Germany.
RI Teschner, Na'ama/AAU-9173-2020; Negev, Maya/AAQ-4703-2020
OI Negev, Maya/0000-0002-5523-3210
FU MINERVA Foundation
FX This study is an outcome of COST Action IS1309 "Innovations in Climate
   Governance: Sources, Patterns and Effects" (INOGOV). The work by Nicole
   M. Schmidt was supported by the MINERVA Foundation and she expresses
   gratitude to Eran Feitelson and Amit Tubi for their guidance and
   suggestions during the planning and development stage of this research.
   The authors are grateful to all interviewees for their kind
   collaboration and generosity with which they shared their views and
   experiences. An early version of this article was presented at the
   INOGOV Intensive Research Workshop (Amsterdam, April 19-20, 2016). The
   authors thank all workshop participants for their helpful comments. In
   particular, the authors thank Jale Tosun, Robbert Biesbroek, Guy Peters,
   and three anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments that
   greatly improved the manuscript. The authors acknowledge Xenia Rak's and
   Dajana Jost's assistance in the interview transcription process.
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NR 85
TC 10
Z9 12
U1 2
U2 10
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1541-132X
EI 1541-1338
J9 REV POLICY RES
JI Rev. Policy Res.
PD NOV
PY 2018
VL 35
IS 6
SI SI
BP 859
EP 880
DI 10.1111/ropr.12295
PG 22
WC Political Science; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law; Public Administration
GA HB9XQ
UT WOS:000451448500004
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Regan, PM
   Kim, H
   Maiden, E
AF Regan, Patrick M.
   Kim, Hyun
   Maiden, Emily
TI Climate change, adaptation, and agricultural output
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive capacity; Climate change adaptation; Crop yields; Extreme
   weather disasters; Sensitivity
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; VULNERABILITY; EVOLUTION
AB Recent studies have estimated that climate-generated extreme weather disasters have reduced crop yields globally by up to 10%. By incorporating indicators of adaptive capacity and sensitivity, we develop empirical models of the relationship between extreme weather disasters and agricultural output between 1995 and 2010. Using panel data models, we find that the greater the adaptive capacity of a country, the more attenuated are the expected agricultural losses from extreme weather disasters. In effect, climate-related agricultural consequences vary as a function of the heterogeneity across countries. Much of this heterogeneity in adaptive capacity is a result of policy choices about structural preparedness. Our results allow us to draw inferences about crop yields under different levels of adaptive capacity in the context of climate change.
C1 [Regan, Patrick M.] Univ Notre Dame, Dept Polit Sci, 217 OShaughnessy Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.
   [Kim, Hyun] Univ Notre Dame, Notre Dame Global Adaptat Initiat, 1400 East Angela Blvd, South Bend, IN 46617 USA.
   [Maiden, Emily] Univ Notre Dame, Kroc Inst Int Peace Studies, Hesburgh Ctr Int Studies 100, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.
C3 University of Notre Dame; University of Notre Dame; University of Notre
   Dame
RP Kim, H (corresponding author), Univ Notre Dame, Notre Dame Global Adaptat Initiat, 1400 East Angela Blvd, South Bend, IN 46617 USA.
EM pregan3@nd.edu; hkim9129@gmail.com; emaiden@nd.edu
OI Kim, Hyun/0000-0003-0681-5828
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NR 52
TC 21
Z9 21
U1 2
U2 35
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD JAN
PY 2019
VL 19
IS 1
BP 113
EP 123
DI 10.1007/s10113-018-1364-0
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HK4PA
UT WOS:000457941000010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU DeLeo, RA
AF DeLeo, Rob A.
TI Anticipatory policymaking in global venues: Policy change, adaptation,
   and the UNFCCC
SO FUTURES
LA English
DT Article
DE Policy change; Anticipatory policymaking; Climate change adaptation
ID RISK SOCIETY; PRECAUTION
AB The subfield of public policy depicts policymaking as reactive process wherein public officials respond to existing social problems. While this depiction holds true in many cases, it fails to account for instances where policy change occurs in anticipation of emerging threats or hazards. "Anticipatory problems" are projected to occur in the future, and it is the prospect of their occurring that generates policy debate. This paper examines the policymaking pattern engendered by anticipatory policy problems, highlighting the ways in which they challenge and support existing assumptions about the process of policy change. To illustrate this distinctive dynamic, this paper will present a case study examining the evolving debate over climate change adaptation policy within United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [DeLeo, Rob A.] Bentley Univ, Dept Global Studies, 175 Forest St, Waltham, MA 02452 USA.
C3 Bentley University
RP DeLeo, RA (corresponding author), Bentley Univ, Dept Global Studies, 175 Forest St, Waltham, MA 02452 USA.
EM rdeleo@bentley.edu
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NR 72
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 9
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0016-3287
EI 1873-6378
J9 FUTURES
JI Futures
PD SEP
PY 2017
VL 92
SI SI
BP 39
EP 47
DI 10.1016/j.futures.2016.09.001
PG 9
WC Economics; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Public Administration
GA FJ9WY
UT WOS:000413133400005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Swarna, ST
   Hossain, K
   Bernier, A
AF Swarna, Surya Teja
   Hossain, Kamal
   Bernier, Alyssa
TI Climate change adaptation strategies for Canadian asphalt pavements;
   Part 2: Life cycle assessment and life cycle cost analysis
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation strategies; Life cycle assessment; Life cycle
   cost analysis; Pavement design
ID DESIGN
AB Presently, there is strong consensus that significant temperature and weather changes are fast approaching as a result of climate change. Pavements will be significantly affected by increased temperatures, precipitation, and flooding, and will require present design methodology to be modified accordingly. Several climate change adaptation strategies are easily available to agencies including upgraded asphalt binder grades, increased Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA) thickness, modified mix gradations, and stabilized base. The objective of this study is to investigate Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) and Life Cycle Cost Analysis (LCCA) for climate change adaptation strategies across various locations in Canada, from a Global Warming Potential (GWP) perspective. All analysis was completed leveraging the Athena Pavement LCA software and the LTPP database. The investigated scenarios were (i) a baseline asphalt pavement with no climate change, (ii) a baseline asphalt pavement with climate change, and (iii) an asphalt pavement adapted to withstand climate change, appropriate to the level of changes experienced by the specific location. The study revealed that although there are initial increases in both cost and emission to administer these adaptation strategies, they are offset over the life of the pavements. Increasing the HMA thickness and using stabilized bases were the most expensive and the highest emitting among the inves-tigated strategies, but they are only necessary for extreme coastal climate change regions including British Columbia and Newfoundland. British Columbia is expected to observe a near 30% increase in agency costs to effectively adapt their pavements to climate change. However, these initiatives were found to decrease the overall global warming potential by nearly 10% in comparison to not adapting. The other examined locations, although not returning as drastic of changes, followed similar trends. The conclusions find that climate change adaptation strategies are highly beneficial from the standpoint of both an LCA and LCCA for all of the investi-gated locations.
C1 [Swarna, Surya Teja; Hossain, Kamal] Mem Univ Newfoundland, Dept Civil Engn, St John, NL A1C 5S7, Canada.
   [Swarna, Surya Teja] Rowan Univ, Ctr Res & Educ Adv Transportat Engn Syst CREATEs, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Glassboro, NJ 08028 USA.
   [Hossain, Kamal; Bernier, Alyssa] Adv Rd & Transportat Engn Lab ARTEL, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada.
C3 Memorial University Newfoundland; Rowan University
RP Swarna, ST (corresponding author), Mem Univ Newfoundland, Dept Civil Engn, St John, NL A1C 5S7, Canada.
EM stswarna@mun.ca; kamal.hossain@carleton.ca;
   alyssabernier@cmail.carleton.ca
RI Swarna, Surya Teja/AAD-6684-2020
OI Hossain, Kamal/0000-0003-1155-9347; Bernier, Alyssa/0000-0001-8777-070X
CR Ahammed M.A., 2016, 2016 TRANSP ASS CAN
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NR 31
TC 9
Z9 10
U1 4
U2 29
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD OCT 10
PY 2022
VL 370
AR 133355
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2022.133355
EA AUG 2022
PG 12
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA 4W7XW
UT WOS:000860372100009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yang, Y
   Liu, BB
   Wang, P
   Chen, WQ
   Smith, TM
AF Yang, Yi
   Liu, Beibei
   Wang, Peng
   Chen, Wei-Qiang
   Smith, Timothy M.
TI Toward sustainable climate change adaptation
SO JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; climate resilience; climate-smart
   agriculture; life cycle assessment (LCA); low-carbon infrastructure;
   material flow analysis
ID LIFE-CYCLE ASSESSMENT; INPUT-OUTPUT-ANALYSIS; SEA-LEVEL RISE;
   LOW-CARBON; INDUSTRIAL PARKS; INDIRECT IMPACTS; ADAPTING AGRICULTURE;
   WATER-RESOURCES; EMBODIED ENERGY; CO2 EMISSIONS
AB Industrial ecology (IE) has made great contributions to climate change mitigation research, in terms of its systems thinking and solid methodologies such as life cycle assessment, material flow analysis, and environmentally extended input-output analysis. However, its potential contribution to climate change adaptation is unclear. Adaptation has become increasingly urgent in a continuously changing climate, especially in developing countries, which are projected to bear the brunt of climate-change-related damages. On the basis of a brief review of climate change impacts and adaptation literature, we suggest that IE can play an important role in the following two aspects. First, with the emphasis on a systems perspective, IE can help us determine how climate change interacts with our socio-economic system and how the interactions may aggravate (or moderate) its direct impacts or whether they may shift burden to other environmental impacts. Second, IE methodologies can help us quantify the direct and indirect environmental impacts of adaptation activities, identify mitigation opportunities, and achieve sustainable adaptation. Further, we find that substantial investment is needed to increase the resilience of infrastructure (e.g., transport, energy, and water supply) and agriculture in developing countries. Because these sectors are also the main drivers of environmental degradation, how to achieve sustainable climate-resilient infrastructure and agriculture in developing countries deserves special attention in future IE studies. Overall, IE thinking and methodologies have great potential to contribute to climate change adaptation research and policy questions, and exploring this growing field will, in turn, inspire IE development.
C1 [Yang, Yi; Wang, Peng; Chen, Wei-Qiang] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Urban Environm, Key Lab Urban Environm & Hlth, Xiamen 361021, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Yi; Smith, Timothy M.] Univ Minnesota, Dept Bioprod & Biosyst Engn, St Paul, MN 55108 USA.
   [Liu, Beibei] Nanjing Univ, Sch Environm, State Key Lab Pollut Control & Resource Reuse, Nanjing, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Beibei] Johns Hopkins Univ Nanjin Univ Ctr Chinese & Amer, Nanjing, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Peng; Chen, Wei-Qiang] Xiamen Key Lab Urban Metab, Xiamen, Fujian, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Wei-Qiang] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Urban Environment, CAS;
   University of Minnesota System; University of Minnesota Twin Cities;
   Nanjing University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese
   Academy of Sciences, CAS
RP Chen, WQ (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Urban Environm, Key Lab Urban Environm & Hlth, Xiamen 361021, Peoples R China.
EM wqchen@iue.ac.cn
RI Liu, beibei/AAB-7993-2019; Peng, Wang/JEF-5667-2023; Chen,
   Wei-Qiang/HJY-2209-2023; Yang, Yi/AAM-9280-2021; Yang, Yi/Q-7057-2016
OI Liu, Beibei/0000-0003-3788-018X; Smith, Timothy/0000-0002-0479-4261;
   Yang, Yi/0000-0002-1131-6196; Chen, Wei-Qiang/0000-0002-7686-2331
FU China's NationalKey Research andDevelopmentProgramof theMinistry of
   Science and Technology [2017YFC0505703]; Key ResearchProject of Frontier
   Science of Chinese Academy of Sciences [QYZDB-SSWDQC012]; Chinese
   Academy of Sciences Pioneer Hundred Talents Program; US National Science
   Foundation [CBET1639342]; National Natural Science Foundation of China
   [71874078]
FX Wei-Qiang Chen andPengWang acknowledge funding from China's NationalKey
   Research andDevelopmentProgramof theMinistry of Science and Technology
   (2017YFC0505703), Key ResearchProject of Frontier Science of Chinese
   Academy of Sciences (QYZDB-SSWDQC012), and the Chinese Academy of
   Sciences Pioneer Hundred Talents Program. YiYang and TimothyM. Smith
   acknowledge funding from theUS National Science Foundation
   (CBET1639342). Beibei Liu acknowledges funding from the National Natural
   Science Foundation of China (71874078).
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NR 155
TC 30
Z9 31
U1 8
U2 78
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1088-1980
EI 1530-9290
J9 J IND ECOL
JI J. Ind. Ecol.
PD APR
PY 2020
VL 24
IS 2
SI SI
BP 318
EP 330
DI 10.1111/jiec.12984
EA JAN 2020
PG 13
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA LD6LK
UT WOS:000510120500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dittmer, KM
   Rose, S
   Snapp, SS
   Kebede, Y
   Brickman, S
   Shelton, S
   Egler, C
   Stier, M
   Wollenberg, E
AF Dittmer, Kyle M.
   Rose, Sabrina
   Snapp, Sieglinde S.
   Kebede, Yodit
   Brickman, Sarah
   Shelton, Sadie
   Egler, Cecelia
   Stier, Milena
   Wollenberg, Eva
TI Agroecology Can Promote Climate Change Adaptation Outcomes Without
   Compromising Yield In Smallholder Systems
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Agroecology; Climate change mitigation; Climate change adaptation;
   Yield; Smallholder
ID FOOD SYSTEMS; AGROFORESTRY; AGRICULTURE; TREES
AB A critical question is whether agroecology can promote climate change mitigation and adaptation outcomes without compromising food security. We assessed the outcomes of smallholder agricultural systems and practices in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) against 35 mitigation, adaptation, and yield indicators by reviewing 50 articles with 77 cases of agroecological treatments relative to a baseline of conventional practices. Crop yields were higher for 63% of cases reporting yields. Crop diversity, income diversity, net income, reduced income variability, nutrient regulation, and reduced pest infestation, indicators of adaptative capacity, were associated with 70% or more of cases. Limited information on climate change mitigation, such as greenhouse gas emissions and carbon sequestration impacts, was available. Overall, the evidence indicates that use of organic nutrient sources, diversifying systems with legumes and integrated pest management lead to climate change adaptation in multiple contexts. Landscape mosaics, biological control (e.g., enhancement of beneficial organisms) and field sanitation measures do not yet have sufficient evidence based on this review. Widespread adoption of agroecological practices and system transformations shows promise to contribute to climate change services and food security in LMICs. Gaps in adaptation and mitigation strategies and areas for policy and research interventions are finally discussed.
C1 [Dittmer, Kyle M.; Rose, Sabrina; Kebede, Yodit; Shelton, Sadie; Wollenberg, Eva] Alliance Biovers Int & Int Ctr Trop Agr CIAT, Cali, Colombia.
   [Snapp, Sieglinde S.] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, Texcoco, Mexico.
   [Snapp, Sieglinde S.] Michigan State Univ MSU, E Lansing, MI USA.
   [Kebede, Yodit] French Natl Res Inst Sustainable Dev IRD, Marseille, France.
   [Brickman, Sarah; Shelton, Sadie; Egler, Cecelia; Stier, Milena; Wollenberg, Eva] Univ Vermont UVM, Burlington, VT USA.
   [Shelton, Sadie; Wollenberg, Eva] Univ Vermont, Gund Inst Environm, Burlington, VT USA.
C3 CGIAR; International Maize & Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT);
   University of Vermont
RP Dittmer, KM (corresponding author), Alliance Biovers Int & Int Ctr Trop Agr CIAT, Cali, Colombia.
EM k.dittmer@cgiar.org
RI Snapp, Sieglinde/GWQ-5774-2022
OI Snapp, Sieglinde/0000-0002-9738-0649; Rose, Sabrina/0000-0002-5385-6828;
   Brickman, Sarah/0000-0001-5000-0461
FU CGIAR Trust Fund
FX This work was implemented as part of the CGIAR Research Program on
   Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), which is carried
   out with support from the CGIAR Trust Fund and through bilateral funding
   agreements. The CCAFS Program closed at the end of 2021. More
   information can be found on the CGIAR website https://www.cgiar.org. The
   views expressed in this document cannot be taken to reflect the official
   opinions of these organizations.
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NR 27
TC 13
Z9 15
U1 4
U2 33
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0364-152X
EI 1432-1009
J9 ENVIRON MANAGE
JI Environ. Manage.
PD AUG
PY 2023
VL 72
IS 2
BP 333
EP 342
DI 10.1007/s00267-023-01816-x
EA APR 2023
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA J9UT0
UT WOS:000961720400001
PM 37004534
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Palacios-Díaz, MD
   Mendoza-Grimón, V
AF Palacios-Diaz, Maria del Pino
   Mendoza-Grimon, Vanessa
TI Environment in Veterinary Education
SO VETERINARY SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE environment; climate change; veterinarian education; one health; soil
   food web; GHG emissions
ID ONE HEALTH
AB Simple Summary Environmental education is an important pillar for responding and adapting to climate change. The EU's common agricultural policy (CAP) has evolved from rules which supported the farming sector after years of famine and has become oriented towards looking at environmental aspects. The CAP policies oriented towards optimizing natural resource use, residue management, antimicrobial use reduction, the decrease in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and animal welfare, need educational programs linked to the environmental problems. In this context, veterinarians are experts in animal production, welfare, food safety, and its technology and in public health under the One Health concept. Unfortunately, they are barely trained in environmental aspects, which would help them to understand and face the consequences of climate change in the rural world. Veterinarians must be able to quantify the effects of animal production in the environment by using different analysis tools, which need to be included in their learning programs. In addition, they must be able to optimize the use of natural resources, minimize GHG emissions, and manage the risks associated with climate change. Environmental concerns have become priority issues over the last third of the 20th century. The EU's common agricultural policy (CAP) has gone from rules which supported the farming sector after years of famine to being oriented towards looking at environmental aspects. Therefore, it has evolved not only to react to a changing market and consumer demands but also to respond to climate change and the need for sustainable development. Environmental education is an important pillar for responding and adapting to climate change. The CAP policies oriented towards optimizing the use of natural resources, residue management, antimicrobial use reduction, the decrease of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), and animal welfare need linked educational programs. In this context, veterinarians, being experts in animal production, welfare, and food safety and its technology and public health under the One Health concept, are scarcely informed in environmental aspects, which would help them to understand and face the consequences of climate change in the rural world. Future veterinarians must be able to quantify the effects of animal production on the environment, optimizing the use of natural resources, minimizing GHG emissions, and managing the risks associated with climate change by using different analysis tools that need to be included in their learning programs.
C1 [Palacios-Diaz, Maria del Pino; Mendoza-Grimon, Vanessa] Univ Las Palmas Gran Canaria, Inst Estudios Ambientales & Recursos Nat, Las Palmas Gran Canaria 35017, Spain.
C3 Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
RP Mendoza-Grimón, V (corresponding author), Univ Las Palmas Gran Canaria, Inst Estudios Ambientales & Recursos Nat, Las Palmas Gran Canaria 35017, Spain.
RI Mendoza-Grimon, Vanessa/ABC-7121-2020; Palacios-Diaz, M.P./ABE-8038-2020
OI Palacios-Diaz, M.P./0000-0003-4075-2592; Mendoza-Grimon, Vanessa
   Reyes/0000-0002-0755-5637
CR Agencia Nacional de Evaluacion y de la Calidad y Acreditacion, 2005, LIBR BLANC EST GRAD
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NR 34
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 2
U2 8
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2306-7381
J9 VET SCI
JI Vet. Sci.
PD FEB
PY 2023
VL 10
IS 2
AR 146
DI 10.3390/vetsci10020146
PG 11
WC Veterinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Veterinary Sciences
GA 9M1LP
UT WOS:000941999700001
PM 36851450
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bouwer, LM
   Vellinga, P
AF Bouwer, LM
   Vellinga, P
TI Some rationales for risk sharing and financing adaptation
SO WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference on Climate Change and Water Management
CY SEP 27-29, 2004
CL Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS
SP Int Water Assoc, Netherlands Assoc Water Management, Cooperative Programme Water & Climate, Aquatech 2004
DE adaptation; climate change; finance; floods; risk management; water
   management
AB Current climate variability and anticipated climate change challenge our water systems and our financial resources. The sharing of economic losses due to weather related hazards and the sharing of costs that result from protecting lives and property take place in different forms, but are currently insufficient. In this paper we discuss three different rationales for financing disaster losses through public and private arrangements, as well as options for financing adaptation, with a special focus on water management. We propose that financial arrangements for risk sharing and climate change adaptation should be reconsidered, in a more structured approach, to be able to deal with both disaster losses and the costs that arise because of climate change adaptation, e.g. for water management, in both developing and developed countries.
C1 Free Univ Amsterdam, Fac Earth & Life Sci, Inst Environm Studies, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
RP Bouwer, LM (corresponding author), Free Univ Amsterdam, Fac Earth & Life Sci, Inst Environm Studies, De Boelelaan 1087, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
EM laurens.bouwer@ivm.falw.vu.nl; pier.vellinga@falw.vu.nl
RI Bouwer, Laurens/AAV-7628-2021
OI Bouwer, Laurens/0000-0003-3498-2586
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NR 15
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 2
U2 11
PU I W A PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 0273-1223
J9 WATER SCI TECHNOL
JI Water Sci. Technol.
PY 2005
VL 51
IS 5
BP 89
EP 95
DI 10.2166/wst.2005.0116
PG 7
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA 931CW
UT WOS:000229464400014
PM 15918362
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Palanisami, K
   Kakumanu, KR
   Ranganathan, CR
   Sekhar, NU
AF Palanisami, Kuppanan
   Kakumanu, Krishna Reddy
   Ranganathan, C. R.
   Sekhar, Nagothu Udaya
TI Farm-level cost of adaptation and expected cost of uncertainty
   associated with climate change impacts in major river basins in India
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; India; Adaptation technologies; Cost of adaptation; Cost
   of uncertainty; Joint probabilities
ID VARIABILITY; INFORMATION
AB Purpose - Researchers and policymakers are figuring out the adaptation technologies to cope with the changing climate. Adaptation strategies for crop production followed by the farmers at selected study locations had ranged from 6-30 per cent only, and this was mainly due to lack of awareness about the actual cost associated with adaptation and non-adaptation of these strategies.
   Design/methodology/approach - Hence, this study aims to address the cost of adaptation for rice using joint probability distribution of rainfall and crop prices.
   Findings - Cost of adaptation varied from INR2,389 to 4,395/ha for System of Rice Intensification (SRI); INR646 to 1,121/ha for alternate wetting and drying (AWD) and INR8,144 to 8,677/ha for well irrigation (WI), whereas expected cost for not using these technologies has ranged from INR6,976 to 9,172/ha for SRI; INR4,123 7,764/ha for AWD and INR10,825 to 17,270/ha for WI. Hence, promotion of the adaptation technologies itself will minimize the income losses to the farmers.
   Research limitations/implications - Even though, there are many ways for farmers (other than technology), to adapt to climate change (such as out-migration to cities, selling farm assets, focus on children's education, etc.), this report, given the framework of the major research study undertaken, addresses only farm-level adaptation of the technologies to enhance farm income.
   Originality/value - Public-private partnership in providing the technologies at cheaper costs, capacity building in handling the technologies and creating awareness about the technologies to minimize the expected cost of adaptation are suggested to improve the adoption level.
C1 [Palanisami, Kuppanan; Kakumanu, Krishna Reddy] Int Water Management Inst, Hyderabad Off, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India.
   [Ranganathan, C. R.] Tamil Nadu Agr Univ, Coimbatore 641003, Tamil Nadu, India.
   [Sekhar, Nagothu Udaya] Norwegian Inst Agr & Environm Res, As, Norway.
C3 CGIAR; International Water Management Institute (IWMI); Tamil Nadu
   Agricultural University; Bioforsk
RP Kakumanu, KR (corresponding author), Int Water Management Inst, Hyderabad Off, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India.
EM k.krishnareddy@cgiar.org
OI Kakumanu, Krishna Reddy/0000-0002-8177-1610
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NR 27
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 12
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-8692
EI 1756-8706
J9 INT J CLIM CHANG STR
JI Int. J. Clim. Chang. Strateg. Manag.
PY 2015
VL 7
IS 1
BP 76
EP 96
DI 10.1108/IJCCSM-04-2013-0059
PG 21
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CD7QR
UT WOS:000351286300006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Haasnoot, M
   Schellekens, J
   Beersma, JJ
   Middelkoop, H
   Kwadijk, JCJ
AF Haasnoot, M.
   Schellekens, J.
   Beersma, J. J.
   Middelkoop, H.
   Kwadijk, J. C. J.
TI Transient scenarios for robust climate change adaptation illustrated for
   water management in The Netherlands
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation pathways; adaptation tipping points; serious game; rainfall
   generator; signposts; adaptive water management; deep uncertainty
ID PATHWAYS; FRAMEWORK
AB Climate scenarios are used to explore impacts of possible future climates and to assess the robustness of adaptation actions across a range of futures. Time-dependent climate scenarios are commonly used in mitigation studies. However, despite the dynamic nature of adaptation, most scenarios for local or regional decision making on climate adaptation are static 'endpoint' projections. This paper describes the development and use of transient (time-dependent) scenarios by means of a case on water management in the Netherlands. Relevant boundary conditions (sea level, precipitation and evaporation) were constructed by generating an ensemble of synthetic time-series with a rainfall generator and a transient delta change method. Climate change impacted river flows were then generated with a hydrological simulation model for the Rhine basin. The transient scenarios were applied in model simulations and game experiments. We argue that there are at least three important assets of using transient scenarios for supporting robust climate adaptation: (1) raise awareness about (a) the implications of climate variability and climate change for decision making and (b) the difficulty of finding proof of climate change in relevant variables for water management; (2) assessment of when to adapt by identifying adaptation tipping points which can then be used to explore adaptation pathways, and (3) identification of triggers for climate adaptation.
C1 [Haasnoot, M.; Schellekens, J.; Kwadijk, J. C. J.] Deltares, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Haasnoot, M.] Delft Univ Technol, NL-2600 AA Delft, Netherlands.
   [Beersma, J. J.] Royal Netherlands Meteorol Inst KNMI, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Middelkoop, H.] Univ Utrecht, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Kwadijk, J. C. J.] Univ Twente, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands.
C3 Deltares; Delft University of Technology; Royal Netherlands
   Meteorological Institute; Utrecht University; University of Twente
RP Haasnoot, M (corresponding author), Deltares, Delft, Netherlands.
EM marjolijn.haasnoot@deltares.nl
RI Middelkoop, Hans/C-5249-2012; Haasnoot, Marjolijn/H-4827-2012; kwadijk,
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NR 49
TC 45
Z9 53
U1 1
U2 35
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD OCT
PY 2015
VL 10
IS 10
AR 105008
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/10/10/105008
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA CZ5ZG
UT WOS:000367180300028
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kehler, S
   Birchall, SJ
AF Kehler, Sarah
   Birchall, S. Jeff
TI Social vulnerability and climate change adaptation: The critical
   importance of moving beyond technocratic policy approaches
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptive capacity; Resilience; Social stressors;
   Vulnerable communities; Urban planning and policy
ID CHANGE MITIGATION; RESILIENCE; INDICATORS; KNOWLEDGE; BARRIERS
AB Planning policy can play a key role in effective, equitable climate change adaptation; however, its capacity remains undermined by technocratic approaches reliant on hard measures, discounting significant research on addressing sources of social vulnerability for successful adaptation policy. Not surprisingly, little research makes use of a planning lens to explore the challenge of utilizing policy measures to address social vulnerability - particularly in relation to climate change. Through a scholarly narrative review of interdisciplinary sources an indepth understanding of climate change vulnerability is gained and its importance in successful adaptation planning demonstrated. The urgency and complexity of climate change requires overcoming socio-political barriers within the existing adaptation paradigm, balancing technocratic methods with a collaborative approach focusing on the social, economic and ethical components of vulnerability to climate change.
C1 [Kehler, Sarah; Birchall, S. Jeff] Univ Alberta, Sch Urban & Reg Planning, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, 1-26 Earth Sci Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada.
C3 University of Alberta
RP Kehler, S (corresponding author), Univ Alberta, Sch Urban & Reg Planning, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, 1-26 Earth Sci Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada.
EM skehler@ualberta.ca
RI Birchall, S Jeff/HOF-3329-2023
OI Birchall, S. Jeff/0000-0002-4508-6720
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NR 60
TC 20
Z9 22
U1 6
U2 24
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD OCT
PY 2021
VL 124
BP 471
EP 477
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2021.07.025
EA AUG 2021
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA UK2IQ
UT WOS:000691798900010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Larsen, C
   McGuinness, S
AF Larsen, Carl
   McGuinness, Shelley
BE Maheshwari, B
   Singh, VP
   Thoradeniya, B
TI Climate Change Adaptation Planning with Peri-Urban Local Government in
   Victoria, Australia
SO BALANCED URBAN DEVELOPMENT: OPTIONS AND STRATEGIES FOR LIVEABLE CITIES
SE Water Science and Technology Library
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Climate change risk; Peri-urban planning; Risk assessment; Adaptation
   plan and local government
AB Climate change presents many challenges for local government in Victoria, Australia. In the Macedon Ranges local government area the future climate is likely to include more hot days, less rainfall and run-off and increased frequency and intensity of extreme events such as drought, flash flooding and wildfire. The purpose of this project was to identify, analyse and evaluate climate change risks and develop an adaptation plan that would assist the Macedon Ranges Shire Council on the outskirts of Melbourne begin to plan for likely impacts arising from climate change.
   The development of the adaptation plan employed a best practice risk management approach in line with AS/NZS 31000: 2009 and AS 5334: 2013 and took and whole-of-council approach. Undertaking a risk assessment approach to climate change adaptation planning for a peri-urban local government area was successful. The approach assisted council to build capacity in climate change, adaptation and the process of undertaking a risk assessment and define their area of operation, influence and responsibility in regards to adaptation actions and the role of other external stakeholders. Further, it helped them to integrate the risks and associated adaptation options directly into the existing risk register system and understand the relativity of climate risks to non-climate risks that the council faces, such as land use change, increasing proportions of absentee landholders and an ageing demographic.
C1 [Larsen, Carl; McGuinness, Shelley] RM Consulting Grp, Suite 1,Level 1,357 Camberwell Rd, Camberwell, Vic 3124, Australia.
RP Larsen, C (corresponding author), RM Consulting Grp, Suite 1,Level 1,357 Camberwell Rd, Camberwell, Vic 3124, Australia.
EM carll@rmcg.com.au
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NR 25
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 9
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 0921-092X
EI 1872-4663
BN 978-3-319-28112-4; 978-3-319-28110-0
J9 WATER SCI TECHNOL LI
PY 2016
VL 72
BP 395
EP 407
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-28112-4_24
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-28112-4
PG 13
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Water Resources
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Water Resources
GA BH2GG
UT WOS:000398928900025
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mills-Novoa, M
   Boelens, R
   Hoogesteger, J
   Vos, J
AF Mills-Novoa, Megan
   Boelens, Rutgerd
   Hoogesteger, Jaime
   Vos, Jeroen
TI Resisting, leveraging, and reworking climate change adaptation projects
   from below: placing adaptation in Ecuador's agrarian struggle
SO JOURNAL OF PEASANT STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; resistance; political ecology; Latin America;
   governmentality; politics
ID FOOD SOVEREIGNTY; SCALAR POLITICS; STATE; RESISTANCE; GOVERNMENTALITY;
   RIGHTS; POWER; INTERVENTION; TERRITORIES; RECOGNITION
AB As climate change escalates, donors, international organizations, and state actors are implementing adaptation projectsEmbedded within these adaptation projects are imaginaries of rural resilience. These imaginaries, however, are contested by individuals and collectives targeted by such initiatives. In this article, we draw on Foucault's notion of counter conducts to understand how beneficiaries in Ecuador resist, leverage, and/or rework adaptation interventions and towards what end. We identified five counter conducts: (1) negotiating for control, (2) setting the terms for participation, (3) opting out, (4) subverting the discursive frame, and (5) leveraging longevity. We argue that these counter conducts are generative, enacting multi-scalar counter-hegemonic politics of agrarian transformation.
C1 [Mills-Novoa, Megan] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Energy & Resources Grp, Giannini Bldg,Rm 116, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
   [Boelens, Rutgerd; Hoogesteger, Jaime; Vos, Jeroen] Wageningen Univ, Dept Environm Sci, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Boelens, Rutgerd] Univ Amsterdam, Ctr Latin Amer Res & Documentat CEDLA, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Boelens, Rutgerd] Univ Cent Ecuador, Fac Agron, Quito, Ecuador.
   [Hoogesteger, Jaime] Univ Guanajuato, Dept Geomat & Hydraul Engn, Guanajuato, Mexico.
   [Hoogesteger, Jaime] Univ Autonoma Mexico, Inst Invest Ecosistemas & Sustentabil IIES, Mexico City, Mexico.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley;
   Wageningen University & Research; University of Amsterdam; Universidad
   Central del Ecuador; Universidad de Guanajuato; Universidad Nacional
   Autonoma de Mexico
RP Mills-Novoa, M (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Energy & Resources Grp, Giannini Bldg,Rm 116, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
EM mills-novoa@berkeley.edu; Rutgerd.Boelens@wur.nl;
   jaime.hoogesteger@wur.nl; jeroen.vos@wur.nl
RI Hoogesteger, Jaime/A-4506-2015; Boelens, Rutgerd/E-5157-2012
OI Mills-Novoa, Megan/0000-0002-1780-9266; boelens,
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NR 117
TC 10
Z9 11
U1 2
U2 9
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0306-6150
EI 1743-9361
J9 J PEASANT STUD
JI J. Peasant Stud.
PD SEP 19
PY 2023
VL 50
IS 6
BP 2283
EP 2311
DI 10.1080/03066150.2022.2144252
EA DEC 2022
PG 29
WC Anthropology; Development Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Anthropology; Development Studies
GA T2QQ2
UT WOS:000893326300001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cobbinah, PB
   Anane, GK
AF Cobbinah, Patrick Brandful
   Anane, George Kwadwo
TI Climate change adaptation in rural Ghana: indigenous perceptions and
   strategies
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; Africa; rural development; agriculture
ID LIVELIHOODS; AFRICA
AB In Ghana, the agricultural sector is climate-dependent and susceptible to threatening impacts of climate change, yet, little is known about climate change adaptation in rural farming communities. This article examines the effects of, and local adaptation response to, climate change in rural farming communities in the Jaman North District of Ghana. Using meteorological data, changes in rainfall and temperature over the past 30 years were analyzed. In addition, social research methods were used to analyse interviews and household survey data on climate change impacts on, and adaption responses of rural communities. Results showed that the changing weather patterns, in the form of erratic rainfall and increasing temperatures, have become an additional burden to rural farming communities who are already faced with limited level of mechanization.
C1 [Cobbinah, Patrick Brandful] Charles Sturt Univ, Inst Land Water & Soc, Sch Environm Sci, POB 789, Albury, NSW 2640, Australia.
   [Anane, George Kwadwo] Univ Energy & Nat Resources, Qual Assurance & Planning Unit, Sunyani, Ghana.
C3 Charles Sturt University
RP Cobbinah, PB (corresponding author), Charles Sturt Univ, Inst Land Water & Soc, Sch Environm Sci, POB 789, Albury, NSW 2640, Australia.
EM pcobbinah@csu.edu.au
RI Cobbinah, Patrick/ABH-9950-2020; Kwadwo Anane, George/AAW-3819-2021
OI Kwadwo Anane, George/0000-0002-6461-826X
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U2 57
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD MAR 14
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 2
BP 169
EP 178
DI 10.1080/17565529.2015.1034228
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DH0AI
UT WOS:000372444500007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Smith, G
   Bastidas, EP
AF Smith, G.
   Bastidas, E. P.
BA Smith, G
   Bastidas, EP
BF Smith, G
   Bastidas, EP
TI Conflict and Sustainability in a Changing Environment: Through the Eyes
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SO CONFLICT AND SUSTAINABILITY IN A CHANGING ENVIRONMENT: THROUGH THE EYES
   OF COMMUNITIES
SE Anthem Ecosystem Services and Restoration
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
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NR 238
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU ANTHEM PRESS
PI LONDON
PA 75-76 BLACKFRIARS RD, LONDON, SE1 8HA, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-78308-608-5
J9 ANTH ECOSY SERV REST
PY 2017
BP 1
EP 191
D2 10.4324/9781315745664
PG 191
WC Environmental Studies; Regional & Urban Planning; Sociology
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration; Sociology
GA BL1KU
UT WOS:000447822500010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Sample, VA
AF Sample, V. Alaric
BE Sample, VA
   Bixler, RP
   Miller, C
TI <i>Forest Conservation and Management in the Anthropocene</i>
   Introduction
SO FOREST CONSERVATION IN THE ANTHROPOCENE: SCIENCE, POLICY, AND PRACTICE
LA English
DT Editorial Material; Book Chapter
ID WESTERN UNITED-STATES; PONDEROSA PINE FORESTS; CLIMATE-CHANGE
   ADAPTATION; STAND-REPLACING FIRE; FUEL-REDUCTION TREATMENTS; DISSOLVED
   ORGANIC-CARBON; YOSEMITE-NATIONAL-PARK; LONG-TERM PERSPECTIVE;
   MIXED-CONIFER FORESTS; NO-ANALOG COMMUNITIES
C1 [Sample, V. Alaric] Pinchot Inst Conservat, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
RP Sample, VA (corresponding author), Pinchot Inst Conservat, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
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NR 788
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU UNIV PRESS COLORADO
PI BOULDER
PA 5589 ARAPAHOE AVE, STE 206C, BOULDER, CO 80303 USA
BN 978-1-60732-521-5; 978-1-60732-459-1; 978-1-60732-458-4
PY 2016
BP 3
EP +
DI 10.5876/9781607324591.c000
D2 10.5876/9781607324591
PG 78
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology;
   Forestry
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Forestry
GA BK4AD
UT WOS:000435934100001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU de Block, D
   Feindt, PH
   van Slobbe, E
AF de Block, Debora
   Feindt, Peter H.
   van Slobbe, Erik
TI Shaping conditions for entrepreneurship in climate change adaptation: a
   case study of an emerging governance arrangement in the Netherlands
SO ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; ecosystem-based adaptation; entrepreneurship; governance
   arrangements
ID ECOSYSTEM-BASED ADAPTATION; MULTILEVEL; CHALLENGES; DYNAMICS; FRAMES
AB Planning and implementation of regional climate change adaptation requires new, integrated governance arrangements that often involve public and private actors. Although entrepreneurship is widely considered an important part of such arrangements, little is known about the conditions that enable it, and its actual role is under-researched. Through an in-depth case study of an ecosystem-based adaptation project in the Netherlands, we have analyzed how the variegated actors in a governance network shape six conditions for entrepreneurial success, established in the entrepreneurship literature. Through a framing analysis, we found that all six conditions, i.e., prior career experience, altruistic motivations, financial motives, social networks, financial capital availability, and policies and regulations, were the object of constant negotiations. Their salience varied during the project as a result of variegated framing practices. In the early stages, issue, identity, and relationship frames were used to create a network of people with a range of relevant experience, connected by altruistic motivations. However, as the project progressed, distrust frames and different spatial-and temporal-scale frames created tensions between public and private actors. Accordingly, process frames, financial motivations, and capital availability became increasingly salient, reflecting the need to consolidate rules, roles, and responsibilities. The findings suggest that approaches to climate change adaptation imply ongoing struggles over the conditions that enable entrepreneurial success. We thereby add an important new dimension to the study of adaptation governance.
C1 [de Block, Debora; van Slobbe, Erik] Wageningen Univ & Res, Water Syst & Global Change Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Feindt, Peter H.] Humboldt Univ, Albrecht Daniel Thaer Inst Agr & Hort Sci, Berlin, Germany.
   [Feindt, Peter H.] Wageningen Univ, Strateg Commun, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Humboldt University of Berlin;
   Wageningen University & Research
RP de Block, D (corresponding author), Wageningen Univ & Res, Water Syst & Global Change Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
OI van Slobbe, Erik/0000-0003-0499-2281
FU Climate-KIC (Knowledge and Innovation Community)
FX The authors would like to thank the initiator of the inland shore
   Wieringermeer for the opportunity to become closely involved in the
   project, as well as all other persons involved in the project for their
   cooperation and valuable comments. This research project was financially
   supported by Climate-KIC (Knowledge and Innovation Community).
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NR 40
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 2
U2 29
PU RESILIENCE ALLIANCE
PI WOLFVILLE
PA ACADIA UNIV, BIOLOGY DEPT, WOLFVILLE, NS B0P 1X0, CANADA
SN 1708-3087
J9 ECOL SOC
JI Ecol. Soc.
PD MAR
PY 2019
VL 24
IS 1
AR 19
DI 10.5751/ES-10310-240119
PG 10
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HS8XU
UT WOS:000464153200002
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nikkanen, M
   Räsänen, A
   Juhola, S
AF Nikkanen, Maija
   Rasanen, Aleksi
   Juhola, Sirkku
TI The influence of socioeconomic factors on storm preparedness and
   experienced impacts in Finland
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Storm preparedness; Natural hazards; Climate change adaptation; Social
   vulnerability; Nordic countries; Disaster risk management
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; NATURAL DISASTERS;
   HOUSEHOLD PREPAREDNESS; MITIGATION MEASURES; RISK; FLOOD; HAZARDS;
   CONTEXT; RESILIENCE
AB Extreme weather events, such as storms, may cause material damage, injuries, and interfere with day-to-day operation of societies. Earlier research on natural hazards and climate change adaptation has found that demographic and socioeconomic factors influence the way individuals prepare for and are affected by natural hazards. However, research often focuses on areas with high exposure and vulnerability and research on low exposure and vulnerability areas is scarcer. To address this gap, we ask: do socioeconomic and demographic factors matter in how individuals prepare for and are affected by storms in Finland? Our data consist of an internet survey (n = 1014) conducted after a severe winter storm hit Finland in the beginning of 2019, and we analyze the data with Chi-squared tests and logistic regressions. Our results show that respondents? education level or employment status are not connected to whether they took preparedness measures or whether they experienced harm. Instead, the type of residential property does play a part. In addition, respondents who had experienced storm-related harm during recent years are more likely to prepare than those who have not. In conclusion, socio-demographic factors seem to have only marginal influence on storm preparedness or experienced impacts in Finland, which contradicts earlier research. This may stem from the relatively equal distribution of well-being among the population.
C1 [Nikkanen, Maija; Rasanen, Aleksi; Juhola, Sirkku] Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Ecosyst & Environm Res Programme, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Nikkanen, Maija; Rasanen, Aleksi; Juhola, Sirkku] Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Helsinki Inst Sustainabil Sci HELSUS, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
C3 University of Helsinki; University of Helsinki
RP Nikkanen, M (corresponding author), Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Ecosyst & Environm Res Programme, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
EM maija.nikkanen@helsinki.fi
RI Juhola, Sirkku/IXW-8093-2023
OI Juhola, Sirkku/0000-0003-0095-2282; Nikkanen, Maija/0000-0002-4970-3116;
   Rasanen, Aleksi/0000-0002-3629-1837
FU Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation
FX This work was supported by the Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation.
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NR 61
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 1
U2 18
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD MAR
PY 2021
VL 55
AR 102089
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2021.102089
EA FEB 2021
PG 9
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA RE6TP
UT WOS:000634284200004
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Busayo, ET
   Kalumba, AM
   Afuye, GA
   Ekundayo, OY
   Orimoloye, IR
AF Busayo, Emmanuel Tolulope
   Kalumba, Ahmed Mukalazi
   Afuye, Gbenga Abayomi
   Ekundayo, Olapeju Yewande
   Orimoloye, Israel Ropo
TI Assessment of the Sendai framework for disaster risk reduction studies
   since 2015
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Bibliometric exploration; Climate change adaptation; Disaster risk
   reduction; Local-level policy; Sendai framework
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; UNCERTAINTY; CHALLENGES; POLICIES; JAPAN
AB The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (SFDRR) (2015-2030) was specifically initiated to advance Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) policy globally, to further understand the complexity of disaster risk in our contemporary time. Despite the potency of the framework, its implementation remains low at the local level. This paper provides a portrait of the intellectual stance of SFDRR studies. Our bibliometric exploration over the survey period of 2015-2019 shows a total of 34 documents with an annual percentage growth of 15.9%, which implies the increase of research on SFDRR during the period of analysis. The UK ranked first in terms of the highest number of corresponding authors during the study period. In addition, the UK was top on the most cited country on the SFDRR documents indexed in WOS from 2015 to 2019, with a sizeable chunk of developed countries on the top. This paper recommends researchers (from well off countries) across climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction intellectual domains should encourage research collaborations which will improve teamwork with Universities and other research councils in transitions countries in a bid to improve their ability to inter alia, development of policies and communication of research outcomes to the final user. This paper concludes that public policymakers and stakeholders working at the local government level should rejig strategies towards implementing the SFDRR and other international frameworks of this manner.
C1 [Busayo, Emmanuel Tolulope; Kalumba, Ahmed Mukalazi; Afuye, Gbenga Abayomi; Ekundayo, Olapeju Yewande; Orimoloye, Israel Ropo] Univ Ft Hare, Dept Geog & Environm Sci, Private Bag X1314, ZA-5700 Alice, Eastern Cape Pr, South Africa.
   [Orimoloye, Israel Ropo] Univ Free State, Ctr Environm Management, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
C3 University of Fort Hare; University of the Free State
RP Busayo, ET (corresponding author), Univ Ft Hare, Dept Geog & Environm Sci, Private Bag X1314, ZA-5700 Alice, Eastern Cape Pr, South Africa.
EM etobusayo@yahoo.com
RI Afuye, Gbenga/AHD-8112-2022; Orimoloye, Israel/AAW-1778-2020
OI Orimoloye, Israel Ropo/0000-0001-5058-2799; Kalumba, Ahmed
   Mukalazi/0000-0001-7593-9096; Gbenga Abayomi, Afuye/0000-0001-7965-2009;
   Ekundayo, OLAPEJU YEWANDE/0000-0001-7790-8277
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   Zhang J, 2016, J ASSOC INF SCI TECH, V67, P967, DOI 10.1002/asi.23437
NR 38
TC 35
Z9 37
U1 4
U2 24
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD NOV
PY 2020
VL 50
AR 101906
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2020.101906
PG 7
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA PG3PB
UT WOS:000599649700011
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU de Freitas, LE
   Duek, TCN
   Navarro, Y
   Netto, ALC
AF de Freitas, Leonardo Esteves
   Netto Duek, Tomas Coelho
   Navarro, Yan
   Coelho Netto, Ana Luiza
BE Filho, WL
   DeFreitas, LE
TI "Corrego d'Antas-The Power of Union": A Film to Strength the Culture of
   Risk Management for Climate Change Adaptation at Corrego d'Antas, Nova
   Friburgo, RJ, Brazil
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION IN LATIN AMERICA: MANAGING VULNERABILITY,
   FOSTERING RESILIENCE
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Symposium on Climate Change Adaptation in Latin America
CY NOV 10-12, 2016
CL Rio de Janeiro, BRAZIL
C1 [de Freitas, Leonardo Esteves; Netto Duek, Tomas Coelho; Coelho Netto, Ana Luiza] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, Lab Geohydroecol, Dept Geog, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
   [de Freitas, Leonardo Esteves] Oswaldo Cruz Fdn FIOCRUZ, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
   [Netto Duek, Tomas Coelho] Fed Fluminense Univ, Civil Def, Niteroi, RJ, Brazil.
   [Navarro, Yan] Colegio Pedro II, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
   [Navarro, Yan] Ctr Studies & Res Audiovisual Geog, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
   [Navarro, Yan] Univ Estado Rio De Janeiro, Geog, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
   [Navarro, Yan] Univ Valencia, Didact Social Sci, Valencia, Spain.
   [Coelho Netto, Ana Luiza] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, 1A CNPq, Dept Geog, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
C3 Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro; Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz;
   Universidade Federal Fluminense; Collegio Pedro II; Universidade do
   Estado do Rio de Janeiro; University of Valencia; Universidade Federal
   do Rio de Janeiro
RP de Freitas, LE (corresponding author), Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, Lab Geohydroecol, Dept Geog, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.; de Freitas, LE (corresponding author), Oswaldo Cruz Fdn FIOCRUZ, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
EM leonardofreitas73@gmail.com; tomascoelhonetto@gmail.com;
   yannavarro@gmail.com; ananetto@acd.ufrj.br
RI DUEK, TOMAS/KHV-4190-2024; Netto, Ana/AAY-5417-2020
OI Coelho Netto Duek, Tomas/0000-0002-2867-9110
FU FAPERJ/Fundacao Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do
   Rio de Janeiro; CAPES/Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel
   Superior
FX To FAPERJ/Fundacao Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do
   Rio de Janeiro and to CAPES/Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de
   Nivel Superior for the Post Doctoral fellowship of the first author.
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   Painel Brasileiro de Mudancas Climaticas, 2012, SUM EX, P34
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   Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina/ Centro Universitario de Estudos e Pesquisas sobre Desastres, 2013, ATL BRAS DES NAT
NR 21
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-56946-8; 978-3-319-56945-1
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2018
BP 299
EP 312
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-56946-8_18
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BM3PW
UT WOS:000462528100018
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fu, L
   Cao, Y
   Kuang, SY
   Guo, H
AF Fu Lin
   Cao Ying
   Kuang Shu-Ya
   Guo Hao
TI Index for climate change adaptation in China and its application
SO ADVANCES IN CLIMATE CHANGE RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Index; Evaluation; Risk assessment; Policy
   recommendation
ID RESILIENCE; IMPACTS
AB With the increasing awareness of the risks and impacts of climate change, scholars tend to pay more attention to the applications of indicators, which access the effectiveness of climate change adaptation. This study aims to evaluate the overall progress of climate change adaptation in China during 2010-2018 in a quantitative manner. The Index for Climate Change Adaptation in China (ICCAC) has been thus developed by adopting the analytic hierarchy process weighting and expert scoring method. Namely, ICCAC is composed of national climate change impacts, adaptation actions in key sectors, adaptation progress in key sectors, and the national adaptation policy framework. Overall, the ICCAC and its four sub-indexes increased significantly from 2010 to 2018, on a yearly-basis. Each sub-index implied that the socio-economic impacts caused by climate change in China have been alleviated gradually; specifically, the mainstream endeavor of key sectors has witnessed remarkable progress, however, it is worth noting that the gap between individual adaptation actions and policies still exists; the implementation effect of policies in key sectors is not as affluent as that of actions; the current adaptation endeavor in key areas is still closely related to the mainstream business of corresponding competent ministries rather than adaptation-aimed actions; the national adaptation policy framework has been primarily formed, but there are still some deficiencies. As a result, the gap in China's adaptation process could be mainly manifested in the following five aspects: i) adaptation effectiveness assessment in forestry and urban infrastructure is urgently needed; ii) policies in marine and water resources sectors need structural reforms; iii) evaluation criteria for national adaptation are not necessarily sufficient; iv) the improvement of adaptive management efficiency has stagnated recently; and v) the adaptation works of relevant Ministries should be coordinated and put forward the corresponding strategies. Finally, this study presents four proposals: conducting an evaluation of adaptation actions in all key sectors, integrating climate change impacts into sectoral planning decisions, launching concrete action plans for adaptation, establishing a complete policy framework on adaptation.
C1 [Fu Lin; Cao Ying; Kuang Shu-Ya] Natl Ctr Climate Change Strategy & Int Cooperat, Beijing 100035, Peoples R China.
   [Guo Hao] Tsinghua Univ, Inst Climate Change & Sustainable Dev, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China.
C3 Tsinghua University
RP Cao, Y (corresponding author), Natl Ctr Climate Change Strategy & Int Cooperat, Beijing 100035, Peoples R China.
EM caoying@ncsc.org.cn
RI Fu, Lin/KXR-2945-2024
FU Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2017YFA0605301]
FX This research was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology of
   China under the project The Design of Framework and Mechanisms of Global
   Stocktake (2017YFA0605301). We appreciate two anonymous referees for
   excellent comments and careful guidance. We thank Qin Yuanyuan, Research
   Associate from Department of International Policy Research, NCSC, for
   editing the English.
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NR 41
TC 15
Z9 16
U1 9
U2 78
PU SCIENCE PRESS
PI BEIJING
PA 16 DONGHUANGCHENGGEN NORTH ST, BEIJING, 100717, PEOPLES R CHINA
SN 1674-9278
J9 ADV CLIM CHANG RES
JI Adv. Clim. Chang. Res.
PD OCT
PY 2021
VL 12
IS 5
BP 723
EP 733
DI 10.1016/j.accre.2021.06.006
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA WC8KP
UT WOS:000704501200011
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bhullar, L
AF Bhullar, Lovleen
TI Climate Change Adaptation and Water Policy: Lessons from Singapore
SO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; Public Utilities Board; Singapore; water
ID OPTIONS
AB Asian countries with large populations concentrated in coastal cities are particularly vulnerable to climate change impacts, such as sea level rise. This, in turn, can adversely affect water resources as a result of flooding, coastal erosion, water scarcity etc. Singapore has been hailed for its progressive water policies and practices, which were developed to overcome its natural resource disadvantage (limited resource base) and to achieve self-sufficiency. Certainly, Singapore's geopolitical situation may have provided an atmosphere conducive to the development of progressive policies; however, it is worth exploring how Singapore is preparing for climate change adaptation, as this may allow other cities/countries to learn from Singapore's experience. The paper evaluates the contribution of Singapore's water policies and practices to climate change adaptation, and examines whether they can support the development of adaptation strategies in the water sector for other similarly situated cities in vulnerable countries. Copyright (c) 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment
C1 Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, Inst Water Policy, Singapore 117548, Singapore.
C3 National University of Singapore
RP Bhullar, L (corresponding author), Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, Inst Water Policy, Singapore 117548, Singapore.
EM sppbl@nus.edu.sg
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NR 29
TC 18
Z9 22
U1 7
U2 100
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0968-0802
EI 1099-1719
J9 SUSTAIN DEV
JI Sustain. Dev.
PD MAY-JUN
PY 2013
VL 21
IS 3
BP 152
EP 159
DI 10.1002/sd.1546
PG 8
WC Development Studies; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Regional
   & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Public
   Administration
GA 167WC
UT WOS:000320665100003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barrelas, J
   Ren, Q
   Pereira, C
AF Barrelas, J.
   Ren, Q.
   Pereira, C.
TI Implications of climate change in the implementation of maintenance
   planning and use of building inspection systems
SO JOURNAL OF BUILDING ENGINEERING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Climate change impacts; Building degradation;
   Building inspection; Building maintenance
ID ADAPTATION; PERSPECTIVE; OPERATION; DAMAGES; IMPACTS; FACADES; LIFE
AB Alterations in climate parameters and severe weather events, within the context of anthropogenic climate change, will likely lead to soil instability and harsher exposure conditions of the building's enclosures, having direct implications on the acceleration of degradation phenomenon. Maintenance planning needs to be improved, to minimise predicted effects of climate-induced risks on a vulnerable built environment, contributing to the sustainability and resilience of constructions. The purpose of this research is to make a literature review on the topic of climate change adaptation and building maintenance and use it as the base to point out possible further developments regarding maintenance planning contribution to the adaptation of building stock management. The implementation of maintenance activities with this aim is still incipient and based on theoretical approaches. Despite the scarcity of research on this topic, the literature covers several relevant complementary tools to maintenance planning, also included in the present paper, considering their essential role to the efficient implementation of climate change adapted maintenance. Future works lay on: (i) the development of tools that connect climate agents to buildings degradation, (ii) their integrated contribution to maintenance planning and (iii) the optimized use of inspection systems.
C1 [Barrelas, J.; Ren, Q.; Pereira, C.] Univ Lisbon, Inst Super Tecn, CERIS, Av Rovisco Pais, P-1049001 Lisbon, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Lisboa
RP Pereira, C (corresponding author), Univ Lisbon, Inst Super Tecn, CERIS, Av Rovisco Pais, P-1049001 Lisbon, Portugal.
EM joana.barrelas@tecnico.ulisboa.pt; qifanren@tecnico.ulisboa.pt;
   clareira@sapo.pt
RI Pereira, Clara/Q-8006-2016; Barrelas, Joana/AAQ-4041-2021
OI Barrelas, Joana/0000-0002-3012-1423; Pereira, Clara/0000-0002-9535-1844
FU Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT) [PD/BD/150397/2019,
   SFRH/BD/131113/2017]; China Scholarship Council (CSC) [201906370013];
   CERIS (Instituto Superior Tecnico, University of Lisbon); Fundação para
   a Ciência e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BD/131113/2017, PD/BD/150397/2019]
   Funding Source: FCT
FX The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of CERIS (Instituto
   Superior Tecnico, University of Lisbon). This work was supported by
   Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT) grants PD/BD/150397/2019
   and SFRH/BD/131113/2017; and the China Scholarship Council (CSC) grant
   No. 201906370013.
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NR 57
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 3
U2 10
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
EI 2352-7102
J9 J BUILD ENG
JI J. Build. Eng.
PD AUG
PY 2021
VL 40
AR 102777
DI 10.1016/j.jobe.2021.102777
EA MAY 2021
PG 11
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA SU5OB
UT WOS:000663185500003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mogaka, HR
   Muriithi, LN
AF Mogaka, Hezron R.
   Muriithi, Lydia N.
TI Factors Affecting Multiple Climate Change Adaptation Practices of
   Smallholder Farmers in lower Eastern Kenya
SO JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION
LA English
DT Article
DE Adoption; agricultural technologies; smallholder farmers Introduction
ID ADOPTION
AB The study investigated the socioeconomic and institutional factors influencing uptake of multiple climate change adaptation practices among smallholder farmers in lower Eastern Kenya. Multistage sampling procedure was used to select 384 small-scale farmers. Percentage and regression were used in the analysis. Among the socio-economic factors, gender positively and significantly influenced adoption of conservation agriculture and water harvesting at 5%, respectively. Among the institutional factors, distance to markets positively or negatively influenced uptake of all the technologies at 1% and 5%, respectively. Due to complementarity in adoption of all the seven adaptation practices, age and distance to nearest markets should be considered during technology dissemination. The study, therefore, calls for agricultural policy reforms that aim at designing incentive programmes which adequately address most of the socioeconomic and institutional issues related to uptake of adaptation practices as well as encouraging off-farm diversification.
C1 [Mogaka, Hezron R.] Univ Embu, Dept Agr Econ & Extens, Embu, Kenya.
   [Muriithi, Lydia N.] Univ Embu, Dept Agr Resource Management, Embu, Kenya.
RP Mogaka, HR (corresponding author), Univ Embu, Dept Agr Econ & Extens, Embu, Kenya.
EM hezronmogaka@gmail.com; muriithilydia03@gmail.com
FU International Development Research Centre (IDRC) through the project
   Climate Change Adaptation and ICT (CHAI)
FX This research was supported by International Development Research Centre
   (IDRC) through the project Climate Change Adaptation and ICT (CHAI).
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NR 27
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 9
PU AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SOC NIGERIA
PI KWARA STATE
PA AGRICULTURAL & RURAL MANAGEMENT TRAINING INST, PMB 1343 ILORIN, KWARA
   STATE, 00000, NIGERIA
SN 1119-944X
EI 2408-6851
J9 J AGRIC EXT
JI J. Agric. Ext.
PD OCT
PY 2021
VL 25
IS 4
BP 92
EP 100
DI 10.11226/v25i4
PG 9
WC Agronomy
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Agriculture
GA WN7JX
UT WOS:000711944700003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Schwarb, M
   Acuña, D
   Konzelmann, T
   Rohrer, M
   Salzmann, N
   Lopez, BS
   Silvestre, E
AF Schwarb, M.
   Acuna, D.
   Konzelmann, Th.
   Rohrer, M.
   Salzmann, N.
   Serpa Lopez, B.
   Silvestre, E.
TI A data portal for regional climatic trend analysis in a Peruvian High
   Andes region
SO ADVANCES IN SCIENCE AND RESEARCH
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 10th EMS Annual Meeting / 8th European Conference on Applied Climatology
   (ECAC)
CY SEP 13-17, 2010
CL Zurich, SWITZERLAND
SP European Meteorol Soc
ID PRECIPITATION VARIABILITY; TEMPERATURE; SERIES
AB In the frame of a Swiss-Peruvian climate change adaptation initiative (PACC), operational and historical data series of more than 100 stations of the Peruvian Meteorological and Hydrological Service (SENAMHI) are now accessible in a dedicated data portal. The data portal allows for example the comparison of data series or the interpolation of spatial fields as well as download of data in various data formats. It is thus a valuable tool supporting the process of data homogenisation and generation of a regional baseline climatology for a sound development of adequate climate change adaptation measures. The procedure to homogenize air-temperature and precipitation data series near Cusco city is outlined and followed by an exemplary trend analysis. Local air temperature trends are found to be in line with global mean trends.
C1 [Schwarb, M.; Rohrer, M.] Meteodat GmbH, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Acuna, D.; Serpa Lopez, B.; Silvestre, E.] SENAMHI, Lima, Peru.
   [Konzelmann, Th.] Fed Off Meteorol & Climatol MeteoSwiss, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Salzmann, N.] Univ Zurich, Dept Geog, CH-8006 Zurich, Switzerland.
C3 Servicio Nacional de Meteorologia Hidrologia del Peru (SENAMHI); Federal
   Office of Meteorology & Climatology (MeteoSwiss); University of Zurich
RP Rohrer, M (corresponding author), Meteodat GmbH, Zurich, Switzerland.
EM mario.rohrer@meteodat.ch
OI Schwarb, Manfred/0000-0002-0508-2530
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NR 19
TC 14
Z9 15
U1 0
U2 1
PU COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
PI GOTTINGEN
PA BAHNHOFSALLEE 1E, GOTTINGEN, 37081, GERMANY
SN 1992-0628
EI 1992-0636
J9 ADV SCI RES
JI Adv. Sci. Res.
PY 2011
VL 6
BP 219
EP 226
DI 10.5194/asr-6-219-2011
PG 8
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA CD2FL
UT WOS:000350890000037
OA gold, Green Submitted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Spirandelli, DJ
   Anderson, TR
   Porro, R
   Fletcher, CH
AF Spirandelli, Daniele J.
   Anderson, Tiffany R.
   Porro, Roberto
   Fletcher, Charles H.
TI Improving Adaptation Planning for Future Sea-Level Rise: Understanding
   Uncertainty and Risks Using a Probability-Based Shoreline Model
SO JOURNAL OF PLANNING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; sea-level rise; probability models; shoreline
   change
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; EROSION; POLICY; VULNERABILITY; CHALLENGES;
   DECISIONS; IMPACTS
AB Sea-level rise (SLR) presents risks to communities and ecosystems because of hazards like coastal erosion. In order to adapt, planners and the public seek estimates of shoreline change with high confidence and accuracy. The complexity of shorelines produces considerable uncertainty in the timing, location and magnitude of change. We present and discuss a probabilistic shoreline model for SLR planning. Using the coast of Maui as an illustrative case, we compare this model to a common deterministic model. We discuss the advantages of a probability-based model for SLR adaptation, including for prioritizing actions, phasing, visualizing risk and uncertainty, and improving adaptive management.
C1 [Spirandelli, Daniele J.] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Coastal Policy & Community Dev, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
   [Spirandelli, Daniele J.] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Sea Grant Coll, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
   [Anderson, Tiffany R.; Fletcher, Charles H.] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Sch Ocean & Earth Sci & Technol, Honolulu, HI USA.
   [Porro, Roberto] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Natl Disaster Preparedness Training Ctr, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
C3 University of Hawaii System; University of Hawaii Manoa; University of
   Hawaii System; University of Hawaii Manoa; University of Hawaii System;
   University of Hawaii Manoa; University of Hawaii System; University of
   Hawaii Manoa
RP Spirandelli, DJ (corresponding author), Univ Hawaii Manoa, Saunders Hall 107,2424 Maile Way, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
EM danieles@hawaii.edu
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NR 54
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 0
U2 30
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0739-456X
EI 1552-6577
J9 J PLAN EDUC RES
JI J. Plan. Educ. Res.
PD SEP
PY 2016
VL 36
IS 3
BP 290
EP 303
DI 10.1177/0739456X16657160
PG 14
WC Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA DV5JC
UT WOS:000382962200003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Birchall, SJ
   MacDonald, S
   Baran, NN
AF Birchall, S. Jeff
   MacDonald, Seghan
   Baran, Nicklas N.
TI An assessment of systems, agents, and institutions in building community
   resilience to climate change: A case study of Charlottetown, Canada
SO URBAN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Coastal communities; Strategic planning; Local government; Urban
   resilience; Climate change adaptation; Urban planning
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; LOCAL CLIMATE; FRAMEWORK; STRATEGIES; GOVERNMENT;
   BARRIERS; LESSONS; INTEGRATION; PLANS; RISK
AB While climate change manifests itself as a global phenomenon, impacts are experienced most acutely at the local scale. As a result, the onus of responding to climate change impacts through planning policies and practice falls on local government decision-makers. This qualitative study, based in Charlottetown, Canada, utilizes the framework of resilience theory to examine the relationship between systems, agents, and institutions in addressing climate vulnerability to build community resilience. Findings suggest that while non-municipal agents such as senior orders of government and external organizations are championing proactive adaptation through climate impact research and adaptation initiatives, the municipality has taken a non-urgent, reactionary approach in the face of climate stressors, often implementing initiatives that further exacerbate climate vulnerability. In the face of system vulnerabilities and cascading failures, deep institutional barriers, influencing and influenced by agents, contribute to the low prioritization of climate adaptation action. Institutional and agent-induced constraints at the municipal scale have led to the lack of internal initiative to act within the municipality, undermining the efforts of external organizations and senior orders of government. This study highlights the importance of robust local government agents and institutions as a prerequisite to enable local-scale climate adaptation.
C1 [Birchall, S. Jeff; MacDonald, Seghan; Baran, Nicklas N.] Univ Alberta, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, Sch Urban & Reg Planning, 1-26 Earth Sci Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada.
C3 University of Alberta
RP Birchall, SJ (corresponding author), Univ Alberta, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, Sch Urban & Reg Planning, 1-26 Earth Sci Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada.
EM jeff.birchall@ualberta.ca
RI Birchall, S Jeff/HOF-3329-2023
FU Cornerstone Program, Killam Research Fund.
FX Acknowledgements This research was supported through the Cornerstone
   Program, Killam Research Fund.
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NR 72
TC 18
Z9 18
U1 2
U2 14
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0955
J9 URBAN CLIM
JI Urban CLim.
PD JAN
PY 2022
VL 41
AR 101062
DI 10.1016/j.uclim.2021.101062
EA JAN 2022
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 0N8LE
UT WOS:000783082500002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nemakonde, LD
   Van Niekerk, D
AF Nemakonde, Livhuwani D.
   Van Niekerk, Dewald
TI Enabling conditions for integrating government institutions for disaster
   risk reduction and climate change adaptation in the SADC region and
   beyond
SO RISK HAZARDS & CRISIS IN PUBLIC POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; coherence; disaster risk reduction; enabling
   conditions; government institutions; integration
ID CHALLENGES; POLICY
AB Climate change, through extreme weather events, is increasing the risk and impacts of disasters. An increase in extreme weather events underscores the importance of bringing coherence in efforts to reduce the risk of disasters and to adapt to the impacts of the changing climate. The linkages between disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) and the need to integrate the two policy areas are well documented in the literature. However, the implementation of DRR and CCA measures continues in isolation. This article seeks to contribute to the ongoing efforts to bring coherence between DRR and CCA by identifying factors that would make it easy to integrate the two policy areas. An exploratory-sequential mixed methods design was used to collect data from 41 participants from 10 of the 16 SADC Member States and two international cooperating partners. Participants identified political will and commitment, policy and legislative frameworks, provision of resources and capacities, addressing institutional barriers, and an improvement in communication and coordination as the main factors that could enhance the integration of government organizations for DRR and CCA. This paper submits that successful integration of institutions responsible for DRR and CCA, particularly government institutions, can be achieved when these factors are addressed.
C1 [Nemakonde, Livhuwani D.; Van Niekerk, Dewald] North West Univ, African Ctr Disaster Studies, Sch Geo & Spatial Sci, Unit Environm Sci & Management, 11 Hoffman St, ZA-2531 Potchefstroom, South Africa.
C3 North West University - South Africa
RP Nemakonde, LD (corresponding author), North West Univ, African Ctr Disaster Studies, Sch Geo & Spatial Sci, Unit Environm Sci & Management, 11 Hoffman St, ZA-2531 Potchefstroom, South Africa.
EM livhuwani.nemakonde@acds.co.za
RI van Niekerk, Dewald/H-6134-2012; Nemakonde, Livhuwani
   David/JOK-5197-2023
OI van Niekerk, Dewald/0000-0002-4571-4205; Nemakonde, Livhuwani
   David/0000-0002-3458-5575
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NR 61
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 3
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1944-4079
J9 RISK HAZARDS CRISIS
JI Risk Hazards Crisis Public Policy
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 14
IS 1
BP 6
EP 26
DI 10.1002/rhc3.12246
EA MAR 2022
PG 21
WC Public Administration
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Public Administration
GA 9M0LP
UT WOS:000765237500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Biesbroek, R
   Candel, JJL
AF Biesbroek, Robbert
   Candel, Jeroen J. L.
TI Mechanisms for policy (dis)integration: explaining food policy and
   climate change adaptation policy in the Netherlands
SO POLICY SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Crosscutting problems; Policy integration; Policy mechanism; Climate
   change adaptation; Food policy; Governance
ID CAUSAL MECHANISMS; EPISTEMIC COMMUNITIES; INTEGRATED POLICY; SOCIAL
   MECHANISMS; OFFICE-SEEKING; BLACK-BOX; GOVERNANCE; COORDINATION;
   CHALLENGES; GOVERNMENT
AB Recent years have witnessed increased political interest to the challenge of organizing policy integration to govern societal problems that crosscut the boundaries of traditional government sectors and levels, including climate change, food insecurity, terrorism, and the instability of financial markets. Public policy scholars have recently suggested to study such attempts by conceptualizing policy integration as a multi-dimensional process. Although such a processual perspective has helped to comparatively assess policy (dis)integration, the mechanisms of (dis)integration over time remain undertheorized. Past studies have reported a number of relevant factors, but these have remained rather functionalistic observations that lack explanatory value. To address this gap, we propose a mechanism-based approach that uncovers the political processes that underlie policy (dis)integration over time. Rooted in different strands of social science literature, the mechanistic approach offers a model of causation to assess the plausible chain of key processes that are triggered under particular contextual conditions. We illustrate the framework by empirically investigating the mechanisms that explain the policy (dis)integration of food and climate change adaptation policy in the Netherlands. We end the paper with discussing various implications of our findings for processual approaches to policy integration.
C1 [Biesbroek, Robbert; Candel, Jeroen J. L.] Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Hollandseweg 1, NL-6706 KN Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research
RP Biesbroek, R (corresponding author), Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Hollandseweg 1, NL-6706 KN Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM robbert.biesbroek@wur.nl
RI Biesbroek, Robbert/GZZ-4476-2022; Biesbroek, Robbert/I-2384-2013
OI Candel, Jeroen/0000-0003-2302-9159; Biesbroek,
   Robbert/0000-0002-2906-1419
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NR 100
TC 66
Z9 69
U1 7
U2 57
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0032-2687
EI 1573-0891
J9 POLICY SCI
JI Policy Sci.
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 53
IS 1
BP 61
EP 84
DI 10.1007/s11077-019-09354-2
PG 24
WC Public Administration; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA KW4SB
UT WOS:000521154700004
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wall, E
   Smit, B
AF Wall, E
   Smit, B
TI Climate change adaptation in light of sustainable agriculture
SO JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; adaptive capacity; climate change; policy; sustainable
   agriculture
AB Agricultural activity has always included,adaptation to a number of diverse stresses and opportunities-elements that continue influencing developments in the agri-food sector. Climate and weather conditions are a good example of factors that require on-going adaptation. With climate change they take on even more significance. Based oil data from Canadian producers, this article identifies several climate and weather risk adaptation strategies currently in use and notes their close links to sustainable agriculture practices. The article concludes that the mutually supportive relationship between sustainable agriculture and climate change adaptation could be used to justify more government support for sustainable agriculture policies and programs.
C1 Univ Guelph, Fac Environm Sci, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
C3 University of Guelph
RP Univ Guelph, Fac Environm Sci, Blackwood Hall,Room 202, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
EM ewall@uoguelph.ca
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NR 32
TC 86
Z9 111
U1 6
U2 86
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 1044-0046
EI 1540-7578
J9 J SUSTAIN AGR
JI J. Sustain. Agric.
PY 2005
VL 27
IS 1
BP 113
EP 123
DI 10.1300/J064v27n01_07
PG 11
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 997XM
UT WOS:000234282200006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wang, J
   Brown, DG
   Riolo, RL
   Page, SE
   Agrawal, A
AF Wang, Jun
   Brown, Daniel G.
   Riolo, Rick L.
   Page, Scott E.
   Agrawal, Arun
TI Exploratory analyses of local institutions for climate change adaptation
   in the Mongolian grasslands: An agent-based modeling approach
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Social adaptation; Climate change; Local institutions; Agent-based
   modeling; Mongolian grasslands
ID INNER-MONGOLIA; EXIT COSTS; DEGRADATION; RESPONSES; EVOLUTION; PASTURE;
   RIGHTS; POLICY
AB There has been a decrease in grazing mobility in the Mongolian grasslands over the past decades. Sedentary grazing with substantial external inputs has increased the cost of livestock production. As a result, the livelihoods of herders have become more vulnerable to climate variability and change. Sedentary grazing is the formal institutional arrangement in Inner Mongolia, China. However, this may not be an efficient institutional arrangement for climate change adaptation. Self-organized local institutions for climate change adaptation have emerged and are under development in the study area. In this study, we did exploratory analyses of multiple local institutions for climate change adaptation in the Mongolian grasslands, using an agent-based modeling approach. Empirical studies from literature and our field work show that sedentary grazing, pasture rental markets, and reciprocal pasture-use groups are three popular institutional arrangements in the study area. First, we modeled the social-ecological performance (i.e., livelihood benefits to herders and grassland quality) of these institutions and their combinations under different climate conditions. Second, we did exploratory analyses of multiple social mechanisms for facilitating and maintaining cooperative use of pastures among herders. The modeling results show that in certain value-ranges of some model parameters with assumed values, reciprocal pasture-use groups had better performance than pasture rental markets; and the comparative advantage of cooperative use of pastures over sedentary grazing without cooperation becomes more evident with the increase in drought probability. Agent diversity and social norms were effective for facilitating the development of reciprocal pasture-use groups. Kin selection and punishments on free-riders were useful for maintaining cooperation among herders. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Wang, Jun; Brown, Daniel G.; Agrawal, Arun] Univ Michigan, Sch Nat Resources & Environm, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Wang, Jun; Brown, Daniel G.; Riolo, Rick L.; Page, Scott E.; Agrawal, Arun] Univ Michigan, Ctr Study Complex Syst, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of
   Michigan System; University of Michigan
RP Wang, J (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Sch Nat Resources & Environm, 440 Church St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
EM junw@umich.edu
RI Agrawal, Arun/A-4257-2009; Brown, Dan/L-8089-2013
OI Agrawal, Arun/0000-0001-6796-2958; Brown, Dan/0000-0001-6023-5950
FU NASA Land-Cover/Land-Use Change Program [NNX09AK87G]; NASA [NNX09AK87G,
   114042] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
FX This work was support by the NASA Land-Cover/Land-Use Change Program
   (NNX09AK87G). We thank the Inner Mongolian Institute of Survey and
   Design, and the Institute of Botany, Mongolian Academy of Sciences,
   Mongolia, for their helpful assistance in implementing the household
   surveys in the two countries. Dr. Yichun Xie from the Eastern Michigan
   University provided substantial efforts in communicating with local
   collaborators for data collections.
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NR 48
TC 31
Z9 38
U1 1
U2 80
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD OCT
PY 2013
VL 23
IS 5
SI SI
BP 1266
EP 1276
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2013.07.017
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA 268OC
UT WOS:000328179400042
DA 2025-01-10
ER

EF