Arid
DOI10.1007/s10113-014-0741-6
Social vulnerability in three high-poverty climate change hot spots: What does the climate change literature tell us?
Tucker, Josephine1; Daoud, Mona2; Oates, Naomi1; Few, Roger2; Conway, Declan3; Mtisi, Sobona; Matheson, Shirley
通讯作者Tucker, Josephine
来源期刊REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
ISSN1436-3798
EISSN1436-378X
出版年2015
卷号15期号:5页码:783-800
英文摘要

This paper reviews the state of knowledge on social vulnerability to climate change in three hot spots (deltas, semi-arid regions and snowpack- or glacier-fed river basins) in Africa, Central Asia and South Asia, using elements of systematic review methods. Social vulnerability is defined as a dynamic state of societies comprising exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity. We examine whether the hot spots have specific characteristics that tend to increase or decrease social vulnerability, consider suitable scales of analysis for understanding vulnerability, and explore the conceptions of vulnerability adopted in the climate change literature and the nature of the insights this generates. Finally, we identify knowledge gaps in this literature. All three hot spots are characterized by high levels of natural resource dependence, with increasing environmental degradation. They also exhibit unequal policies and patterns of development, which benefit certain segments of society while making others more vulnerable. Vulnerability is driven by multiple factors operating at different scales; however, characterization of cross-scalar interactions is poorly developed in the majority of studies reviewed. Most studies are either large scale, such as broad comparisons of vulnerability across countries, or local, documenting community-level processes. Detailed understanding of the interactions between climate change impacts on natural systems, and socio-economic trajectories, including adaptation, also emerges as a knowledge gap.


英文关键词Social vulnerability Semi-arid Delta River basin Africa Asia
类型Review
语种英语
国家England
收录类别SCI-E ; SSCI
WOS记录号WOS:000354404600004
WOS关键词SEA-LEVEL RISE ; CHANGE ADAPTATION ; WATER-RESOURCES ; DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES ; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY ; RIVER-BASINS ; IMPACTS ; ASIA ; DROUGHT ; SYSTEMS
WOS类目Environmental Sciences ; Environmental Studies
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology
来源机构University of London
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/190133
作者单位1.Overseas Dev Inst, London SE1 8NJ, England;
2.Univ E Anglia, Sch Int Dev, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England;
3.Univ London London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, London WC2A 2AE, England
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Tucker, Josephine,Daoud, Mona,Oates, Naomi,et al. Social vulnerability in three high-poverty climate change hot spots: What does the climate change literature tell us?[J]. University of London,2015,15(5):783-800.
APA Tucker, Josephine.,Daoud, Mona.,Oates, Naomi.,Few, Roger.,Conway, Declan.,...&Matheson, Shirley.(2015).Social vulnerability in three high-poverty climate change hot spots: What does the climate change literature tell us?.REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE,15(5),783-800.
MLA Tucker, Josephine,et al."Social vulnerability in three high-poverty climate change hot spots: What does the climate change literature tell us?".REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE 15.5(2015):783-800.
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