Local practitioners’ use of vulnerability and resilience concepts in adaptation to flood hazards

被引:0
|
作者
Greg Oulahen
Linda Mortsch
Erin O’Connell
Deborah Harford
Alexandra Rutledge
机构
[1] Ryerson University,Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
[2] University of Waterloo,Faculty of Environment
[3] Simon Fraser University,Adaptation to Climate Change Team (ACT)
来源
Climatic Change | 2019年 / 153卷
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摘要
Vulnerability and resilience are important ideas that are conceptualized in many different ways by researchers studying disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation. Four main conceptualizations of vulnerability in the literature include vulnerability as a threshold, as exposure to hazards, as a pre-existing condition, and as an outcome. Three main conceptualizations of resilience are resilience as resistance, as recovery, and as creative transformation. This study investigates how local practitioners in Metro Vancouver municipalities perceive and apply these concepts to reduce risk and adapt to flood hazards. Results from focus groups and surveys of practitioners find that the conceptualizations of vulnerability and resilience perceived as most valuable are often not applied in local risk reduction and adaptation efforts. Participants’ interpretations of how vulnerability and resilience concepts are applied to four main adaptation strategies—protect, accommodate, avoid, and retreat—reveal nuanced and complex challenges at the intersection of where theory meets practice. As currently operationalized, vulnerability and resilience appear unlikely to lead to anything more than incremental adaptation.
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页码:41 / 58
页数:17
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