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Assessing Vulnerability to Global Environmental Change
 

Assessing Vulnerability to Global Environmental Change

Making Research Useful for Adaptation Decision Making and Policy

Edited by:
Anthony Patt   International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Dagmar Schröter   European Era-Net
Richard Klein   Stockholm Environment Institute
Anne Cristina de la Vega-Leinert   Greifswald University

288 pages
Publisher: Earthscan from Routledge



   
Paperback - 2010
ISBN: 9781849711548 - AU $ 96.00
 

 Assessing the vulnerability of human populations to global environmental change, particularly climate change, is now the main imperative of research and international action. However, much of the research into vulnerability is not designed to feed directly into decision making and policy, creating a gap between the knowledge created by researchers and what is required by decision makers.

This book seeks to rectify this problem and bridge the gap. It discusses vulnerability as the central theme and brings together many different applications from disaster studies, climate change impact studies and several other fields and provides the most comprehensive synthesis of definitions, theories, formalisation and applications to date, illustrated with examples from different disciplines, regions and periods, and from local through to regional, national and international levels. Case study topics cover sea level rise, vulnerability to changes in ecosystem services, assessing the vulnerability of human health and 'double exposure' to climate change and trade liberalisation amongst other issues. Research outcomes stress that science-policy dialogues must be transparent to be effective and concentrate on a mutual understanding of the concepts used. A key research finding is that the most useful information for decision makers is that which shows the separate causes and drivers of vulnerability, rather than presenting vulnerability in an aggregated form. The book concludes with a unifying framework for analysing integrated methodologies of vulnerability assessment and guiding how research and policy can be linked to reduce vulnerability.

 

 Forewords by Hans Joachim Schellnhuber and Rik Leemans
List of Acronyms and Abbreviations
1 Vulnerability Research and Assessment to Support Adaptation and Mitigation: Common Themes from the Diversity of Approaches
2 The House is Both Empty and Sad: Social Vulnerability, Environmental Disturbance, Economic Change and the Irish Potato Famine
3 Vulnerability Assessments in the Developed World:The UK and Norway
4 Vulnerability Assessments in the Developing World: Mozambique and South Africa
5 Global Assessment of Coastal Vulnerability to Sea-Level Rise: Experience from DINAS-COAST
6 Our Vulnerability to Changes in Ecosystem Services
7 Assessing Vulnerability of Human Health
8 Mapping Double Exposure to Climate Change and Trade Liberalization as an Awareness-Raising Tool
9 An Agent-Based Framework for Assessing Vulnerability Futures
10 Assessing Financial and Economic Vulnerability to Natural Hazards: Bridging the Gap between Scientific Assessment and the Implementation of Disaster Risk Management with the CatSim Model
11 Evaluation of a Stakeholder Dialogue on European Vulnerability to Global Change
12 Defining Dangerous Climate Change:The Beijing Exercise
13 A Framework for Analysing Methodologies of Vulnerability Assessments
Index
 

 "This book presents the state-of-the-art in vulnerability science, based on first-hand experience since this new field emerged - an essential resource for advanced students and scholars. Covering aspects of natural and social sciences, it discusses case studies from developed and developing countries."
Wolfgang Cramer, Professor of Global Ecology, Potsdam institute for Climate Impact Research
 

 Anthony Patt leads the Decisions and Governance Research Group in the Program on Risk and Vulnerability at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, in Austria. He has published extensively on climate vulnerability and climate adaptation in Africa.

Dagmar Schröter is currently scientific coordinator of a European Era-Net project on climate change adaptation. She has published extensively on global change vulnerability, ecosystem processes and ecosystem services.

Richard Klein coordinates climate policy research at the Stockholm Environment Institute. His research interests include methodological aspects of vulnerability assessment, societal adaptation to climate change, and integration of climate and development policy.

Anne Cristina de la Vega-Leinert is currently a researcher and lecturer in applied geography at Greifswald University, Germany. She investigates emergent synergies between biodiversity, development, food and human rights issues in the context of global change.

 

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