Adapting to Climate Change
Thresholds, Values, Governance
Herausgeber: Adger, W. Neil; O'Brien, Karen L.; Lorenzoni, Irene
Adapting to Climate Change
Thresholds, Values, Governance
Herausgeber: Adger, W. Neil; O'Brien, Karen L.; Lorenzoni, Irene
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This presents top scientific research by leading researchers and practitioners on the critical issue of adapting to climate change.
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This presents top scientific research by leading researchers and practitioners on the critical issue of adapting to climate change.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 532
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Dezember 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 907g
- ISBN-13: 9780521182515
- ISBN-10: 0521182514
- Artikelnr.: 32916773
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 532
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Dezember 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 907g
- ISBN-13: 9780521182515
- ISBN-10: 0521182514
- Artikelnr.: 32916773
Introduction; 1. Adaptation now; Part I. Adapting to Thresholds in Physical
and Ecological Systems: 2. Ecological limits of adaptation to climate
change; 3. Adapting to the effects of climate change on water supply
reliability; 4. Protecting London from tidal flooding: limits to
engineering adaptation; 5. Climate prediction: a limit to adaptation?; 6.
Learning to crawl: how to use seasonal climate forecasts to build adaptive
capacity; 7. Norse Greenland settlement and limits to adaptation; 8. Sea
ice change in Arctic Canada: are there limits to Inuit adaptation?; Part
II. The Role of Value and Culture in Adaptation: 9. The past, present and
some possible futures of adaptation; 10. Do values subjectively define the
limits to climate change adaptation?; 11. Conceptual and practical barriers
to adaptation: vulnerability and responses to heat waves in the UK; 12.
Values and cost-benefit analysis: economic efficiency criteria in
adaptation; 13. Hidden costs and disparate uncertainties: trade-offs in
approaches to climate policy; 14. Community based adaptation and culture in
theory and practice; 15. Exploring the invisibility of local knowledge in
decision-making: the Boscastle harbour flood disaster; 16. Adaptation and
conflict within fisheries: insights for living with climate change; 17.
Exploring cultural dimensions of adaptation to climate change; 18. Adapting
to an uncertain climate on the great plains: testing hypotheses on
historical populations; 19. Climate change and adaptive human migration:
lessons from rural North America; Part III. Governance, Knowledge and
Technologies for Adaptation: 20. Are our levers long and our fulcra strong
enough? Exploring the soft underbelly of adaptation decisions and actions;
21. Decentralized planning and climate adaptation: toward transparent
governance; 22. Climate adaptation, local institutions and rural
livelihoods; 23. Adaptive governance for a changing coastline: science,
policy and publics in search of a sustainable future; 24. Climate change,
international cooperation and adaptation in transboundary water management;
25. Decentralization: a window of opportunity for successful adaptation to
climate change?; 26. Adapting to climate change: the nation-state as
problem and solution; 27. Limits to adaptation: analysing institutional
constraints; 28. Accessing diversification, networks and traditional
resource management as adaptations to climate extremes; 29. Governance
limits to effective global financial support for adaptation; 30.
Organizational learning and governance in adaptation in urban development;
31. Conclusions: transforming the world; Index.
and Ecological Systems: 2. Ecological limits of adaptation to climate
change; 3. Adapting to the effects of climate change on water supply
reliability; 4. Protecting London from tidal flooding: limits to
engineering adaptation; 5. Climate prediction: a limit to adaptation?; 6.
Learning to crawl: how to use seasonal climate forecasts to build adaptive
capacity; 7. Norse Greenland settlement and limits to adaptation; 8. Sea
ice change in Arctic Canada: are there limits to Inuit adaptation?; Part
II. The Role of Value and Culture in Adaptation: 9. The past, present and
some possible futures of adaptation; 10. Do values subjectively define the
limits to climate change adaptation?; 11. Conceptual and practical barriers
to adaptation: vulnerability and responses to heat waves in the UK; 12.
Values and cost-benefit analysis: economic efficiency criteria in
adaptation; 13. Hidden costs and disparate uncertainties: trade-offs in
approaches to climate policy; 14. Community based adaptation and culture in
theory and practice; 15. Exploring the invisibility of local knowledge in
decision-making: the Boscastle harbour flood disaster; 16. Adaptation and
conflict within fisheries: insights for living with climate change; 17.
Exploring cultural dimensions of adaptation to climate change; 18. Adapting
to an uncertain climate on the great plains: testing hypotheses on
historical populations; 19. Climate change and adaptive human migration:
lessons from rural North America; Part III. Governance, Knowledge and
Technologies for Adaptation: 20. Are our levers long and our fulcra strong
enough? Exploring the soft underbelly of adaptation decisions and actions;
21. Decentralized planning and climate adaptation: toward transparent
governance; 22. Climate adaptation, local institutions and rural
livelihoods; 23. Adaptive governance for a changing coastline: science,
policy and publics in search of a sustainable future; 24. Climate change,
international cooperation and adaptation in transboundary water management;
25. Decentralization: a window of opportunity for successful adaptation to
climate change?; 26. Adapting to climate change: the nation-state as
problem and solution; 27. Limits to adaptation: analysing institutional
constraints; 28. Accessing diversification, networks and traditional
resource management as adaptations to climate extremes; 29. Governance
limits to effective global financial support for adaptation; 30.
Organizational learning and governance in adaptation in urban development;
31. Conclusions: transforming the world; Index.
Introduction; 1. Adaptation now; Part I. Adapting to Thresholds in Physical
and Ecological Systems: 2. Ecological limits of adaptation to climate
change; 3. Adapting to the effects of climate change on water supply
reliability; 4. Protecting London from tidal flooding: limits to
engineering adaptation; 5. Climate prediction: a limit to adaptation?; 6.
Learning to crawl: how to use seasonal climate forecasts to build adaptive
capacity; 7. Norse Greenland settlement and limits to adaptation; 8. Sea
ice change in Arctic Canada: are there limits to Inuit adaptation?; Part
II. The Role of Value and Culture in Adaptation: 9. The past, present and
some possible futures of adaptation; 10. Do values subjectively define the
limits to climate change adaptation?; 11. Conceptual and practical barriers
to adaptation: vulnerability and responses to heat waves in the UK; 12.
Values and cost-benefit analysis: economic efficiency criteria in
adaptation; 13. Hidden costs and disparate uncertainties: trade-offs in
approaches to climate policy; 14. Community based adaptation and culture in
theory and practice; 15. Exploring the invisibility of local knowledge in
decision-making: the Boscastle harbour flood disaster; 16. Adaptation and
conflict within fisheries: insights for living with climate change; 17.
Exploring cultural dimensions of adaptation to climate change; 18. Adapting
to an uncertain climate on the great plains: testing hypotheses on
historical populations; 19. Climate change and adaptive human migration:
lessons from rural North America; Part III. Governance, Knowledge and
Technologies for Adaptation: 20. Are our levers long and our fulcra strong
enough? Exploring the soft underbelly of adaptation decisions and actions;
21. Decentralized planning and climate adaptation: toward transparent
governance; 22. Climate adaptation, local institutions and rural
livelihoods; 23. Adaptive governance for a changing coastline: science,
policy and publics in search of a sustainable future; 24. Climate change,
international cooperation and adaptation in transboundary water management;
25. Decentralization: a window of opportunity for successful adaptation to
climate change?; 26. Adapting to climate change: the nation-state as
problem and solution; 27. Limits to adaptation: analysing institutional
constraints; 28. Accessing diversification, networks and traditional
resource management as adaptations to climate extremes; 29. Governance
limits to effective global financial support for adaptation; 30.
Organizational learning and governance in adaptation in urban development;
31. Conclusions: transforming the world; Index.
and Ecological Systems: 2. Ecological limits of adaptation to climate
change; 3. Adapting to the effects of climate change on water supply
reliability; 4. Protecting London from tidal flooding: limits to
engineering adaptation; 5. Climate prediction: a limit to adaptation?; 6.
Learning to crawl: how to use seasonal climate forecasts to build adaptive
capacity; 7. Norse Greenland settlement and limits to adaptation; 8. Sea
ice change in Arctic Canada: are there limits to Inuit adaptation?; Part
II. The Role of Value and Culture in Adaptation: 9. The past, present and
some possible futures of adaptation; 10. Do values subjectively define the
limits to climate change adaptation?; 11. Conceptual and practical barriers
to adaptation: vulnerability and responses to heat waves in the UK; 12.
Values and cost-benefit analysis: economic efficiency criteria in
adaptation; 13. Hidden costs and disparate uncertainties: trade-offs in
approaches to climate policy; 14. Community based adaptation and culture in
theory and practice; 15. Exploring the invisibility of local knowledge in
decision-making: the Boscastle harbour flood disaster; 16. Adaptation and
conflict within fisheries: insights for living with climate change; 17.
Exploring cultural dimensions of adaptation to climate change; 18. Adapting
to an uncertain climate on the great plains: testing hypotheses on
historical populations; 19. Climate change and adaptive human migration:
lessons from rural North America; Part III. Governance, Knowledge and
Technologies for Adaptation: 20. Are our levers long and our fulcra strong
enough? Exploring the soft underbelly of adaptation decisions and actions;
21. Decentralized planning and climate adaptation: toward transparent
governance; 22. Climate adaptation, local institutions and rural
livelihoods; 23. Adaptive governance for a changing coastline: science,
policy and publics in search of a sustainable future; 24. Climate change,
international cooperation and adaptation in transboundary water management;
25. Decentralization: a window of opportunity for successful adaptation to
climate change?; 26. Adapting to climate change: the nation-state as
problem and solution; 27. Limits to adaptation: analysing institutional
constraints; 28. Accessing diversification, networks and traditional
resource management as adaptations to climate extremes; 29. Governance
limits to effective global financial support for adaptation; 30.
Organizational learning and governance in adaptation in urban development;
31. Conclusions: transforming the world; Index.