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Adaptation strategies
Glossary

Incorporating the Domains of Impact into adaptation planning

Find resources on how to design adaptation interventions that incorporate and address the Domains of Impact.

Available resources:

Social justice implications of U.S. managed retreat buyout programs

A review of eight U.S. buyout programs suggests that buyouts, as practiced, lack transparency, which may increase public distrust of the process and reduce participation.

Date: 02/10/23

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Health and social impacts of a flood disaster: responding to needs and implications for practice

A case study of the health and social impacts of flooding in Carlisle, UK, in 2005

Date: 02/10/23

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Public participation, engagement, and climate change adaptation: A review of the research literature

A review of literature incorporating public participation and citizen engagement in climate change adaptation since 1992 reveals lexical, temporal, and spatial distribution dynamics of research on the topic.

Date: 02/10/23

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Example: Planned relocation after Hurricane Sandy

Koslov et al. (2021) draw attention to instances where supported relocation can be beneficial. Their study on the impact of buyout schemes on the mental health of people affected by Hurricane Sandy shows that rebuilding can lead to higher levels of stress compared to those who were financially supported to move elsewhere. Importantly, they show how the type of support offered and the process of relocation has implications for the success of these adaptation strategies. Leadership, co-management and participatory processes in relocation projects have also been demonstrated to matter for broader community resilience in new settlements. For example, work by Jamshed et al. (2018) in Pakistan following the extensive floods of 2010 show that NGO led relocation resulted in better community outcomes compared to plans led by government agencies. Ajibade et al.’s (2022) review of managed retreat programmes emphasises that plans based on equity and justice predict better outcomes for relocated populations than those based on efficiency based metrics.

Financial mechanisms

Financial mechanisms, such as insurance can support a living-with-risk approach enabling people to stay in place when threatened with flood risk and to recover after a disaster event. When insurance mechanisms are present they can support responses to flood risk, both proactively in providing a sense of security and in the recovery period by providing for the financial cost of repairs. This is suggestive of the importance of insurance companies’ roles in shaping health and wellbeing in climate adaptation, and identifiable as an area where processes could be designed to lessen negative mental health impacts.

Example: Hard engineering in Hokkaido

A study of public responses in Hokkaido, for example, documents the desire for local communities to resist concrete structures, and the potential to integrate different types of adaptation strategies that reflect concerns about wellbeing and allowing the sightline of the sea to remain. Similarly, populations that had to evacuate following the tsunami had better levels of mental health when they were relocated to areas where forests were part of coastal defences compared to those located near concrete infrastructure

Involving local people: Indonesia example

Nurhidayah and McIlgorm (2019) show that in Indonesia the legal framework for adaptation to sea level rise does not fully acknowledge the burden of adapting on communities, they suggest that a more inclusive social justice approach is needed increasing involvement of local people in adaptation planning to improve adaptation outcomes.

Place-based identities

Clarke et al., highlight the importance of incorporating place-based identities into adaptation planning and consultation for wellbeing outcomes and the wider sustainability of interventions.

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