1 / 14

Understanding Community Vulnerability & Adaptation

Understanding Community Vulnerability & Adaptation. Community Vulnerability and Adaptation. Measuring and mapping vulnerability Combined indicators Risk/stress mapping Spatial intersection/interaction Examining adaptation strategies Contingent behavior. Vulnerability: Existing Studies.

jerom
Download Presentation

Understanding Community Vulnerability & Adaptation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding Community Vulnerability & Adaptation

  2. Community Vulnerability and Adaptation • Measuring and mapping vulnerability • Combined indicators • Risk/stress mapping • Spatial intersection/interaction • Examining adaptation strategies • Contingent behavior

  3. Vulnerability: Existing Studies • Agreement on idea but variety of frameworks • Common approach • Aggregate measure (at community level) • A bundle of indicators (Cutter Model) • Demographic, economic, ethnic, political, cultural etc. • Common analysis tools: • Factor extraction, cluster analysis etc.

  4. Vulnerability and Intervention Mapping:ESDA Approach • Measurement is not enough • Its about understanding • Where are the ‘hotspots’? • Are we serving the communities in need? • Where should we prioritize our efforts first?

  5. Spatial non-stationarity: VPM modelWUI vs. rural (affluent vs. poor)

  6. Issues with existing measures • Too general: • Vulnerable to what? • Weather station record vs. perceived effect • Assumption of homogenous effect: • Does poverty always necessarily translate to vulnerability? • Do income and ethnicity have the same marginal effect? • Can not establish causation: • little policy implication • Poor predictive power • Unit issue: • Areal unit (neighborhood) vs. social unit (i.e., fishermen)

  7. Need for a specific/robust function of vulnerability • Specific (to hazard in context): • Vulnerability (drought, heat etc.) • DDs vs. avg. temp. • Weighted (for vulnerability factors): • Lit. review (significance, effect size etc.) V = f(p1.X1+p2.X2+p3.X3+….pn.Xn) • Comprehensive yet flexible: • Intervention variable

  8. Example case • Broad context: Climate change • Specific context: vulnerability to heat effect • Heat waves, illness, death tolls • Socio-income factors • Resources (AC, housing condition etc.) • Intervention variables (i.e., neighborhood canopy coverage) • Policy question: • Will an investment in urban/community forestry programs result in reducing the vulnerability? • Could a roadside plantation bring a larger benefit than subsidy for AC installation?

  9. Vulnerability and Adaptation:survey based approach • Change in resource condition • Knowledge, perception • Contingent behavior • IVI • How important? • Vulnerable? • Impacted yet?

  10. Example context: Heat effect Highly important Slightly affected Not at all affected Not at all vulnerable Highly vulnerable Not at all important

  11. Example context: Trout decline due to stream temp. Highly important Highly affected Not at all vulnerable Highly vulnerable Slightly affected Not at all important

  12. Assessing adaptation • How will people adapt to change • List of potential reactions/strategies • Decision tree • Contingent reaction • Probability • Contingent impact

  13. Understanding Adaptation: Contingent Behavior Approach Trout decline in GA site Continue fishing Stop fishing Continue fishing here Move to other places Hunting Hiking Biking Bird/nature viewing ATV Outdoor team sports Golf Target shooting Canoeing/Kayaking Motor boating Camping Fish for trout Fish for non-trout Other places in GA Out of state (TN, NC, SC) For Trout For non-trout Move to headwater Wait until water gets cooler Skip warmer months (July, Aug.) Make fewer trips

  14. Understanding Community Vulnerability & Adaptation

More Related