The Past, the Present and Some Possible Futures of Adaptation

W. Neil Adger, Irene Lorenzoni, and Karen O'Brien, eds., Adaptation to Climate Change: Thresholds, Values, Governance, Cambridge University Press, pp. 131-163, 2009

35 Pages Posted: 28 Mar 2013 Last revised: 18 Feb 2014

Date Written: 2009

Abstract

Adaptation is a familiar word in the conversations of people who are concerned about climate change. They use it to the processes of adjusting to climate change and its impacts. It describes the actions that must be taken to reduce or eliminate harm, actions whose necessity is unquestionable once the realization strikes that no mitigation plan will be able to bring global warming to a quick halt.

This chapter calls for some reflection on these uses of the word. Though it accepts the urgency of the need to respond to climate change, it questions the naturalness of the term adaptation – the way that it is taken for granted as a key element in climate change policy – and it finds some limits to the term. This chapter suggests that the word does not always capture the full impacts of climate change and that it does not always represent accurately either the perceptions of the people affected by these impacts or the range of alternatives open to them.

This chapter develops these reservations through several sections: (1) a review of the history of the term and its use by international organizations; (2) a presentation of a local community affected by climate change, who constitute one case of the people for whom adaptations are proposed; (3) a discussion of the perceptions of climate change by this local community; (4) a review of four organizations that serve as intermediates between the international and local levels, and that have all adopted the word; and (5) a set of considerations on the way that the term operates in the relations among the international organizations, the intermediary organizations and the local community. Reduced to a single, if long, sentence, this chapter argues that the term serves the international and intermediary organizations far better than the local communities who feel the impacts most directly; rather than transforming the great fear of a hotter planet into sustained action to address the consequences of climate change , the term can create a sense of complacency.

Suggested Citation

Orlove, Ben, The Past, the Present and Some Possible Futures of Adaptation (2009). W. Neil Adger, Irene Lorenzoni, and Karen O'Brien, eds., Adaptation to Climate Change: Thresholds, Values, Governance, Cambridge University Press, pp. 131-163, 2009, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2240439

Ben Orlove (Contact Author)

Columbia University ( email )

420 West 118th Street, room 833
New York, NY 10027
United States
+1 (212) 854 1543 (Phone)

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