Climate Change, Adaptation, and Vulnerability: Reconceptualizing Societal-Environment Interaction Within a Socially Constructed Adaptive Landscape

被引:40
作者
McLaughlin, Paul [1 ]
机构
[1] SUNY Coll Geneseo, Dept Sociol, Geneseo, NY 14454 USA
关键词
adaptation; vulnerability; climate change; evolution; agency; constructionism; theory; organizational sociology; social movements; RESOURCE MOBILIZATION; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; COLLECTIVE ACTION; HISTORICAL ROOTS; FAIR TRADE; MOVEMENT; ORGANIZATIONS; EVOLUTION; LEGITIMATION; EMERGENCE;
D O I
10.1177/1086026611419862
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This article reconceptualizes current analyses of adaptation and vulnerability to climate change within an evolutionary theory of social change premised on the concept of a socially constructed adaptive landscape. The latter describes a negotiated and contested fitness terrain. Individual and corporate actors simultaneously adapt to and actively manipulate this terrain by using alternative collective action frames, mobilizing resources, and creating or exploiting political opportunities in order to legitimate or delegitimate social structures and their associated technologies at various levels of analysis. Adaptation is conceptualized as occurring through homeostatic, developmental, rational choice, and populational mechanisms. Vulnerability results from the adaptive failure of social structures sustaining individual and collective health, livelihood, and well-being. This framework combines organizational sociologists' insights into structure-environment interaction; constructionists' attention to agency, language, culture, and values; and political ecologists' concerns with power, inequality, and processes of marginalization.
引用
收藏
页码:269 / 291
页数:23
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