Assessing the distribution of social-ecological resilience and risk: Ireland as a case study of the uneven impact of famine

被引:6
|
作者
Flaherty, Eoin [1 ]
机构
[1] Queens Univ Belfast, Sch Sociol Social Policy & Social Work, Belfast BT7 1NN, Antrim, North Ireland
关键词
Resilience; Cluster analysis; Ireland; Famine; Entitlement; Regime; PAST FAMINES; FOOD SYSTEMS; COMPLEXITY; LAND; POPULATION; FRAMEWORK;
D O I
10.1016/j.ecocom.2014.04.002
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Explanations for the causes of famine and food insecurity often reside at a high level of aggregation or abstraction. Popular models within famine studies have often emphasised the role of prime movers such as population stress, or the political-economic structure of access channels, as key determinants of food security. Explanation typically resides at the macro level, obscuring the presence of substantial within-country differences in the manner in which such stressors operate. This study offers an alternative approach to analyse the uneven nature of food security, drawing on the Great Irish famine of 1845-1852. Ireland is often viewed as a classical case of Malthusian stress, whereby population outstripped food supply under a pre-famine demographic regime of expanded fertility. Many have also pointed to Ireland's integration with capitalist markets through its colonial relationship with the British state, and country-wide system of landlordism, as key determinants of local agricultural activity. Such models are misguided, ignoring both substantial complexities in regional demography, and the continuity of non-capitalistic, communal modes of land management long into the nineteenth century. Drawing on resilience ecology and complexity theory, this paper subjects a set of aggregate data on pre-famine Ireland to an optimisation clustering procedure, in order to discern the potential presence of distinctive social ecological regimes. Based on measures of demography, social structure, geography, and land tenure, this typology reveals substantial internal variation in regional social ecological structure, and vastly differing levels of distress during the peak famine months. This exercise calls into question the validity of accounts which emphasise uniformity of structure, by revealing a variety of regional regimes, which profoundly mediated local conditions of food security. Future research should therefore consider the potential presence of internal variations in resilience and risk exposure, rather than seeking to characterise cases based on singular macro-dynamics and stressors alone. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:35 / 45
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Blue Food Sovereignty Benefits Social-Ecological Resilience: A Case Study of Small-Scale Fisheries Co-Management and Mariculture in Samoa
    Quimby, Barbara
    Roque, Anais Delilah
    Nebie, Elisabeth Kago Ilboudo
    Levine, Arielle
    Amaama, Safua Akeli
    Wutich, Amber
    Brewis, Alexandra
    Samuelu, Lemasaniai Erenei
    HUMAN ECOLOGY, 2023, 51 (02) : 279 - 289
  • [32] Blue Food Sovereignty Benefits Social-Ecological Resilience: A Case Study of Small-Scale Fisheries Co-Management and Mariculture in Samoa
    Barbara Quimby
    Anaís Delilah Roque
    Elisabeth Kago Ilboudo Nébié
    Arielle Levine
    Safua Akeli Amaama
    Amber Wutich
    Alexandra Brewis
    Lemasaniai Erenei Samuelu
    Human Ecology, 2023, 51 : 279 - 289
  • [33] Evolutionary Characteristics and Trade-Offs' Development of Social-Ecological Production Landscapes in the Loess Plateau Region from a Resilience Point of View: A Case Study in Mizhi County, China
    Zhang, Hang
    Chen, Hai
    Geng, Tianwei
    Liu, Di
    Shi, Qinqin
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 17 (04)
  • [34] The vulnerability evolution and simulation of social-ecological systems in a semi-arid area: A case study of Yulin City, China
    Chen, Jia
    Yang, Xinjun
    Yin, Sha
    Wu, Kongsen
    Deng, Mengqi
    Wen, Xin
    JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHICAL SCIENCES, 2018, 28 (02) : 152 - 174
  • [35] Overcoming the process-structure divide in conceptions of Social-Ecological Transformation Assessing the transformative character and impact of change processes
    Sievers-Glotzbach, Stefanie
    Tschersich, Julia
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2019, 164
  • [36] Advancing protected area effectiveness assessments by disentangling social-ecological interactions: A case study from the Luangwa Valley, Zambia
    Frietsch, Marina
    Zafra-Calvo, Noelia
    Ghoddousi, Arash
    Loos, Jacqueline
    CONSERVATION SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, 2023, 5 (08)
  • [37] Conserving the Greater Sage-Grouse: A Social-Ecological Systems Case Study from the California-Nevada Region
    Duvall, Alison L.
    Metcalf, Alexander L.
    Coates, Peter S.
    RANGELAND ECOLOGY & MANAGEMENT, 2017, 70 : 129 - 140
  • [38] A multi-method approach to study robustness of social-ecological systems: the case of small-scale irrigation systems
    Janssen, Marco A.
    Anderies, John M.
    JOURNAL OF INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS, 2013, 9 (04) : 427 - 447
  • [39] Assessing the dynamics of sustainability for social-ecological systems based on the adaptive cycle framework: A case study in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei urban agglomeration
    Zhang, Ling
    Huang, Qinxu
    He, Chunyang
    Yue, Huanbi
    Zhao, Quanbo
    SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 2021, 70
  • [40] Social-ecological vulnerability of fishing communities to climate change: A US West Coast case study
    Koehn, Laura E.
    Nelson, Laura K.
    Samhouri, Jameal F.
    Norman, Karma C.
    Jacox, Michael G.
    Cullen, Alison C.
    Fiechter, Jerome
    BuiI, Mercedes Pozo
    Levin, Phillip S.
    PLOS ONE, 2022, 17 (08):