Local adaptation policy responses to extreme weather events

被引:0
作者
Leanne Giordono
Hilary Boudet
Alexander Gard-Murray
机构
[1] Oregon State University,
[2] Harvard University,undefined
来源
Policy Sciences | 2020年 / 53卷
关键词
Extreme weather; Climate change; Local government; Adaptation; Policy change; Focusing events;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
At a global level, climate change is expected to result in more frequent and higher-intensity weather events, with impacts ranging from inconvenient to catastrophic. The potential for disasters to act as “focusing events” for policy change, including adaptation to climate change risk, is well known. Moreover, local action is an important element of climate change adaptation and related risk management efforts. As such, there is a good reason to expect local communities to mobilize in response to disaster events, both with immediate response and recovery-focused activities, as well as longer-term preparedness and adaptation-focused public policy changes. However, scholars also note that the experience of disaster does not always yield policy change; indeed, disasters can also result in policy inertia and failure, perhaps as often or more often than major policy change. This study poses two key research questions. First, we ask to what degree policy change occurs in communities impacted by an extreme weather event. Second, we seek to understand the conditions that lead to adaptation-oriented policy adoption in response to an extreme weather event. Our results suggest two main recipes for future-oriented policy adoption in the wake of an extreme weather event. For both recipes, a high-impact event is a necessary condition for future-oriented policy adoption. In the first recipe for change, policy adoption occurs in Democratic communities with highly focused media attention. The second, less expected recipe for change involves Republican communities that have experienced other uncommon weather events in the recent past. We use a comparative case approach with 15 cases and fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis methods. Our approach adds to the existing literature on policy change and local adaptation by selecting a mid-N range of cases where extreme weather events have the potential to act as focusing events, thereby sidestepping selection on the dependent variable. Our approach also takes advantage of a novel method for measuring attention, the latent Dirichlet allocation approach.
引用
收藏
页码:609 / 636
页数:27
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Experience is not enough: A dynamic explanation of the limited adaptation to extreme weather events in public organizations [J].
Zhang, Fengxiu ;
Maroulis, Spiro .
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2021, 70
[22]   Extreme Weather Events and the Critical Importance of Anticipatory Adaptation and Organizational Resilience in Responding to Impacts [J].
Linnenluecke, Martina K. ;
Griffiths, Andrew ;
Winn, Monika .
BUSINESS STRATEGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2012, 21 (01) :17-32
[23]   Acts of God: Continuities and change in Christian responses to extreme weather events from early modernity to the present [J].
Hardwick, Joseph ;
Stephens, Randall J. .
WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2020, 11 (02)
[24]   'The weather is like the game we play': Coping and adaptation strategies for extreme weather events among ethnic minority groups in upland northern Vietnam [J].
Delisle, Sarah ;
Turner, Sarah .
ASIA PACIFIC VIEWPOINT, 2016, 57 (03) :351-364
[25]   Crop Diversification in Coping with Extreme Weather Events in China [J].
Huang Ji-kun ;
Jiang Jing ;
Wang Jin-xia ;
Hou Ling-ling .
JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE AGRICULTURE, 2014, 13 (04) :677-686
[26]   In Situ Adaptation to Climatic Change: Mineral Industry Responses to Extreme Flooding Events in Queensland, Australia [J].
Sharma, Vigya ;
Franks, Daniel M. .
SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES, 2013, 26 (11) :1252-1267
[27]   Crop Diversification in Coping with Extreme Weather Events in China [J].
HUANG Ji-kun ;
JIANG Jing ;
WANG Jin-xia ;
HOU Ling-ling .
JournalofIntegrativeAgriculture, 2014, 13 (04) :677-686
[28]   Smallholder farmer resilience to extreme weather events in a global food value chain [J].
Thompson, William J. ;
Varma, Varun ;
Joerin, Jonas ;
Bonilla-Duarte, Solhanlle ;
Bebber, Daniel P. ;
Blaser-Hart, Wilma ;
Kopainsky, Birgit ;
Spath, Leonhard ;
Curcio, Bianca ;
Six, Johan ;
Krutli, Pius .
CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2023, 176 (11)
[29]   Predicting weather, climate and extreme events [J].
Miller, Martin J. ;
Smolarkiewicz, Piotr K. .
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS, 2008, 227 (07) :3429-3430
[30]   Studying local climate adaptation: A heuristic research framework for comparative policy analysis [J].
Vogel, Brennan ;
Henstra, Daniel .
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2015, 31 :110-120