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MainDB: Transformational Adaptation in the Context of Coastal Cities

Title

Transformational Adaptation in the Context of Coastal Cities

NWPWeblink

NWPTypeOfOrganization

University/education/training organization

NWPGeographicRegion

Africa; Asia; Caribbean and Central America; Europe; North America; Pacific/Oceania; South America

Scope of work

 

NWPMandatesandFrameworks

 

NWPModalityApproachandMechanism

 

NWPEffortsToAddressSOE

 

NWPRelevantStakeholders

 

NWPFocusonNElossesFlag

 

NWPImpactAreas

 

NWPOutputs

 

Good practices and lessons learned

 

NWPGapsChallenges

 

Date of submission

 

Abbreviation

 

Activities

 

Adaptation element

Adaptation planning and practices; Knowledge management; Monitoring and evaluation/M&E; Science and research; Vulnerability assessment

Adaptation sector/theme

Coastal areas/zones; Adaptation finance; Disaster risk reduction; Infrastructure; Urban resilience

Climate hazard

Floods; Sea level rise; Storm surges; Tropical cyclones/typhoons

Country

United States of America

NWPDataSource

 

Description

Coastal settlements, home to more than three billion people and growing rapidly, are highly vulnerable to climate change. Increasingly, there are calls for climate adaptation that goes beyond business-as-usual approaches, transforms socioeconomic systems, and addressformational adaptation, as well as practitioner frameworks and case studies of urban coastal adaptation. The article discusses specific challenges for transformational adaptation and its governance in coastal cities. In doing so, this review cones underlying drivers of vulnerability. Although calls for transformational adaptation are growing, greater clarity is needed on what transformation means in context in order to bridge the gap between theory and practice. This article reviews the theoretical literature on transtributes to the growing debate about operationalizing the concept of transformational adaptation in the context of coastal cities and offers insights to ensure that transformation processes are inclusive and equitable.

Expected outcome

 

Further information

 

NWPGeographicScope

Global; Local; National; Regional; Subregional; Transboundary

Indicators of achievement

 

NWPInformationType

Knowledge Resource

NWPJoinDate

12/08/2022

NWPPartner

Northeastern University

Purpose

 

Regional group

 

Target group

Academics and scientists; Policy makers

NWPWorkStream

NWP

NWPYear

 

NWPOutcome

 

NWPPartners

 

Type of knowledge resource

 

Scale of work

 

NWPSlowOnsetEvents

 

NWPReferences

 

Implementing partners

Laura Kuhl,1 M. Feisal Rahman,2 Samantha McCraine,3 Dunja Krause,4 Md Fahad Hossain,5 Aditya Vansh Bahadur,6 and Saleemul Huq5 1School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs, and International Affairs Program, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA; email: l.kuhl@northeastern.edu 2Department of Geography, Durham University, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom; email: mohammad.f.rahman@durham.ac.uk 3WorldWildlife Fund for Nature,Washington, DC 20037, USA; email: smccraine@gmail.com 4United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland; email: dunja.krause@un.org 5International Centre for Climate Change and Development, London TW2 6EJ, United Kingdom; email: fahad.hossain@icccad.org, saleemul.huq@icccad.org 6International Institute for Environment and Development, London WC1X 8NH, United Kingdom; email: aditya.bahadur@iied.org Annu. Rev.

NWPYearPublication

2021

NWPUpdate

 

SourceItemID

2452

NWPSecendaryEmail

 

NWPPrimaryEmail

l.kuhl@northeastern.edu

NWPTypeOfKnowledge

Scientific/peer reviewed publication

NWPCountryItem

United States

NWPRelevantWeblinks

Attachments

Content Type: NWPSearchableItem
Created at 08/12/2022 07:01 by crmmocservices
Last modified at 08/12/2022 07:01 by crmmocservices