Vulnerability and capacity: explaining local commitment to climate-change policy

被引:168
|
作者
Zahran, Sammy [1 ]
Brody, Samuel D. [2 ]
Vedlitz, Arnold [3 ]
Grover, Himanshu [2 ]
Miller, Caitlyn [3 ]
机构
[1] Colorado State Univ, Dept Sociol, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
[2] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Landscape Architecture & Urban Planning, Environm Planning & Sustainabil Res Unit, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
[3] Texas A&M Univ, George Bush Sch Govt & Publ Serv, Inst Sci Technol & Publ Policy, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
来源
关键词
D O I
10.1068/c2g
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
We examine the reasons why a US locality would voluntarily commit to the Cities for Climate Protection (CCP) campaign. Using geographic information systems analytic techniques, we map and measure a locality's vulnerability to climate-change impacts at the county level of spatial precision. We analyze multiple measures of climate-change vulnerability, including expected temperature change, extreme weather events, and coastal proximity, as well as economic variables, demographic variables, and civic-participation variables that constitute a locality's socioeconomic capacity to commit to costly climate-change policy initiatives. Bivariate and logistic regression results indicate that CCP-committed localities are quantitatively different to noncommitted localities on both climate-change risk and socioeconomic-capacity dimensions. On vulnerability measures, the odds of CCP-campaign participation increase significantly with the number of people killed and injured by extreme weather events, projected temperature change, and coastal proximity. On socioeconomic-capacity measures, the odds of CCP-campaign involvement increase with the percentage of citizens that vote Democrat and recycle, as well as the number of nonprofit organizations with an environment focus. The odds decrease in a county area as the percentage of the labor force employed in carbon-intensive industries increases.
引用
收藏
页码:544 / 562
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] CLIMATE-CHANGE POLICY
    LAVE, LB
    DOWLATABADI, H
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1993, 27 (10) : 1962 - 1972
  • [2] EXPLAINING NATIONAL CLIMATE-CHANGE POLICIES
    ROWLANDS, IH
    [J]. GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 1995, 5 (03): : 235 - 249
  • [3] Accounting for adaptive capacity and uncertainty in assessments of species' climate-change vulnerability
    Wade, Alisa A.
    Hand, Brian K.
    Kovach, Ryan P.
    Luikart, Gordon
    Whited, Diane C.
    Muhlfeld, Clint C.
    [J]. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2017, 31 (01) : 136 - 149
  • [4] The assessment: Climate-change policy
    Helm, D
    [J]. OXFORD REVIEW OF ECONOMIC POLICY, 2003, 19 (03) : 349 - 361
  • [5] Climate-change policy stalled
    Mann, Adam
    [J]. NATURE, 2010, 468 (7327) : 1015 - 1016
  • [6] Climate-change policy coming
    不详
    [J]. CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 2002, 80 (06) : 21 - 21
  • [7] Act Local: Climate-Change Policy at the County Level in South Florida
    Sara Ayers-Rigsby
    Rachael Kangas
    Michael Savarese
    Jeff Ransom
    [J]. Historical Archaeology, 2023, 57 (2) : 619 - 633
  • [8] Act Local: Climate-Change Policy at the County Level in South Florida
    Ayers-Rigsby, Sara
    Kangas, Rachael
    Savarese, Michael
    Ransom, Jeff
    [J]. HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY, 2023, 57 (02) : 619 - 633
  • [9] Linking energy to climate-change policy
    Hess, Glenn
    [J]. CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 2008, 86 (10) : 42 - +
  • [10] Characterizing forest vulnerability and risk to climate-change hazards
    Lecina-Diaz, Judit
    Martinez-Vilalta, Jordi
    Alvarez, Albert
    Banque, Mireia
    Birkmann, Joern
    Feldmeyer, Daniel
    Vayreda, Jordi
    Retana, Javier
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 19 (02) : 126 - 133