The ability of societies to adapt to twenty-first-century sea-level rise

被引:0
|
作者
Jochen Hinkel
Jeroen C. J. H. Aerts
Sally Brown
Jose A. Jiménez
Daniel Lincke
Robert J. Nicholls
Paolo Scussolini
Agustín Sanchez-Arcilla
Athanasios Vafeidis
Kwasi Appeaning Addo
机构
[1] Global Climate Forum (GCF),Division of Resource Economics, Albrecht Daniel Thaer
[2] Humboldt-University,Institute and Berlin Workshop in Institutional Analysis of Social
[3] Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam,Ecological Systems (WINS)
[4] University of Southampton,Institute for Environmental Studies
[5] Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya,Faculty of Engineering and the Environment and Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research
[6] BarcelonaTech,Laboratori d’Enginyeria Marítima
[7] International Centre for Coastal Resources Research,Institute of Geography
[8] Christian-Albrechts University Kiel,Department of Marine and Fisheries Sciences
[9] University of Ghana,undefined
来源
Nature Climate Change | 2018年 / 8卷
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摘要
Against the background of potentially substantial sea-level rise, one important question is to what extent are coastal societies able to adapt? This question is often answered in the negative by referring to sinking islands and submerged megacities. Although these risks are real, the picture is incomplete because it lacks consideration of adaptation. This Perspective explores societies’ abilities to adapt to twenty-first-century sea-level rise by integrating perspectives from coastal engineering, economics, finance and social sciences, and provides a comparative analysis of a set of cases that vary in terms of technological limits, economic and financial barriers to adaptation and social conflicts.
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页码:570 / 578
页数:8
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