How climate compatible are livelihood adaptation strategies and development programs in rural Indonesia?

被引:22
|
作者
Wise, R. M. [1 ]
Butler, J. R. A. [2 ]
Suadnya, W. [3 ]
Puspadi, K. [4 ]
Suharto, I. [5 ]
Skewes, T. D. [6 ]
机构
[1] CSIRO Land & Water Flagship, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
[2] CSIRO Land & Water Flagship, GPO Box 2583, Brisbane, Qld 4001, Australia
[3] Univ Mataram, Fac Agr, Jl Majapahit 62, Mataram 83127, Nusa Tenggara B, Indonesia
[4] Assessment Inst Agr Technol, Lombok, Ntb, Indonesia
[5] VECO Indonesia, Denpasar, Indonesia
[6] CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere Flagship, GPO Box 2583, Brisbane, Qld 4001, Australia
关键词
Adaptation pathways; Deliberative decision-making; Multiple criteria analysis; Mal-adaptation; Rural development;
D O I
10.1016/j.crm.2015.11.001
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Achieving climate compatible development (CCD) is a necessity in developing countries, but there are few examples of requisite planning processes, or manifestations of CCD. This paper presents a multi-stakeholder, participatory planning process designed to screen and prioritise rural livelihood adaptation strategies against nine CCD criteria. The process also integrated three principles of adaptation pathways: interventions should be (1) 'no regrets' and maintain reversibility to avoid mal-adaptation; (2) address both proximate and underlying systemic drivers of community vulnerability; and (3) linked across spatial scales and jurisdictional levels to promote coordination. Using examples of two rural sub-districts in Indonesia, we demonstrate the process and resulting CCD strategies. Priority strategies varied between the sub-districts but all reflected standard development interventions: water management, intensification or diversification of agriculture and aquaculture, education, health, food security and skills-building for communities. Strategies delivered co-benefits for human development and ecosystem services and hence adaptive capacity, but greenhouse mitigation co-benefits were less significant. Actions to deliver the strategies' objectives were screened for reversibility, and a minority were potentially maladaptive (i.e. path dependent, disproportionately burdening the most vulnerable, reducing incentives to adapt, or increasing greenhouse gas emissions) yet highly feasible. These related to infrastructure, which paradoxically is necessary to deliver 'soft' adaptation benefits (i.e. road access to health services). Only a small minority of transformative strategies addressed the systemic (i.e. institutional and political) drivers of vulnerability. Strategies were well-matched by development programs, suggesting that current interventions mirror CCD. However, development programs tackled fewer systemic drivers, were poorly coordinated and had a higher risk of mal-adaptation. We conclude that the approach is effective for screening and prioritising no regrets CCD, but more extensive learning processes are necessary to build decision-makers' capacity to tackle systemic drivers, and to scrutinise potentially mal-adaptive infrastructural investments. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:100 / 114
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Farmers' Perceptions of Climate Change and Agricultural Adaptation Strategies in Rural Sahel
    Mertz, Ole
    Mbow, Cheikh
    Reenberg, Anette
    Diouf, Awa
    ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2009, 43 (05) : 804 - 816
  • [32] Climate Emergency Adaptation and Sustainable Management Strategies in Rural and Agricultural Landscapes
    Nikologianni, Anastasia
    Moore, Kathryn
    Larkham, Peter J.
    INFRASTRUCTURES, 2020, 5 (11) : 1 - 13
  • [33] Assessing rural households' resilience and adaptation strategies to climate variability and change
    Keshavarz, Marzieh
    Moqadas, Reihaneh Soltani
    JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 2021, 184
  • [34] Rural coping and adaptation strategies for climate change by Himalayan communities in Nepal
    Dhungana, Nabin
    Silwal, Nisha
    Upadhaya, Suraj
    Khadka, Chiranjeewee
    Regmi, Sunil Kumar
    Joshi, Dipesh
    Adhikari, Samjhana
    JOURNAL OF MOUNTAIN SCIENCE, 2020, 17 (06) : 1462 - 1474
  • [35] Rural coping and adaptation strategies for climate change by Himalayan communities in Nepal
    Nabin DHUNGANA
    Nisha SILWAL
    Suraj UPADHAYA
    Chiranjeewee KHADKA
    Sunil Kumar REGMI
    Dipesh JOSHI
    Samjhana ADHIKARI
    JournalofMountainScience, 2020, 17 (06) : 1462 - 1475
  • [36] Rural coping and adaptation strategies for climate change by Himalayan communities in Nepal
    Nabin Dhungana
    Nisha Silwal
    Suraj Upadhaya
    Chiranjeewee Khadka
    Sunil Kumar Regmi
    Dipesh Joshi
    Samjhana Adhikari
    Journal of Mountain Science, 2020, 17 : 1462 - 1474
  • [37] Farmers’ Perceptions of Climate Change and Agricultural Adaptation Strategies in Rural Sahel
    Ole Mertz
    Cheikh Mbow
    Anette Reenberg
    Awa Diouf
    Environmental Management, 2009, 43 : 804 - 816
  • [38] Livelihood Options as Adaptation to Climate Variability Among Households in Rural Southwest Nigeria: Emerging Concerns and Reactions
    Oluwatayo, Isaac B.
    IMPLEMENTING CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION IN CITIES AND COMMUNITIES: INTEGRATING STRATEGIES AND EDUCATIONAL APPROACHES, 2016, : 267 - 275
  • [39] Social Network Analysis as a Tool for Studying Livelihood Adaptation to Climate Change: Insights from Rural Bangladesh
    Nagel, Ben
    HUMAN ECOLOGY REVIEW, 2020, 26 (02) : 147 - 169
  • [40] Climate Change Adaptation in Rural Development in Latvia: an Impact Assessment
    Paredne, Inguna
    SOCIETY, INTEGRATION, EDUCATION, VOL VI: ECONOMICS, INNOVATIVE BUSINESS AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION - FINANCE, ACCOUNTING AND TAX ADMINISTRATION, 2019, : 466 - 476