An integrative research framework for enabling transformative adaptation
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In: Environmental Science & Policy, Vol. 68, 01.02.2017, p. 87-96.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - An integrative research framework for enabling transformative adaptation
AU - Colloff, Matthew J.
AU - Martín-López, Berta
AU - Lavorel, Sandra
AU - Locatelli, Bruno
AU - Gorddard, Russell
AU - Longaretti, Pierre Yves
AU - Walters, Gretchen
AU - van Kerkhoff, Lorrae
AU - Wyborn, Carina
AU - Coreau, Audrey
AU - Wise, Russell M.
AU - Dunlop, Michael
AU - Degeorges, Patrick
AU - Grantham, Hedley
AU - Overton, Ian C.
AU - Williams, Rachel D.
AU - Doherty, Michael D.
AU - Capon, Tim
AU - Sanderson, Todd
AU - Murphy, Helen T.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2016 The Authors
PY - 2017/2/1
Y1 - 2017/2/1
N2 - Transformative adaptation will be increasingly important to effectively address the impacts of climate change and other global drivers on social-ecological systems. Enabling transformative adaptation requires new ways to evaluate and adaptively manage trade-offs between maintaining desirable aspects of current social-ecological systems and adapting to major biophysical changes to those systems. We outline such an approach, based on three elements developed by the Transformative Adaptation Research Alliance (TARA): (1) the benefits of adaptation services; that sub-set of ecosystem services that help people adapt to environmental change; (2) The values-rules-knowledge perspective (vrk) for identifying those aspects of societal decision-making contexts that enable or constrain adaptation and (3) the adaptation pathways approach for implementing adaptation, that builds on and integrates adaptation services and the vrk perspective. Together, these elements provide a future-oriented approach to evaluation and use of ecosystem services, a dynamic, grounded understanding of governance and decision-making and a logical, sequential approach that connects decisions over time. The TARA approach represents a means for achieving changes in institutions and governance needed to support transformative adaptation.
AB - Transformative adaptation will be increasingly important to effectively address the impacts of climate change and other global drivers on social-ecological systems. Enabling transformative adaptation requires new ways to evaluate and adaptively manage trade-offs between maintaining desirable aspects of current social-ecological systems and adapting to major biophysical changes to those systems. We outline such an approach, based on three elements developed by the Transformative Adaptation Research Alliance (TARA): (1) the benefits of adaptation services; that sub-set of ecosystem services that help people adapt to environmental change; (2) The values-rules-knowledge perspective (vrk) for identifying those aspects of societal decision-making contexts that enable or constrain adaptation and (3) the adaptation pathways approach for implementing adaptation, that builds on and integrates adaptation services and the vrk perspective. Together, these elements provide a future-oriented approach to evaluation and use of ecosystem services, a dynamic, grounded understanding of governance and decision-making and a logical, sequential approach that connects decisions over time. The TARA approach represents a means for achieving changes in institutions and governance needed to support transformative adaptation.
KW - Adaptation pathways
KW - Adaptation services
KW - Adaptive governance
KW - Agency
KW - Co-production
KW - Decsion making
KW - Global change
KW - Learning
KW - Power relations
KW - Transformation
KW - Values-rules-knowledge
KW - Sustainability Science
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85007247467&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.envsci.2016.11.007
DO - 10.1016/j.envsci.2016.11.007
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 68
SP - 87
EP - 96
JO - Environmental Science & Policy
JF - Environmental Science & Policy
SN - 1462-9011
ER -