Rural geography II: Scalar and social constructionist perspectives on climate change adaptation and rural resilience

This report considers rural geography scholarship in relation to the field of climate change adaptation. While applied perspectives on the modelling and mapping of the potential impacts of climate change-related hazard events on rural localities continue to be an important research theme, more theor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in human geography 2019-02, Vol.43 (1), p.183-191
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description This report considers rural geography scholarship in relation to the field of climate change adaptation. While applied perspectives on the modelling and mapping of the potential impacts of climate change-related hazard events on rural localities continue to be an important research theme, more theoretically sophisticated and interpretivist approaches are providing more challenging understandings of the multi-scalar nature of climate change adaptation processes, from the micro-scale of the farm operator to the global scale of shifting climate regimes. Social constructivism is being deployed to critique taken-for-granted interpretations of the natural processes underlying regionally-specific climate change impacts, further broadening the ontological and epistemological lens of the sub-discipline. Rural geography continues to be a fertile sub-disciplinary field for theoretical and methodological experimentation.
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subjects Adaptation
Climate adaptation
Climate change
Climate models
Constructionism
Constructivism
Environmental impact
Epistemology
Experimentation
Experiments
Geography
Human geography
Mapping
Resilience
Rural areas
Rural communities
Rural geography
Rural sociology
Social construction
title Rural geography II: Scalar and social constructionist perspectives on climate change adaptation and rural resilience
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