Weather and Climate Variability May Be Poor Proxies for Climate Change in Farmer Risk Perceptions

Despite long-standing assertions that climate change creates new risk management challenges, the climate change adaptation literature persists in assuming, both implicitly and explicitly, that weather and climate variability are suitable proxies for climate change in evaluating farmers’ risk percept...

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Veröffentlicht in:Weather, climate, and society climate, and society, 2019-10, Vol.11 (4), p.697-711
Hauptverfasser: Findlater, Kieran M., Kandlikar, Milind, Satterfield, Terre, Donner, Simon D.
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container_issue 4
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container_title Weather, climate, and society
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creator Findlater, Kieran M.
Kandlikar, Milind
Satterfield, Terre
Donner, Simon D.
description Despite long-standing assertions that climate change creates new risk management challenges, the climate change adaptation literature persists in assuming, both implicitly and explicitly, that weather and climate variability are suitable proxies for climate change in evaluating farmers’ risk perceptions and predicting their adaptive responses. This assumption persists in part because there is surprisingly little empirical evidence either way, although case studies suggest that there may be important differences. Here, we use a national survey of South Africa’s commercial grain farmers (n = 389)—similar to their peers in higher-income countries (e.g., North America, Europe, Australia), but without subsidies—to show that they treat weather and climate change risks quite differently. We find that their perceptions of climate change risks are distinct from and, in many regards, oppositional to their perceptions of weather risks. While there seems to be a temporal element to this distinction (i.e., differing concern for short-term vs long-term risks), there are other differences that are better understood in terms of normalcy (i.e., normal vs abnormal relative to historical climate) and permanency (i.e., temporary vs permanent changes). We also find an interaction effect of education and political identity on concern for climate change that is at odds with the well-publicized cultural cognition thesis based on surveys of the American public. Overall, studies that use weather and climate variability as unqualified proxies for climate change are likely to mislead researchers and policymakers about how farmers perceive, interpret, and respond to climate change stimuli.
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source American Meteorological Society; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Access to information
Adaptation
Agriculture
Climate adaptation
Climate change
Climate change adaptation
Climate variability
Cognition
Decision making
Environmental risk
Farmers
Politics
Polls & surveys
Risk management
Risk perception
Subsidies
Surveying
Surveys
Variability
Weather
title Weather and Climate Variability May Be Poor Proxies for Climate Change in Farmer Risk Perceptions
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