Is ‘Resilience’ Maladaptive? Towards an Accurate Lexicon for Climate Change Adaptation

Climate change adaptation is a rapidly evolving field in conservation biology and includes a range of strategies from resisting to actively directing change on the landscape. The term ‘climate change resilience,’ frequently used to characterize adaptation strategies, deserves closer scrutiny because...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental management (New York) 2016-04, Vol.57 (4), p.753-758
Hauptverfasser: Fisichelli, Nicholas A., Schuurman, Gregor W., Hoffman, Cat Hawkins
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Schuurman, Gregor W.
Hoffman, Cat Hawkins
description Climate change adaptation is a rapidly evolving field in conservation biology and includes a range of strategies from resisting to actively directing change on the landscape. The term ‘climate change resilience,’ frequently used to characterize adaptation strategies, deserves closer scrutiny because it is ambiguous, often misunderstood, and difficult to apply consistently across disciplines and spatial and temporal scales to support conservation efforts. Current definitions of resilience encompass all aspects of adaptation from resisting and absorbing change to reorganizing and transforming in response to climate change. However, many stakeholders are unfamiliar with this spectrum of definitions and assume the more common meaning of returning to a previous state after a disturbance. Climate change, however, is unrelenting and intensifying, characterized by both directional shifts in baseline conditions and increasing variability in extreme events. This ongoing change means that scientific understanding and management responses must develop concurrently, iteratively, and collaboratively, in a science-management partnership. Divergent concepts of climate change resilience impede cross-jurisdictional adaptation efforts and complicate use of adaptive management frameworks. Climate change adaptation practitioners require clear terminology to articulate management strategies and the inherent tradeoffs involved in adaptation. Language that distinguishes among strategies that seek to resist change, accommodate change, and direct change (i.e., persistence, autonomous change, and directed change) is prerequisite to clear communication about climate change adaptation goals and management intentions in conservation areas.
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subjects Adaptation
Adaptation, Physiological
Adaptive management
Aquatic Pollution
Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution
Climate adaptation
Climate Change
Communication
Conservation
Conservation areas
Conservation biology
Conservation of Natural Resources
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecology
Emissions
Environment
Environmental Management
Forestry Management
Greenhouse effect
Management
National parks
Natural resources
Nature Conservation
Parks & recreation areas
Stakeholders
Terminology as Topic
Waste Water Technology
Water Management
Water Pollution Control
Wildlife conservation
title Is ‘Resilience’ Maladaptive? Towards an Accurate Lexicon for Climate Change Adaptation
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