Re-framing island nations as champions of resilience in the face of climate change and disaster risk
De Souza, Roger M., Henly-Shepard, Sarah, McNamara, Karen and Fernando, Nishara (2015). Re-framing island nations as champions of resilience in the face of climate change and disaster risk. UNU-EHS Working Paper. UNU-EHS.
Document type:
Report
Collection:
-
Attached Files (Some files may be inaccessible until you login with your UNU Collections credentials) Name Description MIMEType Size Downloads Reframing_island_nations_WP_No_17.pdf Reframing_island_nations_WP_No_17.pdf application/pdf 690.17KB -
Sub-type Working paper Author De Souza, Roger M.
Henly-Shepard, Sarah
McNamara, Karen
Fernando, NisharaTitle Re-framing island nations as champions of resilience in the face of climate change and disaster risk Series Title UNU-EHS Working Paper Volume/Issue No. 17 Publication Date 2015-02 Place of Publication Bonn Publisher UNU-EHS Pages 19 Language eng Abstract As a home to important flora and fauna, with rich cultural roots and heritage, island communities are often characterized by their deep social ties with the natural environment. However, due to environmental degradation, impacts from climate change including slow (e.g. sea level rise) and sudden (e.g. hurricanes) onset events and the associated changes to livelihood structures and opportunities, islands throughout the world face increasing threats. In order to understand and appropriately address livelihood risks in these communities and to identify opportunities for resilience-building, there is an urgent need to shed light on the historical and cultural context of island societies and ecosystems. These approaches should build upon local and traditional knowledge and be grounded in established practices developed by island communities over centuries which continue to be heavily impacted by current political and economic trends. This article presents several multi-scale case studies from islands around the world to offer a historically informed review of the cultural, environmental, political and economic systems and influences on island resilience. The discussion then shifts to the current state of vulnerable island populations, ecosystems and livelihoods, and opportunities for restoring and enhancing resilience through traditional and local knowledge and institutionalizing a longterm agenda to rebuild social and environmental justice. In doing so, this article demonstrates how small island communities can become inspiring champions of livelihood resilience to global environmental change. Our conclusions highlight best practices at the local, national and regional scales for addressing these challenges through education, women’s empowerment, health, intergenerational knowledge sharing, food security and innovative livelihood strategies such as varied mobility tactics. These practices ultimately serve as catalysts to reduce livelihood vulnerabilities and contribute to national and community level adaptive capacity to climate change, by helping forge a stronger sense of global community between small islands and non-small islands across the world. Keyword Climate change
Disasters
Islands
Livelihoods
ResilienceCopyright Holder United Nations University Institute for Environment and Human Security Copyright Year 2015 Copyright type All rights reserved -
Citation counts Search Google Scholar Access Statistics: 7179 Abstract Views, 849 File Downloads - Detailed Statistics Created: Thu, 21 May 2015, 18:28:51 JST