Book contents
- Adaptiveness
- Adaptiveness
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1 On Adaptiveness
- 2 Synthesising and Identifying Emerging Issues in Adaptiveness Research within the Earth System Governance Framework (1998–2018)
- 3 Climate Change Adaptive Capacity Assessments
- 4 Assessing the Adaptive Capacity of Collaborative Governance Institutions
- 5 The Marine Debris Nexus
- 6 Synergies and Trade-Offs between Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation across Multiple Scales of Governance
- 7 Lock-Ins in Climate Adaptation Governance
- 8 Governance and Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation in Conflict-Affected Countries of Central Africa
- 9 Policy Tools and Capacities for Adaptiveness in US Public Land Management
- 10 Adaptiveness in Earth System Governance
- Index
- References
6 - Synergies and Trade-Offs between Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation across Multiple Scales of Governance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 June 2021
- Adaptiveness
- Adaptiveness
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1 On Adaptiveness
- 2 Synthesising and Identifying Emerging Issues in Adaptiveness Research within the Earth System Governance Framework (1998–2018)
- 3 Climate Change Adaptive Capacity Assessments
- 4 Assessing the Adaptive Capacity of Collaborative Governance Institutions
- 5 The Marine Debris Nexus
- 6 Synergies and Trade-Offs between Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation across Multiple Scales of Governance
- 7 Lock-Ins in Climate Adaptation Governance
- 8 Governance and Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation in Conflict-Affected Countries of Central Africa
- 9 Policy Tools and Capacities for Adaptiveness in US Public Land Management
- 10 Adaptiveness in Earth System Governance
- Index
- References
Summary
To catalyse action for both mitigation and adaptation to anthropogenic climate change, improved understanding of synergies and trade-offs induced by differential governance interventions in earth system dynamics is needed at multiple scales – local to national and global. This chapter applies a social-ecological systems (SES) analytical approach and a novel interdisciplinary integrative framework for trade-off analysis embedded within an SES approach to analyse cross-scale impacts of three specific UNFCCC-mediated policy mechanisms aimed at mitigation and/or adaptation to climate change:Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+), the Clean Development Mechanism, and the Adaptation Fund. Evidence from published studies is presented to identify synergies and trade-offs among mitigation and adaptation impacts of these policy mechanisms. It is argued that the SES approach may provide a scalable, replicable, and integrative analytical approach to rigorously analyse the synergies and trade-offs of different global to local policy mechanisms and their feedback effects from local to global scales.
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- Information
- Adaptiveness: Changing Earth System Governance , pp. 102 - 126Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
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