Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Adaptation now
- Part I Adapting to thresholds in physical and ecological systems
- Part II The role of values and culture in adaptation
- Part III Governance, knowledge and technologies for adaptation
- 20 Whether our levers are long enough and the fulcrum strong? Exploring the soft underbelly of adaptation decisions and actions
- 21 Decentralized planning and climate adaptation: toward transparent governance
- 22 Climate adaptation, local institutions and rural livelihoods
- 23 Adaptive governance for a changing coastline: science, policy and publics in search of a sustainable future
- 24 Climate change, international cooperation and adaptation in transboundary water management
- 25 Decentralization: a window of opportunity for successful adaptation to climate change?
- 26 Adapting to climate change in Sámi reindeer herding: the nation-state as problem and solution
- 27 Limits to adaptation: analysing institutional constraints
- 28 Accessing diversification, networks and traditional resource management as adaptations to climate extremes
- 29 Governance limits to effective global financial support for adaptation
- 30 Organizational learning and governance in adaptation in urban development
- 31 Conclusions: Transforming the world
- Index
- References
25 - Decentralization: a window of opportunity for successful adaptation to climate change?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Adaptation now
- Part I Adapting to thresholds in physical and ecological systems
- Part II The role of values and culture in adaptation
- Part III Governance, knowledge and technologies for adaptation
- 20 Whether our levers are long enough and the fulcrum strong? Exploring the soft underbelly of adaptation decisions and actions
- 21 Decentralized planning and climate adaptation: toward transparent governance
- 22 Climate adaptation, local institutions and rural livelihoods
- 23 Adaptive governance for a changing coastline: science, policy and publics in search of a sustainable future
- 24 Climate change, international cooperation and adaptation in transboundary water management
- 25 Decentralization: a window of opportunity for successful adaptation to climate change?
- 26 Adapting to climate change in Sámi reindeer herding: the nation-state as problem and solution
- 27 Limits to adaptation: analysing institutional constraints
- 28 Accessing diversification, networks and traditional resource management as adaptations to climate extremes
- 29 Governance limits to effective global financial support for adaptation
- 30 Organizational learning and governance in adaptation in urban development
- 31 Conclusions: Transforming the world
- Index
- References
Summary
Introduction
In times of fundamental changes and shifts in institutional, political and economic structures at various scales, climate change and variability also exert a strong pressure on the resilience of social–ecological systems (IPCC, 2007). The IPCC states that African countries will be affected most by future climate change, since among other factors, widespread poverty, demographic changes, constrained institutional realities and inadequate political strategies are significantly limiting local adaptation capabilities (DFID, 2006; World Bank, 2006). In West Africa, livelihoods are highly dependent on forest ecosystem goods and services (FEGS), often in interplay with agricultural and livestock production systems. To reduce the growing risk of vulnerability under climate change, technical and societal adaptation is needed. Revised governance structures may enable adaptation at multiple levels and layers.
This chapter examines the opportunities and barriers for successful adaptation to climate change and variability in the context of an ongoing decentralization process, by examining the relatively understudied relationship between adaptive capacity and features of governance and culture. Here we present a case study on forests, climate change and aspects of adaptive capacity under a changing institutional landscape in two municipalities in the south-west of Burkina Faso. Adaptive capacity, in this chapter, is also understood as a function of governance features – such as institutional governance structures – and the individual understandings of the actors involved in decision-making processes related to FEGS. The chapter concludes by highlighting the importance of knowledge to overcome resource dependency and of two key features of governance essential for technical and societal adaptation to climate change: (1) individual understandings and (2) institutional flexibility dependent upon close links with local realities.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Adapting to Climate ChangeThresholds, Values, Governance, pp. 399 - 416Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
References
- 8
- Cited by