TY - JOUR
T1 - Adaptation interventions and their effect on vulnerability in developing countries
T2 - Help, hindrance or irrelevance?
AU - Eriksen, Siri
AU - Schipper, E. Lisa F.
AU - Scoville-Simonds, Morgan
AU - Vincent, Katharine
AU - Adam, Hans Nicolai
AU - Brooks, Nick
AU - Harding, Brian
AU - Khatri, Dil
AU - Lenaerts, Lutgart
AU - Liverman, Diana
AU - Mills-Novoa, Megan
AU - Mosberg, Marianne
AU - Movik, Synne
AU - Muok, Benard
AU - Nightingale, Andrea
AU - Ojha, Hemant
AU - Sygna, Linda
AU - Taylor, Marcus
AU - Vogel, Coleen
AU - West, Jennifer Joy
N1 - Funding Information:
An earlier version of this manuscript was submitted to the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in December 2018 as a background paper in response to a request by the Norwegian Minister of International Development to document how adaptation policy and programmes are affecting vulnerability, including both positive and negative impacts. The considerable time and effort contributed by 20 authors representing 24 institutions around the world draw on the experiences and knowledge generated by diverse research as well as adaptation interventions in which the authors have been involved, either in design, implementation or evaluation. While the writing largely took place through authors volunteering their free time, our joint expertise emerges from a multitude of past and present research projects, such as those funded by the following grants: the Swedish Research Council Development grant (#2015-03323) “Conflict, Violence and Environmental Change: Investigating resource governance and legitimacy in transitional societies”; the Swiss National Science Foundation grant (#168266) “Adapting to a changing discursive climate”; the Research Council of Norway grant (#289957) “Transformation as Praxis: Exploring Socially Just and Transdisciplinary Pathways to Sustainability in Marginal Environments’ (TAPESTRY)”; the Research Council of Norway grant (#244551) “CiXPAG - Interaction of Climate Extremes, Air Pollution and Agro-ecosystems”; the University of Arizona, US, Office of Research grant (#2107534); the National Science Foundation Geography and Spatial Sciences Program - Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Awards (#2002829); the Swedish Research Council (VR) Sustainability and Resilience grant (#2018-05866) “Governing Climate Resilient Futures: gender, justice and conflict resolution in resource management (JUSTCLIME)”; the Research Council of Norway grant (#250434/F10) “Adaptation: Combining Old and New kNowledge to Enable Conscious Transformation to Sustainability (AdaptationCONNECTS); and the Research Council of Canada grant (#1232014-435). We would like to thank two anonymous reviewers for their useful comments. The views and perspectives presented in this publication remain the responsibility of the authors, however.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors
PY - 2021/5
Y1 - 2021/5
N2 - This paper critically reviews the outcomes of internationally-funded interventions aimed at climate change adaptation and vulnerability reduction. It highlights how some interventions inadvertently reinforce, redistribute or create new sources of vulnerability. Four mechanisms drive these maladaptive outcomes: (i) shallow understanding of the vulnerability context; (ii) inequitable stakeholder participation in both design and implementation; (iii) a retrofitting of adaptation into existing development agendas; and (iv) a lack of critical engagement with how ‘adaptation success’ is defined. Emerging literature shows potential avenues for overcoming the current failure of adaptation interventions to reduce vulnerability: first, shifting the terms of engagement between adaptation practitioners and the local populations participating in adaptation interventions; and second, expanding the understanding of ‘local’ vulnerability to encompass global contexts and drivers of vulnerability. An important lesson from past adaptation interventions is that within current adaptation cum development paradigms, inequitable terms of engagement with ‘vulnerable’ populations are reproduced and the multi-scalar processes driving vulnerability remain largely ignored. In particular, instead of designing projects to change the practices of marginalised populations, learning processes within organisations and with marginalised populations must be placed at the centre of adaptation objectives. We pose the question of whether scholarship and practice need to take a post-adaptation turn akin to post-development, by seeking a pluralism of ideas about adaptation while critically interrogating how these ideas form part of the politics of adaptation and potentially the processes (re)producing vulnerability. We caution that unless the politics of framing and of scale are explicitly tackled, transformational interventions risk having even more adverse effects on marginalised populations than current adaptation.
AB - This paper critically reviews the outcomes of internationally-funded interventions aimed at climate change adaptation and vulnerability reduction. It highlights how some interventions inadvertently reinforce, redistribute or create new sources of vulnerability. Four mechanisms drive these maladaptive outcomes: (i) shallow understanding of the vulnerability context; (ii) inequitable stakeholder participation in both design and implementation; (iii) a retrofitting of adaptation into existing development agendas; and (iv) a lack of critical engagement with how ‘adaptation success’ is defined. Emerging literature shows potential avenues for overcoming the current failure of adaptation interventions to reduce vulnerability: first, shifting the terms of engagement between adaptation practitioners and the local populations participating in adaptation interventions; and second, expanding the understanding of ‘local’ vulnerability to encompass global contexts and drivers of vulnerability. An important lesson from past adaptation interventions is that within current adaptation cum development paradigms, inequitable terms of engagement with ‘vulnerable’ populations are reproduced and the multi-scalar processes driving vulnerability remain largely ignored. In particular, instead of designing projects to change the practices of marginalised populations, learning processes within organisations and with marginalised populations must be placed at the centre of adaptation objectives. We pose the question of whether scholarship and practice need to take a post-adaptation turn akin to post-development, by seeking a pluralism of ideas about adaptation while critically interrogating how these ideas form part of the politics of adaptation and potentially the processes (re)producing vulnerability. We caution that unless the politics of framing and of scale are explicitly tackled, transformational interventions risk having even more adverse effects on marginalised populations than current adaptation.
KW - Climate change adaptation
KW - Climate resilient development
KW - Development interventions
KW - Maladaptation
KW - Post-adaptation
KW - Vulnerability
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85099621811&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.worlddev.2020.105383
DO - 10.1016/j.worlddev.2020.105383
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85099621811
SN - 0305-750X
VL - 141
SP - 1
EP - 16
JO - World Development
JF - World Development
M1 - 105383
ER -