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E-raamat: Climate Change and Threatened Communities

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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Dec-2012
  • Kirjastus: Practical Action Publishing
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781780447353
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Dec-2012
  • Kirjastus: Practical Action Publishing
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781780447353

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Global climate change disproportionately affects rural people and indigenous groups, but their rights, knowledge, and interests concerning it are generally unacknowledged. Shifts in precipitation, cloud cover, temperature, and other climatic patterns alter their livelihood pursuits and cultural landscapes, accentuating their existing social and economic marginalization. This book argues that planners and researchers of climate change mitigation and adaptation must take into account the knowledge and capacity of rural people, and engage them as active participants in the design of interventions, not as a matter of courtesy, but because it is their right. Furthermore, inclusion of local communities in genuine partnership will likely make interventions more effective

Climate Change and Threatened Communities presents 15 case studies documenting the capacities and constraints to be encountered among communities facing changing climates in Bangladesh, Cameroon, Canada, Ecuador, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Italy, Malawi, Mexico, Mozambique, Peru, South Africa, Sudan, United States, Vietnam, and Zimbabwe. It explores human interactions in environments ranging from subarctic tundra to equatorial rain forest, from oceanic lagoons to inland mountains. Chapters investigate issues such as social vulnerability to climatic uncertainty, shifts in livelihood practices, local perceptions of climatic change, and the potential and limitations of the United Nations Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries. Authors consider the potential of archaeology, phenomenology, controlled comparisons, historical analysis, gender analysis and other analytical approaches to shed light on the experiences of communities and their members

This book is important reading for policy makers, academics, and students in the fields of climate change adaptation, anthropology and development studies, as well as more general readers
Tables
vii
About the editors viii
1 Introduction
1(14)
A. Peter Castro
Dan Taylor
David W. Brokensha
2 Climate change and forest conservation: a REDD flag for Central African forest people?
15(14)
Philip Burnham
3 Social vulnerability, climatic variability, and uncertainty in rural Ethiopia: a study of South Wollo and Oromiya Zones of eastern Amhara Region
29(12)
A. Peter Castro
4 Farmers on the frontline: adaptation and change in Malawi
41(16)
Kate Wellard
Daimon Kambewa
Sieglinde Snapp
5 Risk and abandonment, and the meta-narrative of climate change
57(12)
Dan Taylor
6 Mobilizing knowledge to build adaptive capacity: lessons from southern Mozambique
69(12)
L. Jen Shaffer
7 Climate change and the future of onion and potato production in West Darfur, Sudan: a case study of Zalingei locality
81(12)
Yassir Hassan Satti
A. Peter Castro
8 Comparing knowledge of and experience with climate change across three glaciated mountain regions
93(14)
K.W. Dunbar
Julie Brugger
Christine Jurt
Ben Orlove
9 Aapuupayuu (the weather warms up): climate change and the Eeyouch (Cree) of northern Quebec
107(12)
Kreg Ettenger
10 `The one who has changed is the person': observations and explanations of climate change in the Ecuadorian Andes
119(10)
Kristine Skarbø
Kristin Vander Molen
Rosa Ramos
Robert E. Rhoades
11 Good intentions, bad memories, and troubled capital: American Indian knowledge and action in renewable energy projects
129(10)
Raymond I. Orr
David B. Anderson
12 Reclaiming the past to respond to climate change: Mayan farmers and ancient agricultural techniques in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico
139(14)
Betty Bernice Faust
Armando Anaya-Hernandez
Helga Geovannini-Acuna
13 Can we learn from the past? Policy history and climate change in Bangladesh
153(10)
David Lewis
14 Local perceptions and adaptation to climate change: a perspective from Western India
163(12)
Dineshkumar Moghariya
15 Ethno-ecology in the shadow of rain and the light of experience: local perceptions of drought and climate change in east Sumba, Indonesia
175(10)
Yancey Orr
Russell Schimmer
Roland Geerken
16 Local knowledge and technology innovation in a changing world: traditional fishing communities in Tam Giang Cau Hai lagoon, Vietnam
185(12)
Thanh Vo
Jack Manno
17 Conclusion: some reflections on indigenous knowledge and climate change
197(4)
Dan Taylor
A. Peter Castro
David W. Brokensha
Resources 201(6)
A. Peter Castro
Notes 207(4)
Index 211