4.7 Article

Everyday Adaptation: Theorizing climate change adaptation in daily life

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2022.102555

关键词

Adaptation; Climate Change; Vulnerability; Adaptive Capacity; Everyday Action

资金

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Weatherhead Center for International Affairs
  3. Gertrude and Otto Pollak Fellowship
  4. Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowship
  5. Center for Advanced Study of India
  6. David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies

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Climate science shows that urgent adaptation is necessary for both natural and human systems. Adaptation includes changes in societies and ecological systems in response to actual and anticipated impacts of climate change. While current adaptation practice focuses on institutional action, we argue for a broader definition that includes small, incremental changes in daily life to accommodate shifting ecologies. We propose the concept of everyday adaptation, which refers to the ways individuals work, eat, live, and think in response to climate realities. Understanding the logic and effects of everyday adaptation is crucial for better aligning individual actions with large-scale adaptation projects and protecting the livelihood and quality of life in climate change affected areas.
Climate science to date demonstrates that natural and human systems must urgently adapt. Adaptation refers to changes in societies and ecological systems as they respond to both actual and anticipated impacts of the changing climate. While adaptation is not limited to the level of planning and policy, existing adaptation practice privileges institutional action. We argue that the definition of adaptation should be broadened to include the small, incremental changes made in our daily lives to accommodate the shifting ecologies in which we live. Drawing on critical adaptation research and our own ethnographic fieldwork in the Global South, we define everyday adaptation as the shifted ways a person works, eats, lives and thinks in response to climate realities, rather than the hardening of coastlines or the relocation of vulnerable structures. We integrate and build on existing scholarship on adaptation and the everyday to theorize the logics of everyday, hyperlocal adaptation. This hyperlocal scale is a critical component of any definition of adaptation and a useful lens for studying the way much of the global population adapts and will continue to adapt their lives to climate change. We offer two theoretical components of adaptation revealed by the everyday - adaptation labor and value adaptation - as lenses to see changes in everyday action. Through considering hyperlocal action, we then identify and explore four logics of everyday adaptation actions: lifestyle stability, socio-ecological reactivity, livelihood flexibility, and community capacity. Everyday adaptations are limited by individuals' capacity to adapt and thereby determine the longevity, livability, and quality of life of places on the frontlines of climate change. We argue for understanding the aggregate effects of everyday adaptation in order to better align the actions of those living with climate change in their everyday lives and the large-scale adaptation projects aiming to protect them.

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