ABSTRACT

Climate change poses multiple challenges to development. It affects lives and livelihoods, infrastructure and institutions, as well as beliefs, cultures and identities. There is a growing recognition that the social dimensions of vulnerability and adaptation now need to move to the forefront of development policies and practices.

This book presents case studies showing that climate change is as much a problem of development as for development, with many of the risks closely linked to past, present and future development pathways. Development policies and practices can play a key role in addressing climate change, but it is critical to question to what extent such actions and interventions reproduce, rather than address, the social and political structures and development pathways driving vulnerability. The chapters emphasise that adaptation is about much more than a set of projects or interventions to reduce specific impacts of climate change; it is about living with change while also transforming the processes that contribute to vulnerability in the first place.

This book will help students in the field of climate change and development to make sense of adaptation as a social process, and it will provide practitioners, policymakers and researchers working at the interface between climate change and development with useful insights for approaching adaptation as part of a larger transformation to sustainability.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

Development as usual is not enough

chapter 2|20 pages

Building adaptive capacity in the informal settlements of Maputo

Lessons for development from a resilience perspective

chapter 4|29 pages

Adaptive capacity

From coping to sustainable transformation

chapter 5|15 pages

Gender matters

Adaptive capacities to climate variability and change in the Lake Victoria Basin

chapter 8|22 pages

Can linking small- and large-scale farmers enhance adaptive capacity?

Evidence from Tanzania's Southern Agricultural Growth Corridor

chapter 10|22 pages

Sustainable adaptation under adverse development?

Lessons from Ethiopia

chapter 12|16 pages

A socionature approach to adaptation

Political transition, intersectionality, and climate change programmes in Nepal

chapter 13|16 pages

Influencing policy and action on climate-change adaptation

Strategic stakeholder engagement in the agricultural sector in Tanzania

chapter 14|22 pages

Limited room for manoeuvre

Indigenous peoples and climate-change adaptation strategies

chapter 15|17 pages

Climate change and development

Adaptation through transformation