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394 R.Mechler et al.
amplified by ElNiño episodes.We show howdifferent tools andmethods can be
co-generated andused at different learning stages and across temporal and agency
scalesbyresearchersandpractitioners.Seamless integration isneitherpossible,nor
desirable, and inmany instances, an adaptivemanagement approach through,what
wecall, aShared ResilienceLearningDialogue, canprovide theboundaryprocess
thatconnects thedifferentanalyticalelementsdevelopedandparticularlylinksthose
upwith community-ledprocesses.Our critical examinationof the experience from
theAllianceleadsintosuggestionsfor identifyingnovelfundingandsupportmodels
involvingNGOs,researchersandtheprivatesectorworkingsidebysidewithpublic
sector institutions to deliver community level support formanaging risks thatmay
go“beyondadaptation.”
Keywords Flood risk ·Resilience ·Science-societypartnerships ·Boundary
objects ·Adaptivemanagement ·Learning
17.1 Introduction:The2015PolicyImperatives
andtheImplications for theLossandDamageDebate
International policy as well as local risk and resilience practice are increasingly
challenging the scientific community to provide actionable knowledge for identi-
fying acceptable and efficient responses through risk analysis, policy insight and
governance studies that help to build resilience. It has been well understood that
implementationneeds to bemulti-scalar involvingpartnerships between civil soci-
ety, private sector andgovernment entities (ENHANCE2016).
17.1.1 GlobalPolicy Imperative-ReducingRisks
andBuildingResilience
Policy related to climate risk and resilience in recent years hasmade great strides
forward.TheWorldConferenceonDisasterRiskReduction,whichledtotheSendai
Framework for Action, demonstrated increasing recognition that a broad-based
approach isnecessary to incentivise risk reduction, avoid riskcreationandgenerate
additional co-benefits that go beyond the direct and indirect gains from reducing
risk(UN2015).TheSustainableDevelopmentGoals (SDG),passedaswell in2015,
constituteauniversalsetof17goalsand169targetsdefiningdevelopmentaspiration
and ideally transformation inan integrated fashion (UN2105).Aneed for transfor-
mation is being seen as increasingly relevant for the climate discourse, and at the
endof2015,Paris sawthe full endorsementunderarticle8of theWarsawLossand
DamageMechanism (WIM),createdatCOP19to“dealwithclimate-relatedeffects,
including residual impacts after adaptation” (UNFCCC2015).
Loss and Damage from Climate Change
Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
- Titel
- Loss and Damage from Climate Change
- Untertitel
- Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
- Autoren
- Reinhard Mechler
- Laurens M. Bouwer
- Thomas Schinko
- Swenja Surminski
- JoAnne Linnerooth-Bayer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-72026-5
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 580
- Schlagwörter
- Environment, Climate change, Environmental law, Environmental policy, Risk management
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima