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440 M.LandauerandS. Juhola
Box18.1Whyiscommunityrelocationsochallenging:ExamplefromKivalina,Alaska
KivalinaisavillageintheNorthwestArcticBoroughinAlaska,theUnitedStates.Ithasabout
400 inhabitants (mostly Inupiats) thatarenowbeingforced to relocatedue to risksof rising
sea levels and coastal erosion and also impacts of permafrost thawandheavy snowstorms
(Gregg2010;WashingtonPost2015;NOAA2017).
The village has been planning relocations for 20 years already, detailed in the Kivalina
RelocationMaster Plan published in 2006.Despite this, potential relocation options have
notbeenconsideredsuitable,due tohighcosts, socialandculturalobjectionsorbecause the
sitesunderdiscussionaregeotechnically inappropriate (Gregg2010).Efforts to respond to
climate impacts through adaptation have beenmade: such as building a rock revetment to
postpone the relocation in2010.Thedecisionon relocation is tobemade in theupcoming
decade(NOAA2017).Difficultiesinfinancingrelocationisacommonproblem.InKivalina,
relocation has been estimated to cost between 95 and 125millionUS dollars (IAW2009
cited inLynnandDonoghue2011).
TheAlaskan ecosystem services-based communities have been able to adapt to changing
conditions in the past, but institutional, financial and political barriers have hindered local
communities toparticipate indecision-making—examplesof theseare lackinggovernment
agency in charge of relocation, and funding allocated to disasters (e.g. for rebuilding) but
not for relocation (ADN2016).
Forced relocationcan lead tocultural damage, suchas lossof traditional livelihoods (Lynn
andDonoghue2011). It ishard toput aprice tocultural loss, but effortshavebeenmade to
maintain thecultureandtraditionsofKivalinaresidents,despiterelocation.This isdone, for
example,bycreatingprojectsthatenablethecommunitiestosharethoughtsaboutlocalways
of life and locate, connect andeducatenewrelocationpartners andnetworkingwithglobal
community to shape thediscourseonclimatedisplacement (see:www.relocate-ak.org).
Fig.18.3 Riskand IndigenousPeoples inAlaska
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