The Politics of Maladaptation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How can we understand the political identity of maladaptive adaptations to climate change?
- What are the problems in trying to understand maladaptation as a political phenomenon?
- What are the implications and significance of the politics of maladaptation?
2. Adaptation
2.1. Adaptation in the Climate Change Discourse
- a broadening of perspectives of what constitutes adaptation and how it is to be understood, including that of political inquiry and critique, thereby opening the maladaptation discourse,
- closer engagement with the disaster risk reduction discourse,
- closer engagement with the sustainable development discourse and,
- a critical debate over whether adaptation should be ‘transformative’ or perpetuate the socio-economic and socio-ecological status quo.
2.2. Judging Policy Success and Failure
2.3. Maladaptation in the Climate Change Discourse
- fail to achieve their intended effects,
- produce counter-productive effects that increase vulnerabilities or the scale/scope of actual/potential impacts that they were intended to address,
- generate direct negative consequences and
- cause indirect negative consequences in other systems, locations, in other sectors and in other realms.
3. Political Issues in Maladaptation
3.1. Establishing the Political Character of Maladaptation
3.2. Is Maladaptation Identical to Failed Adaptation?
4. Political Themes in Maladaptation
4.1. Political Themes of Climate Adaptation in Comparison with Maladaptation
4.2. Maladaptation and Knowledge
- ‘known knowns’; outcomes known to the adaptation measure progenitors and known more widely; possible negative outcomes are known to all policy actors, but the adaptation measure is undertaken nevertheless,
- ‘blind spots’; outcomes known to others but not known to the adaptation measure progenitors; possible negative outcomes are known to outside policy actors, drawn either from previous experiences, research or traditional knowledge/local experience, but not to those undertaking the adaptation measure,
- ‘unknown unknowns’; outcomes not known by any of the actors involved and
- deliberate obfuscation; outcomes known to the progenitors but not known to others.
- escalating challenges exhaust adaptive capacities,
- systems are locally adaptive but globally maladaptive and
- persistent adaptive behaviour that fails to adapt to prevailing or future changed circumstances.
4.3. Maladaptation and Representation: Participation in Decision Making
5. A Political Typology of Maladaptation
5.1. Maladaptation and Institutional Politics
5.2. Maladaptation and Political Economy Politics
- enclosure; captures and transfers resources or authority, including through privatization,
- exclusion; prevents or inhibits stakeholder engagement in political processes and decision making,
- encroachment; harms species, ecosystems, ecological processes and natural resources and
- entrenchment; increases social and economic inequality through disempowering the already disadvantaged, notably women and minorities.
5.3. Maladaptation and Environmental Justice Politics
5.4. Maladaptation and Political Ecology Politics
6. Conclusions
6.1. How Can We Understand the Political Identity of Maladaptive Adaptations to Climate Change?
- those of pre-existing conditions,
- those of undertaking adaptation, and
- those of the consequences of climate change impacts and the associated adaptation measures.
6.2. What Are the Problems in Trying to Understand Maladaptation as a Political Phenomenon?
- difficulties of assessment arising from temporal factors occurring when maladaptations have lengthy lead times and/or involve delayed effects,
- inadequate data/information on key variables and
- dynamic circumstances where continual developments occur in ongoing public policies.
6.3. What Are the Implications and Significance of the Politics of Maladaptation?
- inform the debate over the progressive/transformative character and potential of adaptation,
- adjudge if adaptation maintains the status quo which may entail favouring vested interests and/or elites and those with influence in public policy processes
- reveal if the cause of a progressive economic/environmental/political/social agenda is being hampered and
- add a neglected dimension to the definition of maladaptation, both in terms of assessment and as entity of adaptation.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Conceptual Challenge | Exemplars of Key Question(s) | |
---|---|---|
Attribution | Who is responsible for maladaptation? | |
Causal Type: Natural and Social Causation | How to treat natural disaster causes and socio-technical causes of maladaptation? | |
Contingency | Where are the causes of maladaptation located and do these lie outside the realm of the adaptation? Are maladaptation consequences restricted to the location/site of the adaptation or should off-site effects be considered? | |
Outcome Predictability | Could maladaptative outcomes been reasonably expected or foreseen? | |
Temporal Causal Chain | How long into the future is it reasonable to adjudge adaptations as having become maladaptative; i.e., What distinguishes the short- and long-term? | |
Ideation | Core ideas | What constitutes maladaptation? |
Moral Purpose | What are the moral and/or ethical reasonings underpinning the identification of maladaptation? How do these relate to those of the maladapted adaptation measure? | |
Primary Directive of Adaptation Regarding Natural Systems | What is adaptation seeking to achieve in natural systems? By implication, what is the baseline of natural conditions used for assessing adaptation measures and the subsequent identification of maladaptation? | |
Relationship to Adaptation | What differentiates maladaptation from failed/unsatisfactory adaptation? | |
Identity | Epistemology | Can maladaptation be established objectively, or does it only depend on the perspective of the observer? How is subjectivity to be addressed in maladaptation assessments? |
Ontology and Classification | What defines maladaptation and can different forms/types be identified? | |
Scale of Phenomena | What extent of adaptation failure counts as maladaptation? | |
Singular or Multifaced Phenomena? | Are adaptations maladaptive as a whole or in part? Can maladaptation occur alongside adaptation successes? |
Political Perspective | Political Realm of Interest | Dominant Maladaptation Concerns |
---|---|---|
Institutional politics | Public sector decision-making | Maladaptation as an outcome of institutional factors, including decision making processes |
Political economy | Projects/actions through international agencies | Maladaptation as an outcome of political/economic power, vested interests, historic inequalities |
Environmental justice | International/national policy; society in general; Nature | Social inequities/injustices arising directly/indirectly through the medium of the environment from adaptation measures |
Political ecology | Nature/society interface | Loss or diminution of environmental values; some have resulting negative social outcomes |
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Glover, L.; Granberg, M. The Politics of Maladaptation. Climate 2021, 9, 69. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli9050069
Glover L, Granberg M. The Politics of Maladaptation. Climate. 2021; 9(5):69. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli9050069
Chicago/Turabian StyleGlover, Leigh, and Mikael Granberg. 2021. "The Politics of Maladaptation" Climate 9, no. 5: 69. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli9050069
APA StyleGlover, L., & Granberg, M. (2021). The Politics of Maladaptation. Climate, 9(5), 69. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli9050069