Adaptation or Manipulation? Unpacking Climate Change Response Strategies

Adaptation is a key feature of sustainable social-ecological systems. As societies traverse various temporal and spatial scales, they are exposed to differing contexts and precursors for adaptation. A cursory view of the response to these differing contexts and precursors suggests the particular abi...

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Main Authors: Dana C. Thomsen, Timothy F. Smith, Noni Keys
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2012-09-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss3/art20/
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spelling doaj-69dcdd44503e4185a024e2ff218ae7fc2020-11-25T00:31:52ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872012-09-011732010.5751/ES-04953-1703204953Adaptation or Manipulation? Unpacking Climate Change Response StrategiesDana C. Thomsen0Timothy F. Smith1Noni Keys2Sustainability Research Centre, University of the Sunshine CoastSustainability Research Centre, University of the Sunshine CoastSustainability Research Centre, University of the Sunshine CoastAdaptation is a key feature of sustainable social-ecological systems. As societies traverse various temporal and spatial scales, they are exposed to differing contexts and precursors for adaptation. A cursory view of the response to these differing contexts and precursors suggests the particular ability of persistent societies to adapt to changing circumstances. Yet a closer examination into the meaning of adaptation and its relationship to concepts of resilience, vulnerability, and sustainability illustrates that, in many cases, societies actually manipulate their social-ecological contexts rather than adapt to them. It could be argued that manipulative behaviors are a subset of a broader suite of adaptive behaviors; however, this paper suggests that manipulative behaviors have fundamentally different intentions and outcomes. Specifically, adaptive behaviors are respectful of the intrinsic integrity of social-ecological systems and change is directed toward internal or self-regulating modification. By way of contrast, manipulative behaviors tend to disregard the integrity of social-ecological systems and focus on external change or manipulating the broader system with the aim of making self-regulation unnecessary. It is argued that adaptive behaviors represent long-term strategies for building resilience, whereas manipulative behaviors represent short-term strategies with uncertain consequences for resilience, vulnerability, and the sustainability of social-ecological systems. Of greatest significance; however, is that manipulative strategies have the potential to avoid authentic experiences of system dynamics, obscure valuable learning opportunities, create adverse path dependencies, and lessen the likelihood of effective adaptation in future contexts.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss3/art20/adaptationadaptive capacityclimate changelearningmanipulationpath dependencyresilience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dana C. Thomsen
Timothy F. Smith
Noni Keys
spellingShingle Dana C. Thomsen
Timothy F. Smith
Noni Keys
Adaptation or Manipulation? Unpacking Climate Change Response Strategies
Ecology and Society
adaptation
adaptive capacity
climate change
learning
manipulation
path dependency
resilience
author_facet Dana C. Thomsen
Timothy F. Smith
Noni Keys
author_sort Dana C. Thomsen
title Adaptation or Manipulation? Unpacking Climate Change Response Strategies
title_short Adaptation or Manipulation? Unpacking Climate Change Response Strategies
title_full Adaptation or Manipulation? Unpacking Climate Change Response Strategies
title_fullStr Adaptation or Manipulation? Unpacking Climate Change Response Strategies
title_full_unstemmed Adaptation or Manipulation? Unpacking Climate Change Response Strategies
title_sort adaptation or manipulation? unpacking climate change response strategies
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2012-09-01
description Adaptation is a key feature of sustainable social-ecological systems. As societies traverse various temporal and spatial scales, they are exposed to differing contexts and precursors for adaptation. A cursory view of the response to these differing contexts and precursors suggests the particular ability of persistent societies to adapt to changing circumstances. Yet a closer examination into the meaning of adaptation and its relationship to concepts of resilience, vulnerability, and sustainability illustrates that, in many cases, societies actually manipulate their social-ecological contexts rather than adapt to them. It could be argued that manipulative behaviors are a subset of a broader suite of adaptive behaviors; however, this paper suggests that manipulative behaviors have fundamentally different intentions and outcomes. Specifically, adaptive behaviors are respectful of the intrinsic integrity of social-ecological systems and change is directed toward internal or self-regulating modification. By way of contrast, manipulative behaviors tend to disregard the integrity of social-ecological systems and focus on external change or manipulating the broader system with the aim of making self-regulation unnecessary. It is argued that adaptive behaviors represent long-term strategies for building resilience, whereas manipulative behaviors represent short-term strategies with uncertain consequences for resilience, vulnerability, and the sustainability of social-ecological systems. Of greatest significance; however, is that manipulative strategies have the potential to avoid authentic experiences of system dynamics, obscure valuable learning opportunities, create adverse path dependencies, and lessen the likelihood of effective adaptation in future contexts.
topic adaptation
adaptive capacity
climate change
learning
manipulation
path dependency
resilience
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss3/art20/
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AT nonikeys adaptationormanipulationunpackingclimatechangeresponsestrategies
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