Displacement Induced by Climate Change Adaptation: The Case of ‘Climate Buffer’ Infrastructure

Climate buffer infrastructure is on the rise as a promising ‘green’ climate adaptation strategy. More often than not, such infrastructure building is legitimized as an urgent technical intervention—while less attention is paid to the distribution of costs and benefits among the affected population....

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Main Authors: Jeroen Frank Warner, Hanne Wiegel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/16/9160
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spelling doaj-6b5fa4eec0004ce4a652fcdd7f4490942021-08-26T14:22:16ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-08-01139160916010.3390/su13169160Displacement Induced by Climate Change Adaptation: The Case of ‘Climate Buffer’ InfrastructureJeroen Frank Warner0Hanne Wiegel1Sociology of Development and Change Chair Group, Social Sciences Group, Wageningen University, Hollandseweg 1, 7606 KN Wageningen, The NetherlandsSociology of Development and Change Chair Group, Social Sciences Group, Wageningen University, Hollandseweg 1, 7606 KN Wageningen, The NetherlandsClimate buffer infrastructure is on the rise as a promising ‘green’ climate adaptation strategy. More often than not, such infrastructure building is legitimized as an urgent technical intervention—while less attention is paid to the distribution of costs and benefits among the affected population. However, as this article shows, adaptation interventions may directly or indirectly result in the relocation or even eviction of households or communities, thereby increasing vulnerabilities for some while intending to reduce long-term climate vulnerabilities for all. We argue that this raises serious, if underappreciated, ethical issues that need to be more explicitly addressed in adaptation policy making. We illustrate our conceptual argument with the help of three examples of infrastructural ‘climate buffers’: Space for the River projects in the Netherlands, the Diamer–Bhasha dam in Pakistan and the coastal protection plan in Jakarta, Indonesia.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/16/9160climate adaptationdisplacementrelocationThe NetherlandsPakistanIndonesia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeroen Frank Warner
Hanne Wiegel
spellingShingle Jeroen Frank Warner
Hanne Wiegel
Displacement Induced by Climate Change Adaptation: The Case of ‘Climate Buffer’ Infrastructure
Sustainability
climate adaptation
displacement
relocation
The Netherlands
Pakistan
Indonesia
author_facet Jeroen Frank Warner
Hanne Wiegel
author_sort Jeroen Frank Warner
title Displacement Induced by Climate Change Adaptation: The Case of ‘Climate Buffer’ Infrastructure
title_short Displacement Induced by Climate Change Adaptation: The Case of ‘Climate Buffer’ Infrastructure
title_full Displacement Induced by Climate Change Adaptation: The Case of ‘Climate Buffer’ Infrastructure
title_fullStr Displacement Induced by Climate Change Adaptation: The Case of ‘Climate Buffer’ Infrastructure
title_full_unstemmed Displacement Induced by Climate Change Adaptation: The Case of ‘Climate Buffer’ Infrastructure
title_sort displacement induced by climate change adaptation: the case of ‘climate buffer’ infrastructure
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Climate buffer infrastructure is on the rise as a promising ‘green’ climate adaptation strategy. More often than not, such infrastructure building is legitimized as an urgent technical intervention—while less attention is paid to the distribution of costs and benefits among the affected population. However, as this article shows, adaptation interventions may directly or indirectly result in the relocation or even eviction of households or communities, thereby increasing vulnerabilities for some while intending to reduce long-term climate vulnerabilities for all. We argue that this raises serious, if underappreciated, ethical issues that need to be more explicitly addressed in adaptation policy making. We illustrate our conceptual argument with the help of three examples of infrastructural ‘climate buffers’: Space for the River projects in the Netherlands, the Diamer–Bhasha dam in Pakistan and the coastal protection plan in Jakarta, Indonesia.
topic climate adaptation
displacement
relocation
The Netherlands
Pakistan
Indonesia
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/16/9160
work_keys_str_mv AT jeroenfrankwarner displacementinducedbyclimatechangeadaptationthecaseofclimatebufferinfrastructure
AT hannewiegel displacementinducedbyclimatechangeadaptationthecaseofclimatebufferinfrastructure
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