Climate Change and Threatened Communities
Vulnerability, Capacity, and Action
A. Peter Castro (Redaktør) ; Dan Taylor (Redaktør) ; David W. Brokensha (Redaktør)
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(Paperback)
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Leveringstid:
Sendes innen 21 dager
It is important reading for policy makers and academics in climate change adaptation, anthropology and development studies.
- FAKTA
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Utgitt:
2012
Forlag: Practical Action Publishing
Innbinding: Paperback
Språk: Engelsk
ISBN: 9781853397356
Format: 23 x 16 cm
- KATEGORIER:
- VURDERING
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Les vurderinger
Prelims (Tables, Boxes); 1. Introduction; A. Peter Castro, Dan Taylor, and David W. Brokensha; 2. Climate change and forest conservation: a REDD flag for Central African forest people? Philip Burnham; 3. Social vulnerability, climatic variability, and uncertainty in rural Ethiopia: a study of South Wollo and Oromiya Zones of eastern Amhara Region; A. Peter Castro; 4. Farmers on the frontline: adaptation and change in Malawi; Kate Wellard, Daimon Kambewa, and Sieglinde Snapp; 5. Risk and abandonment and the meta-narrative of climate change; Dan Taylor; 6. Mobilizing knowledge to build adaptive capacity: lessons from southern Mozambique; J. Shaffer; 7. Climate change and the future of onion and potato production in West Darfur, Sudan: a case study of Zalingei locality; Yassir Hassan Satti and A. Peter Castro; 8. Comparing knowledge of and experience with climate change across three glaciated mountain regions; K.W. Dunbar, Julie Brugger, Christine Jurt, and Ben Orlove; 9. Aapuupayuu (the weather warms up): climate change and the Eeyouch (Cree) of northern Quebec; Kreg T. Ettenger; 10. 'The one who has changed is the person': observations and explanations of climate change in the Ecuadorian Andes; Kristine Skarbo, Kristin Vander Molen, Rosa Ramos, and Robert E. Rhoades; 11. Good intentions, bad memories, and troubled capital: American Indian knowledge and action in renewable energy projects; Raymond I. Orr and David B. Anderson; 12. Reclaiming the past to respond to climate change: Mayan farmers and ancient agricultural techniques in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico; Betty Bernice Faust, Armando Anaya Hernandez, and Helga Geovannini Acuna; 13. Can we learn from the past? policy history and climate change in Bangladesh David Lewis; 14. Local perceptions and adaptation to climate change: a perspective from Western India; Dineshkumar Moghariya; 15. Ethno-ecology in the shadow of rain and light of experience: local perceptions of drought and climate change in East Sumba, Indonesia; Yancey Orr, Russell Schimmer and Roland Geerken; 16. Local knowledge and technology innovation in a changing world: traditional fishing communities in Tam Giang Cau Hai lagoon, Vietnam; Thanh Vo and Jack Manno; 17. Conclusion: some reflections on indigenous knowledge and climate change Dan Taylor, A. Peter Castro, and David W. Brokensha Resources A. Peter Castro; Back Matter (Index)