Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach

The multidimensional impacts of climate change necessitate participation of large scale organizations in the management of vulnerability to climate change. Operating at multiple levels of governance, these organizations help manage the deleterious effects of changing climate for different sectors of...

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Main Authors: Ishtiaque, A., Eakin, H., Chhetri, N., Myint, S., Dewan, Ashraf, Kamruzzaman, M.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74573
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author Ishtiaque, A.
Eakin, H.
Chhetri, N.
Myint, S.
Dewan, Ashraf
Kamruzzaman, M.
author_facet Ishtiaque, A.
Eakin, H.
Chhetri, N.
Myint, S.
Dewan, Ashraf
Kamruzzaman, M.
author_sort Ishtiaque, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The multidimensional impacts of climate change necessitate participation of large scale organizations in the management of vulnerability to climate change. Operating at multiple levels of governance, these organizations help manage the deleterious effects of changing climate for different sectors of human-environment systems. How they frame vulnerability, what influences their framings, why are their framings aligned or misaligned: while these are critical questions for managing vulnerability, they are often overlooked in the literature. By ‘framing’ we mean how actors understand and evaluate key factors of vulnerability. Through a case study in Bangladesh, we analyze how vulnerability is framed by the leading organizations across five sectors and three levels of governance. Drawing from key-informant interviews, we developed a spatial multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) approach and identified vulnerability hotspots. With few variations, our study reveals that the framings of vulnerability are mostly aligned across scale irrespective at which stakeholders are operating. Collectively, proximity to river/sea along with poverty, schooling, cropping intensity, soil salinity, and availability of multipurpose disaster shelters are identified as key determinants of vulnerability by all organizations. They prioritize infrastructural and agricultural development as basis for vulnerability management. We argue that similarity of the understanding of vulnerability across scale would facilitate adaptation decision-making process. However, less focus on socio-economic criteria can undermine the success of adaptation initiatives. While the findings of this study can assist the decision-makers of Bangladesh in coastal vulnerability management, the methodological approach should be useful to assess coastal vulnerability in other parts of the world as well.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2019
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-745732019-08-22T02:02:27Z Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach Ishtiaque, A. Eakin, H. Chhetri, N. Myint, S. Dewan, Ashraf Kamruzzaman, M. The multidimensional impacts of climate change necessitate participation of large scale organizations in the management of vulnerability to climate change. Operating at multiple levels of governance, these organizations help manage the deleterious effects of changing climate for different sectors of human-environment systems. How they frame vulnerability, what influences their framings, why are their framings aligned or misaligned: while these are critical questions for managing vulnerability, they are often overlooked in the literature. By ‘framing’ we mean how actors understand and evaluate key factors of vulnerability. Through a case study in Bangladesh, we analyze how vulnerability is framed by the leading organizations across five sectors and three levels of governance. Drawing from key-informant interviews, we developed a spatial multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) approach and identified vulnerability hotspots. With few variations, our study reveals that the framings of vulnerability are mostly aligned across scale irrespective at which stakeholders are operating. Collectively, proximity to river/sea along with poverty, schooling, cropping intensity, soil salinity, and availability of multipurpose disaster shelters are identified as key determinants of vulnerability by all organizations. They prioritize infrastructural and agricultural development as basis for vulnerability management. We argue that similarity of the understanding of vulnerability across scale would facilitate adaptation decision-making process. However, less focus on socio-economic criteria can undermine the success of adaptation initiatives. While the findings of this study can assist the decision-makers of Bangladesh in coastal vulnerability management, the methodological approach should be useful to assess coastal vulnerability in other parts of the world as well. 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74573 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2019.01.020 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Ishtiaque, A.
Eakin, H.
Chhetri, N.
Myint, S.
Dewan, Ashraf
Kamruzzaman, M.
Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach
title Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach
title_full Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach
title_fullStr Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach
title_full_unstemmed Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach
title_short Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach
title_sort examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial mcda approach
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74573