Authors
Sonia Graham, Jon Barnett, Ruth Fincher, Anna Hurlimann, Colette Mortreux, Elissa Waters
Publication date
2013/7/1
Journal
Environmental Impact Assessment Review
Volume
41
Pages
45-52
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Analysis of the risks of sea-level rise favours conventionally measured metrics such as the area of land that may be subsumed, the numbers of properties at risk, and the capital values of assets at risk. Despite this, it is clear that there exist many less material but no less important values at risk from sea-level rise. This paper re-theorises these multifarious social values at risk from sea-level rise, by explaining their diverse nature, and grounding them in the everyday practices of people living in coastal places. It is informed by a review and analysis of research on social values from within the fields of social impact assessment, human geography, psychology, decision analysis, and climate change adaptation. From this we propose that it is the ‘lived values’ of coastal places that are most at risk from sea-level rise. We then offer a framework that groups these lived values into five types: those that are physiological in nature …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Graham, J Barnett, R Fincher, A Hurlimann… - Environmental Impact Assessment Review, 2013