Authors
Billie Lee Turner, Pamela A Matson, James J McCarthy, Robert W Corell, Lindsey Christensen, Noelle Eckley, Grete K Hovelsrud-Broda, Jeanne X Kasperson, Roger E Kasperson, Amy Luers, Marybeth L Martello, Svein Mathiesen, Rosamond Naylor, Colin Polsky, Alexander Pulsipher, Andrew Schiller, Henrik Selin, Nicholas Tyler
Publication date
2003/7/8
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
100
Issue
14
Pages
8080-8085
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The vulnerability framework of the Research and Assessment Systems for Sustainability Program explicitly recognizes the coupled human–environment system and accounts for interactions in the coupling affecting the system's responses to hazards and its vulnerability. This paper illustrates the usefulness of the vulnerability framework through three case studies: the tropical southern Yucatán, the arid Yaqui Valley of northwest Mexico, and the pan-Arctic. Together, these examples illustrate the role of external forces in reshaping the systems in question and their vulnerability to environmental hazards, as well as the different capacities of stakeholders, based on their access to social and biophysical capital, to respond to the changes and hazards. The framework proves useful in directing attention to the interacting parts of the coupled system and helps identify gaps in information and understanding relevant to …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BL Turner, PA Matson, JJ McCarthy, RW Corell… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003