Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1063215 Resources, Conservation and Recycling 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

In different parts of the world, neo-liberal politics is shifting responsibilities from the nation state to other governmental and non-governmental actors. This is also evident in the governance of adaptation to the impacts of climate change, where the responsibility of the individual is increasingly stressed. This paper focuses on institutions for local water management in the Netherlands and aims to explain how the institutional shift to individual responsibility affects the adaptive capacity of society to deal with the impacts of climate change. The paper uses a case study approach in which stakeholders are interviewed; the analysis is then structured along an ‘Adaptive Capacity Wheel’. It concludes that the recent institutional shift creates different challenges for increasing the adaptive capacity, amongst others: a lack of clearly defined responsibilities and accountability procedures, scattered and not easily accessible information to individuals, an overlap in municipal and individual responsibility, and differences in social context that call for context-specific management approaches pose challenges to increasing the adaptive capacity. The paper also draws conclusions on the methodology used.

► Studies the impacts of institutional change on adaptive capacity. ► Uses a ‘hard’ concept (individual responsibility) in a ‘soft’ social science approach. ► Applies a recently introduced analytical framework: the Adaptive Capacity Wheel. ► Identifies challenges of increased individual responsibility for adaptive capacity.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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