Global evidence of constraints and limits to human adaptation
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Thomas, Adelle
Theokritoff, Emily
Lesnikowski, Alexandra
Reckien, Diana
Jagannathan, Kripa
Cremades, Roger
Campbell, Donovan
Joe, Elphin Tom
Sitati, Asha
Singh, Chandni
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Springer
Abstract
Constraints and limits to adaptation are critical to understanding the extent to which human and natural systems can successfully adapt to climate change. We conduct a systematic review of 1,682 academic studies on human adaptation responses to identify patterns in constraints and limits to adaptation for different regions, sectors, hazards, adaptation response types, and actors. Using definitions of constraints and limits provided by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), we find that most literature identifies constraints to adaptation but that there is limited literature focused on limits to adaptation. Central and South America and Small Islands generally report greater constraints and both hard and soft limits to adaptation. Technological, infrastructural, and ecosystem-based adaptation suggest more evidence of constraints and hard limits than other types of responses. Individuals and households face economic and socio-cultural constraints which also inhibit behavioral adaptation responses and may lead to limits. Finance, governance, institutional, and policy constraints are most prevalent globally. These findings provide early signposts for boundaries of human adaptation and are of high relevance for guiding proactive adaptation financing and governance from local to global scales.
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Regional Environmental Change
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution licence
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