Values must be at the heart of responding to loss and damage

IF 3.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
K. McNamara, R. Clissold, Ross Westoby, Merewalesi Yee, Taputu Mariri, Vaine Wichman, V. Obed, Precilla Meto, Elizabeth Raynes, M. M. Nand
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

As climate change worsens, loss and damage will rapidly accelerate, causing tremendous suffering worldwide. Conceptualising loss and damage based on what people value in their everyday lives and what they consider worth preserving in the face of risk needs to be at the centre of policy and funding. This study in three Pacific Island countries utilises a local, values-based approach to explore people’s experiences of climate change, including intolerable impacts, to inform locally meaningful priorities for funding, resources, and action. What people value determines what is considered intolerable, tolerable, and acceptable in terms of climate-driven loss and damage, and this can inform which responses should be prioritised and where resources should be allocated to preserve the things that are most important to people. Given people’s different value sets and experiences of climate change across places and contexts, intolerable impacts, and responses to address them are place-dependent. We call on policy makers to ensure that understandings of, and responses to, loss and damage are locally identified and led.
应对损失和损害必须以价值观为核心
随着气候变化的加剧,损失和损害将迅速加速,在全世界造成巨大的痛苦。根据人们在日常生活中的价值以及他们认为在面临风险时值得保护的东西来确定损失和损害的概念,需要成为政策和资金的核心。这项在三个太平洋岛国开展的研究采用了一种基于当地价值观的方法,探讨人们对气候变化(包括无法忍受的影响)的体验,从而为当地有意义的资金、资源和行动优先事项提供信息。人们的价值观决定了在气候导致的损失和破坏方面,什么是不可容忍的、可容忍的和可接受的,这可以为哪些应对措施应被优先考虑以及哪些资源应被分配用于保护对人们来说最重要的事物提供信息。鉴于不同地方和背景下人们对气候变化有不同的价值观和体验,不可容忍的影响以及应对这些影响的措施都是因地制宜的。我们呼吁政策制定者确保对损失和损害的理解以及应对措施由当地确定和主导。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Climate
Frontiers in Climate Environmental Science-Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
233
审稿时长
15 weeks
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