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Livelihood resilience in the face of climate change

Tanner, T.; Lewis, D.; Wrathall, D.; Bronen, R.; Cradock-Henry, N.; Huq, S.; Lawless, C.; Nawrotzki, R.; Prasad, V.; Rahman, M.A.; Alaniz, R.; King, K.; McNamara, K.; Nadiruzzaman, M.; Henly-Shepard, S.; Thomalla, F.

Authors

T. Tanner

D. Lewis

D. Wrathall

R. Bronen

N. Cradock-Henry

S. Huq

R. Nawrotzki

V. Prasad

M.A. Rahman

R. Alaniz

K. King

K. McNamara

M. Nadiruzzaman

S. Henly-Shepard

F. Thomalla



Abstract

The resilience concept requires greater attention to human livelihoods if it is to address the limits to adaptation strategies and the development needs of the planet's poorest and most vulnerable people. Although the concept of resilience is increasingly informing research and policy, its transfer from ecological theory to social systems leads to weak engagement with normative, social and political dimensions of climate change adaptation. A livelihood perspective helps to strengthen resilience thinking by placing greater emphasis on human needs and their agency, empowerment and human rights, and considering adaptive livelihood systems in the context of wider transformational changes.

Citation

Tanner, T., Lewis, D., Wrathall, D., Bronen, R., Cradock-Henry, N., Huq, S., …Thomalla, F. (2015). Livelihood resilience in the face of climate change. Nature Climate Change, 5(1), 23-26. https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2431

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 10, 2014
Publication Date 2015-01
Deposit Date Feb 10, 2015
Journal Nature Climate Change
Print ISSN 1758-678X
Electronic ISSN 1758-6798
Publisher Nature Research
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 5
Issue 1
Pages 23-26
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2431
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1414884