Preferences on funding humanitarian aid and disaster management under climatic losses and damages: A multinational Delphi panel

IF 4.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Climatic Change Pub Date : 2024-06-28 DOI:10.1007/s10584-024-03741-2
Juha-Pekka Jäpölä, Sophie Van Schoubroeck, Steven Van Passel
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Abstract

Losses and damages (l&d) from climate change and the frequency of extreme events will burden our global budgetary constraints and adaptive capacities. Scientific and analytical support for allocating public funding in humanitarian aid and disaster management to counter them involves determining the most pertinent criteria to use or where to design forecasting. Their priorities are often assumed, and assumptions can be ill-fitting. Thus, we asked the key users of such information for their preferences.

A two-round anonymous Delphi method utilising global frameworks for a funding allocation simulation was employed to survey the stated preferences of a stratified panel of l&d experts (N = 36). They were experts from 19 countries of origin representing international organisations (e.g., United Nations, European Union, World Bank), the research sector, the public sector, and civil society (e.g., Save the Children, World Vision). The consensus and stability were analysed with parametric measures.

We find that the near-future preference for magnitude-indicating criteria, such as people-centric and disaster risk-based, outweighs the importance of indicators related to governance, the rule of law, or a socio-economic aspect. Likewise, financing adaptation options to climate change-related risks to food security, human health, and water security are a high near-future priority for minimising l&d compared to, for example, risks to living standards or risks to terrestrial and ocean ecosystems. The covariance suggests that these priorities are an emergent preference in the l&d sector. Thus, it raises further questions on what we can and should prioritise with scarce resources.

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气候损失和破坏情况下人道主义援助和灾害管理的资金偏好:多国德尔菲小组
气候变化和极端事件频发造成的损失和破坏(l&d)将给我们的全球预算限制和适应能力带来沉重负担。要为人道主义援助和灾害管理方面的公共资金分配提供科学和分析支持,以应对这些问题,就需要确定最相关的使用标准或预测设计。他们的优先事项往往是假定的,而假定可能是不合适的。我们采用了两轮匿名德尔菲法,利用资金分配模拟的全球框架,对分层的 l&d 专家小组(N = 36)进行了调查。这些专家来自 19 个国家,分别代表国际组织(如联合国、欧盟、世界银行)、研究部门、公共部门和民间社会(如救助儿童会、世界宣明会)。我们发现,在不久的将来,人们更倾向于采用表明规模的标准,如以人为中心和基于灾害风险的标准,而不是与治理、法治或社会经济方面相关的指标。同样,与生活水平风险或陆地和海洋生态系统风险相比,资助与气候变化相关的粮食安全、人类健康和水安全风险的适应方案,是近期内最大限度减少 l&d 的高度优先事项。该协方差表明,这些优先事项是土地和水领域新出现的偏好。因此,它提出了更多的问题,即我们可以而且应该利用稀缺资源优先考虑什么。
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来源期刊
Climatic Change
Climatic Change 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
10.20
自引率
4.20%
发文量
180
审稿时长
7.5 months
期刊介绍: Climatic Change is dedicated to the totality of the problem of climatic variability and change - its descriptions, causes, implications and interactions among these. The purpose of the journal is to provide a means of exchange among those working in different disciplines on problems related to climatic variations. This means that authors have an opportunity to communicate the essence of their studies to people in other climate-related disciplines and to interested non-disciplinarians, as well as to report on research in which the originality is in the combinations of (not necessarily original) work from several disciplines. The journal also includes vigorous editorial and book review sections.
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