Urban climate governance in Southeast Asian small and mid-sized cities: undermining resilience and distributing risks unevenly

IF 2.6 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences Pub Date : 2022-09-28 DOI:10.1080/1943815X.2022.2127774
D. Marks, Gwenn Pulliat
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT Secondary cities are home to most of the world’s urban populations vulnerable to climate change, yet researchers and policymakers have devoted less attention to them than large and megacities. To help address this gap, this paper explores the relationship between incomplete decentralized governance, climate change, and urban resilience. It does through the case studies of secondary cities of Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. Secondary cities are of importance because they are the fastest growing cities in the Global South but also because they have weaker capacity to address climate risks. Through these case studies, the paper draws comparisons between the different cases to look at the linkages between decentralization and urban resilience in secondary cities. Overall, it argues that climate governance, due to the retention of power and resources by central bureaucrats along with fragmented governance structures, and misaligned incentive structures which prioritize economic growth over climate protection have undermined resilience building and contributed to the uneven distribution of climate risks in these cities.
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东南亚中小城市的城市气候治理:削弱韧性和风险分配不均
二级城市是世界上大多数易受气候变化影响的城市人口的家园,但研究人员和政策制定者对二级城市的关注却少于大城市和特大城市。为了帮助解决这一差距,本文探讨了不完全分散治理、气候变化和城市韧性之间的关系。本文通过对柬埔寨、缅甸、泰国和越南的二级城市进行案例研究。二线城市之所以重要,是因为它们是全球南方发展最快的城市,但也因为它们应对气候风险的能力较弱。通过这些案例研究,本文对不同案例进行了比较,以探讨二级城市权力下放与城市韧性之间的联系。总体而言,报告认为,由于中央官僚机构对权力和资源的保留,加上治理结构的碎片化,以及将经济增长置于气候保护之上的错位激励结构,气候治理破坏了韧性建设,并导致这些城市气候风险分布不均。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences (JIES) provides a stimulating, informative and critical forum for intellectual debate on significant environmental issues. It brings together perspectives from a wide range of disciplines and methodologies in both the social and natural sciences in an effort to develop integrative knowledge about the processes responsible for environmental change. The Journal is especially concerned with the relationships between science, society and policy and one of its key aims is to advance understanding of the theory and practice of sustainable development.
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