Kate Sherren, H. M. T. Rahman, Patricia Manuel, Emily Wells, Eric Rapaport, Danika van Proosdij
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引用次数: 0
摘要
以自然为基础的海岸适应是以自然为基础的解决方案的一个子集,其重点是管理海岸风 险的物质性:我们的海岸保护是由什么构成的,或者我们把会造成危害的东西放在哪里。在我们的跨学科合作工作中,我们一直在重新构想基于自然的海岸适应方案,以第一原则为出发点:我们如何看待海岸以及什么是美好的海岸生活。在以自然为基础的方法中,我们对美好和可能的共同认识(也称为社会想象)需要在任何物质材料之前进行转变。本文提出了一个新的嵌套框架,用五个以 R 开头的单词来思考以自然为基础的海岸适应问题:重新想象(Reimagine)、保护(Reserve)、迁移(Relocate)、恢复(Restore)、加固(Reinforce)。我们使用基于自然的适应方案,即对 Fundy 湾农业堤区的堤坝进行有管理的调整,来说明该框架在实践中的实用性,但也申明其更普遍的适用性。
Reimagining nature-based coastal adaptation: A nested framework
Nature-based coastal adaptation is a subset of nature-based solutions that has to this point focused on the materiality of managing coastal risks: what our coastal protections are made of or where we put things that are in the way of harm. In our collaborative interdisciplinary work, we have been reimagining nature-based coastal adaptation to start with first principles: how we think about the coast and what makes a good coastal life. In a nature-based approach our shared sense of what is good and possible, also known as the social imaginary, needs shifting before any physical material. This paper presents a new nested framework for thinking about nature-based coastal adaptation using five words starting with R: Reimagine, Reserve, Relocate, Restore, Reinforce. We use the nature-based adaptation option of managed dyke realignment in Bay of Fundy agricultural dykelands to illustrate the utility of the framework in practice but assert its more generic applicability.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Flood Risk Management provides an international platform for knowledge sharing in all areas related to flood risk. Its explicit aim is to disseminate ideas across the range of disciplines where flood related research is carried out and it provides content ranging from leading edge academic papers to applied content with the practitioner in mind.
Readers and authors come from a wide background and include hydrologists, meteorologists, geographers, geomorphologists, conservationists, civil engineers, social scientists, policy makers, insurers and practitioners. They share an interest in managing the complex interactions between the many skills and disciplines that underpin the management of flood risk across the world.