Building adaptive capacity in a changing arctic by use of technology
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24315Dato
2021-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Rapid Arctic warming, manifested as thawing permafrost, loss of coastal sea ice, sea level rise, and climate-related extreme
events, is particularly challenging for Indigenous people relying on wild food to sustain their livelihood and culture. The adoption of
new technologies could provide specific capabilities to confront vulnerabilities associated with fishing and hunting activities, but it
could also accentuate existing vulnerabilities of the communities and undermine the generic (i.e., non-specific) adaptive capacities to
respond to rapid environmental and socioeconomic changes. We investigated the role of technology for building capacity to respond
to challenges posed by climate change in three remote communities in northwest Arctic Alaska. We refer to technology as tools used
to change how people engage or relate to landscape or society. We interviewed 35 Inuit subsistence users and used Q-sort methodologies
to examine their attitudes toward technology and climate change adaptation. Communication technologies and new ways of transport
have allowed harvesters to travel faster and further, and 89% of the interviewees underscored the role of technology for enhancing the
specific capacity to cope with extreme weather (77%), foggy conditions (60%), and environmental changes (89%). Despite of the role
technology plays in enhancing the capacity to respond to climate threats, just over half viewed technology as generally favorable for
the community (54%), although most admitted there are downsides (60%), including higher financial costs (34%), increased vulnerability
(23%), and time spent on maintenance (9%). Our results underscore the need to focus on generic capacity when developing climate
adaptation policies for Arctic Alaska to attend to both climatic and non-climatic stressors affecting the vulnerability of Indigenous
communities.
Forlag
Resilience AllianceSitering
Schmidt, Hausner VH, Monz. Building adaptive capacity in a changing arctic by use of technology. Ecology & Society. 2021;26(4):1-23Metadata
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