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Research seminar on planning for climate change adaptation

This research was motivated by a concern that existing societal processes may exacerbate a given socio-ecological system’s susceptibility to the adverse consequences of climate change. Yet, such societal processes are simultaneously underrepresented in adaptation research and practice. The research examined how the problem of climate change adaptation is structured within multi-level policy and planning frameworks. First, a mixed-method methodology was developed and applied to construct international and national climate change adaptation policy frames. Second, Australian regional natural resource management (NRM) planning was used as a case study to analyse how the problem of adaptation planning was defined in planning documents. Third, expert semi-structured interviews were undertaken with NRM practitioners to examine how the existing decision-context orientated adaptation initiatives. The results demonstrate that existing planning frameworks are more amenable to technological concepts of adaptation planning over alternative concepts.

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