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Scenarios of Human Responses to Unprecedented Social‐Environmental Extreme Events

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Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteurs/contributeurs
  • Rusca, Maria (Auteur)
  • Messori, Gabriele (Auteur)
  • Di Baldassarre, Giuliano (Auteur)
Titre
Scenarios of Human Responses to Unprecedented Social‐Environmental Extreme Events
Résumé
Abstract In a rapidly changing world, what is today an unprecedented extreme may soon become the norm. As a result, extreme‐related disasters are expected to become more frequent and intense. This will have widespread socio‐economic consequences and affect the ability of different societal groups to recover from and adapt to rapidly changing environmental conditions. Therefore, there is the need to decipher the relation between genesis of unprecedented events, accumulation and distribution of risk, and recovery trajectories across different societal groups. Here, we develop an analytical approach to unravel the complexity of future extremes and multiscalar societal responses—from households to national governments and from immediate impacts to longer term recovery. This requires creating new forms of knowledge that integrate analyses of the past—that is, structural causes and political processes of risk accumulation and differentiated recovery trajectories—with plausible scenarios of future environmental extremes grounded in the event‐specific literature. We specifically seek to combine the physical characteristics of the extremes with examinations of how culture, politics, power, and policy visions shape societal responses to unprecedented events, and interpret the events as social‐environmental extremes. This new approach, at the nexus between social and natural sciences, has the concrete advantage of providing an impact‐focused vision of future social‐environmental risks, beyond what is achievable within conventional disciplinary boundaries. In this paper, we focus on extreme flooding events and the societal responses they elicit. However, our approach is flexible and applicable to a wide range of extreme events. We see it as the first building block of a new field of research, allowing for novel and integrated theoretical explanations and forecasting of social‐environmental extremes. , Key Points We conceptualize unprecedented extremes as social‐environmental processes shaped by institutional, political, and economic change As social‐environmental extremes become more frequent, there is an urgency to unravel their genesis and the possible societal responses This approach is the first building block of a new field of research in social‐environmental extreme event forecasts , Plain Language Summary The world is seeing increases in a range of extreme events, and this increase may continue or even accelerate in the future, due to anthropogenic climate change. Furthermore, it is often those who are already vulnerable that experience the biggest impacts from these extremes. Yet, there is little understanding of the possible societal responses to unprecedented events. This underscores the urgency of creating innovative approaches to develop plausible scenarios of societal responses and, in turn, mitigate hazards and reduce vulnerability and exposure to extreme events. In this commentary, we develop a truly interdisciplinary conceptual approach to better understand how different societal groups might interact with and respond to future unprecedented extreme events. We combine social science theories describing how different societal groups are affected by, and recover from, extreme events with projections from the literature identifying plausible areas at risk of unprecedented occurrences and local analyses of past extreme events. We see this as the first building block of a new field of research in forecasting social‐environmental extremes that could support governments, civil protection agencies, and civil society organizations to ensure a fairer, improved response to future events.
Publication
Earth's Future
Volume
9
Numéro
4
Date
04/2021
Abrév. de revue
Earth's Future
Langue
en
DOI
10.1029/2020EF001911
ISSN
2328-4277, 2328-4277
URL
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2020EF001911
Consulté le
2024-10-13 11 h 46
Catalogue de bibl.
DOI.org (Crossref)
Référence
Rusca, M., Messori, G., & Di Baldassarre, G. (2021). Scenarios of Human Responses to Unprecedented Social‐Environmental Extreme Events. Earth’s Future, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.1029/2020EF001911
Axes du RIISQ
  • 3 - aspects biopsychosociaux
Enjeux majeurs
  • Inégalités et événements extrêmes
Secteurs et disciplines
  • Nature et Technologie
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/riisq/bibliographie/C4SI286S

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