9 results on '"Moser, Susanne C."'
Search Results
2. Wicked Challenges at Land's End: Managing Coastal Vulnerability Under Climate Change.
- Author
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Moser, Susanne C., Jeffress Williams, S., and Boesch, Donald F.
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CLIMATE change , *COASTS , *BIOLOGICAL adaptation , *MARINE resources , *CLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
With continuing influx of large numbers of people into coastal regions, human stresses on coastal ecosystems and resources are growing at the same time that climate variability and change and associated consequences in the marine environment are making coastal areas less secure for human habitation. The article reviews both climatic and nonclimatic drivers of the growing stresses on coastal natural and human systems, painting a picture of the mostly harmful impacts that result and the interactive and systemic challenges coastal managers face in managing these growing risks. Although adaptive responses are beginning to emerge, the adaptation challenge is enormous and requires not just incremental but also transformative changes. At the same time, such 'wicked' problems, by definition, defy all-encompassing, definitive, and final solutions; instead, temporary best solutions will have to be sought in the context of an iterative, deliberately learning-oriented risk management framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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3. A framework to diagnose barriers to climate change adaptation.
- Author
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Moser, Susanne C. and Ekstrom, Julia A.
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CLIMATE change , *DECISION making , *CLIMATOLOGY , *ECOLOGY , *HUMAN beings - Abstract
This article presents a systematic framework to identify barriers that may impede the process of adaptation to climate change. The framework targets the process of planned adaptation and focuses on potentially challenging but malleable barriers. Three key sets of components create the architecture for the framework. First, a staged depiction of an idealized, rational approach to adaptation decision-making makes up the process component. Second. a set of interconnected structural elements includes the actors, the larger context in which they function (e.g., governance), and the object on which they act (the system of concern that is exposed to climate change). At each of these stages, we ask (1) what could impede the adaptation process and (ii) how do the actors, context, and system of concern contribute to the barrier. To facilitate the identification of barriers, we provide a series of diagnostic questions. Third, the framework is completed by a simple matrix to help locate points of intervention to overcome a given barrier. It provides a systematic starting point for answering critical questions about how to support climate change adaptation at all levels of decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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4. Adaptation to climate change in the Northeast United States: opportunities, processes, constraints.
- Author
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Moser, Susanne C., Kasperson, Roger E., Yohe, Gary, and Agyeman, Julian
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CLIMATE change ,ANIMAL adaptation ,ECONOMIC development ,CLIMATOLOGY ,GLOBAL warming - Abstract
Scientific evidence accumulating over the past decade documents that climate change impacts are already being experienced in the US Northeast. Policy-makers and resource managers must now prepare for the impacts from climate change and support implementing such plans on the ground. In this paper we argue that climate change challenges the region to maintain its economic viability, but also holds some opportunities that may enhance economic development, human well-being, and social justice. To face these challenges and seize these opportunities effectively we must better understand adaptation capacities, opportunities and constraints, the social processes of adaptation, approaches for engaging critical players and the broader public in informed debate, decision-making, and conscious interventions in the adaptation process. This paper offers a preliminary qualitative assessment, in which we emphasize the need for (1) assessing the feasibility and side effects of technological adaptation options, (2) increasing available resources and improving equitable access to them, (3) increasing institutional flexibility, fit, cooperation and decision-making authority, (4) using and enhancing human and social capital, (5) improving access to insurance and other risk-spreading mechanisms, and (6) linking scientific information more effectively to decision-makers while engaging the public. Throughout, we explore these issues through illustrative sectoral examples. We conclude with a number of principles that may guide the preparation of future adaptation plans for the Northeast. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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5. More than information: what coastal managers need to plan for climate change.
- Author
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Tribbia, John and Moser, Susanne C.
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CLIMATE change ,INFORMATION needs ,COASTAL zone management ,CLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Climate change and sea-level rise (SLR) increasingly threaten the world''s coastlines, managers at local, regional, state, and federal levels will need to plan and implement adaptation measures to cope with these impacts in order to continue to protect the economic, social, and environmental security of the state and of local communities. In this paper, we explore the information needs of California coastal managers as they begin confronting the growing risks from climate change. Through this case study we examine the challenges managers face presently, what information they use to perform their responsibilities, what additional information and other knowledge resources they may need to begin planning for climate change. We place our study into the broader context of the study of how science can best support policy-makers and resource managers as they begin to plan and prepare for adaptation to climate change. Based on extensive interview and survey research in the state, we find that managers prefer certain types of information and information sources and would benefit from various learning opportunities (in addition to that information) to make better use of available global change information. Coastal managers are concerned about climate change and willing to address it in their work, but require financial and technical assistance from other agencies at the state and federal level to do so. The study illustrates the strong need for boundary organizations to serve various intermediary functions between science and practice, especially in the context of adaptation to global climate change impacts. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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6. Managing climate risks in California: the need to engage resource managers for successful adaptation to change.
- Author
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Moser, Susanne C. and Luers, Amy Lynd
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CLIMATOLOGY , *CLIMATE change , *MANAGEMENT , *PLANNING , *COASTAL zone management - Abstract
In this paper we propose a framework for evaluating how prepared California resource managers are for risks of continued climate change. The framework presented suggests three critical dimensions of preparedness - awareness of climate-related risks, analytic capacity to translate such climate risks information into specific planning and management activities, and the extent of actions taken to address the risks. We illustrate the application of this framework in this paper through preliminary research of California coastal managers where we identify limited awareness of climate-change related risks, limited analytic capacity, and significant constraints on the abilities of institutions and individuals to take adaptation actions. Our analysis suggests that for California to realize its significant adaptive capacity and be able to manage the unavoidable impacts of climate change, resource managers need to be engaged more effectively in future discussions of managing climate risks in the state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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7. In the Long Shadows of Inaction: The Quiet Building of a Climate Protection Movement in the United States.
- Author
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Moser, Susanne C.
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CLIMATE change , *CLIMATOLOGY , *GLOBAL temperature changes , *GOVERNMENT policy on climate change , *SOCIAL movements , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *EMISSION control , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
The article focuses on the signs of civic, private, local and state public sector activities for climate protection in the U.S. These activities aimed at restricting greenhouse gas emissions as well as assess whether they amount to a social movement for climate protection. It is suggested that momentum is building federal inaction on mandatory emission reductions. There is a renowned increase in opposition activity over several years. However, it is unclear whether the movement reached the take off point of the American society's closeness to the tipping point. This could be attributed to the fact that the movement has not yet found a bridging frame in bringing sub-movements together. The Movement Action Plan (MAP) model is a useful tool in locating where a movement is in its evolution.
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- 2007
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8. Impact assessments and policy responses to sea-level rise in three US states: An exploration of human-dimension uncertainties.
- Author
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Moser, Susanne C.
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CLIMATE change ,CLIMATOLOGY ,HAZARDOUS geographic environments ,CRISIS management - Abstract
Abstract: Uncertainties in the human dimensions of global change deeply affect the assessment and responses to climate change impacts such as sea-level rise (SLR). This paper explores the uncertainties in the assessment process and in state-level policy and management responses of three US states to SLR. The findings reveal important political, economic, managerial, and social factors that enable or constrain SLR responses; question disasters as policy windows; and uncover new policy opportunities in the history of state coastal policies. Results suggest that a more realistic, and maybe more useful picture of climate change impacts will emerge if assessments take more seriously the locally embedded realities and constraints that affect individual decision-makers’ and communal responses to climate change. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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9. MAKING CLIMATE HOT.
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Moser, Susanne C. and Dilling, Lisa
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CLIMATE change , *CLIMATOLOGY , *GLOBAL temperature changes , *ACCLIMATIZATION , *AIR pollution , *POLLUTION , *GASES , *ENVIRONMENTAL activism , *ACTIVISM , *GREEN movement , *EMISSIONS trading , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *AIR quality , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact charges , *ENVIRONMENTAL law , *POLLUTION & economics - Abstract
Discusses the importance of communicating the urgency and challenge of global climate change. Trend for Americans to be preoccupied with many issues other than climate change; Findings by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change regarding the potential impacts and emissions reductions needed in order to avoid drastic consequences; Consideration of how many scientists have issued publicized warnings to alert the public of the need for action; Hurdles encountered by the U.S. public in a national dialogue on climate change; Impact of the release of emissions of heat-trapping gases and subsequent impacts on the climate; Ways to increase the persuasiveness of the climate change message without appealing to fear. INSETS: FLIPPING THE "SWITCH ON ABRUPT CLIMATE CHANGE";UNDERMING URGENCY: DEALING MORE EFFECTIVELY WITH ALARMISTS.
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- 2004
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