Abstract

The scale and scope of climate change has triggered widespread acknowledgement of the need to adapt to it. Out of recent work attempting to understand, define, and contribute to the family of concepts related to adaptation efforts, considerable contributions and research have emerged. Yet, the field of climate adaptation constantly grapples with complex ideas whose relational interplay is not always clear. Similarly, understanding how applied climate change adaptation efforts unfold through planning processes that are embedded in broader institutional settings can be difficult to apprehend. We present a review of important theory, themes, and terms evident in the literature of spatial planning and climate change adaptation to integrate them and synthesize a conceptual framework illustrating their dynamic interplay. This leads to consideration of how institutions, urban governance, and the practice of planning are involved, and evolving, in shaping climate adaptation efforts. While examining the practice of adaptation planning is useful in framing how core climate change concepts are related, the role of institutional processes in shaping and defining these concepts—and adaptation planning itself—remains complex. Our framework presents a useful tool for approaching and improving an understanding of the interactive relationships of central climate change adaptation concepts, with implications for future work focused on change within the domains of planning and institutions addressing challenges in the climate change era.

Highlights

  • The environmental severity and enormity of climate change is coming into sharper focus, as are considerations of crucial and complex impacts on society and daunting demands of the requisite efforts to adapt to it [1]

  • Significant increases in literature concerned with climate change adaptation is evident, with commensurate scholarship dedicated to exploring key concepts in the field [3,4,5]

  • While conceptual frameworks used to streamline and simplify complex ideas are common, frameworks constructed for the purpose of clarifying key concepts in the field of climate change adaptation planning are lacking

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Summary

Introduction

The environmental severity and enormity of climate change is coming into sharper focus, as are considerations of crucial and complex impacts on society and daunting demands of the requisite efforts to adapt to it [1]. Significant increases in literature concerned with climate change adaptation is evident, with commensurate scholarship dedicated to exploring key concepts in the field [3,4,5]. Disentangling the roles and relationships between modes of preparing adaptive responses to climate change (planning) and the social patterns that govern these practices (institutions) reveal more areas of confusion and needed consideration, especially for examining how these practices and patterns may themselves adapt or be adapted [4,9,10]. While conceptual frameworks used to streamline and simplify complex ideas are common, frameworks constructed for the purpose of clarifying key concepts in the field of climate change adaptation planning are lacking

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