Coastal Adaptation in Western Greenland
On Monday May 7, Deborah Davies will present her master's thesis in Coastal and Marine Management titled Resource Lens for Sustainable Adaptation: Coastal Adaptation in Western Greenland. The presentation begins at 14:00 in room 1-2 at the University Centre and is open to all. The thesis advisor is dr. Mike Philips, professor at Swansea Metropolitan University in Wales and the external reader is dr. Níels Einarsson, director of the Stefansson Arctic Institute.
Abstract
Until recently, the impacts of climate variability and long term change in the Arctic have been largely viewed through a physical science lens. This has shaped and potentially limited resource management strategies and climate adaptation measures in the Arctic. It also has possibly increased the vulnerability of these resources and the systems that depend on them
This thesis starts by taking a broader view of ‘resources' to include physical, human and social forms of capital, as well as natural resource wealth. Building on new research methodologies with a specific Arctic context, it then incorporates findings from two climate adaptation case studies in Western Greenland, and sets out to show that:
1. Climate change is experienced as a phenomenon that is principally changing resources and access to resources
2. Coastal communities need to assess their adaptation options in terms of their potential to enhance, diminish, and reshape resources and access to those resources
3. This assessment can be facilitated through a new adaptation tool in the form of a "Resource Lens for Adaptation"