- Title
- What would a climate-adapted settlement look like in 2030? A Case Study of Inverloch and Sandy Point
- Creator
- Stanley, Janet; Birrell, Robert; Brain, Peter; Carey, Marion; Duffy, Michelle; Ferraro, Scott; Fisher, Steb; Griggs, David; Hall, Ashley; Kestin, Tahl; Macmillan, Carole; Manning, Ian; Martin, Helen; Rapson, Virginia; Spencer, Michael; Stanley, Chris; Steffen, Will; Symmons, Mark; Wright, Wendy
- Date
- 2013
- Type
- Text; Book
- Identifier
- http://researchonline.federation.edu.au/vital/access/HandleResolver/1959.17/70396
- Identifier
- vital:6526
- Identifier
- ISBN:9781925039849
- Abstract
- The issue considered by this research report revolves around the broad themes or questions such as: what are we adapting to?; who or what adapts?; and, how does adaptation occur? The challenge that these questions create is that the concept of an adapted settlement encompasses both ‘visual’ and ‘process’ dimensions. Therefore, there is a need to understand how the settlement will decide what it wants to look like in a climate adapted world, and how the settlement is going to achieve this successful adaptation response by (and beyond) 2030. Essentially, adaptation is not something that achieves an endpoint, but is ongoing and responsive to the various impacts that must be adapted to. Thus, there is a need for flexibility, and for adaptive capacity to be initiated and able to continue to change and evolve as required now and into the future.
- Publisher
- National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility
- Rights
- Open Access
- Rights
- This metadata is freely available under a CCO license
- Subject
- 1205 Urban and Regional Planning; 1604 Human Geography
- Full Text
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