The Ability of the Poor to Cope

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Picture: serigalaplastic The Ability of the Poor to Cope Dr. Petra Tschakert Department of Geography and the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute (EESI) Pennsylvania State University February 2015

AR5, WGII, Ch 13 Livelihoods & Poverty ES, Ch13: Observed evidence suggests that climate change and climate variability worsen existing poverty, exacerbate inequalities, and trigger both new vulnerabilities and some opportunities for individuals and communities. Climate change interacts with non-climatic stressors and entrenched structural inequalities to shape vulnerabilities (high confidence, based on medium evidence, high agreement). SPM: Differences in vulnerability and exposure arise from non-climatic factors and from multidimensional inequalities often produced by uneven development processes (very high confidence). People who are socially, economically, culturally, politically, institutionally, or otherwise marginalized are especially vulnerable to climate change and also to some adaptation and mitigation responses (medium evidence, high agreement).

Focus: Power Dynamics Poverty and inequality are largely driven by power differentials (social relations, institutions). Impacts from climate change & climate change policies are funneled through uneven power relations, typically at the expense of the poor, disadvantaged, and less powerful. Climate change is a threat multiplier. Inequalities drive vulnerabilities and constrain adaptive capacities. F. Gemenne et al. 2014 (Climatic Change) the power of political processes and markets to deny some groups the freedoms and opportunities that they need to make choices in their interests and to act on those decisions, and the power of institutions to appropriate and divert processes that aim to overcome vulnerability

Types of Social Protection (Adapted after Arnall et al. 2010; Davies et al. 2009)

Poverty Approaches & Framings Individual failure They - us - benefit - harm Leichenko & Silva 2014

Anti-Social Poverty Politics Discursive framing of the poor ( othering ) protects the privileged (willful omission) http://metro.co.uk/2014/12/27/france-puts-up-anti-homeless-cages-around-park-benches-on-christmas-eve-5000952/

Vulnerability to Sea Level Rise, U.S. Martinich et al. 2013

Social Vulnerability Index (USA) Martinich et al. 2013

People at Risk Property Worth Protecting Economically efficient responses to seal level rise Most land projected to be abandoned - in areas with highest social vulnerability Poor more exposed, and not worth protecting (economic efficiency) Uneven power structures benefit the rich at the expense of the poor Martinich et al. 2013

Social Relations & Power Differentials Structural, systemic inequalities the poor & the non-poor Social relations create poverty and privilege Institutional arrangements, social policies ( bad ) Unequal geographies of power poverty narratives Deserving and undeserving poor dispossession Poverty admits plenty criminalization, stigmatization Exercises of power, flourishing at the expense of others Mechanisms of exclusion, disenfranchisement Systematic erosion of capabilities ( risk management) Wealth redistribution, inclusive growth, shared prosperity

Managing Risk in the AR5 (WGII) Limited ability build adaptive capacity Persistence of vulnerable conditions High susceptibility to cumulative stressors Irreversibility of consequences The propensity or predisposition to be adversely affected. The potential occurrence of a physical event or trend that may cause loss of life, injury, and damage. The presence of people and livelihoods in places that could be adversely affected. SPM, WGII AR5, 2014

Multidimensional Vulnerability Inequalities Olsson et al., Ch 13, and TS, WGII, AR5, 2014

Livelihood Dynamics Indigenous Populations, Bolivian Andes Olsson et al. 2014, Ch13, AR5, WGII

Livelihood Dynamics Indigenous Populations, Bolivian Andes Olsson et al. 2014, Ch13, AR5, WGII

Pastoralists, Botswana Olsson et al. 2014, Ch13, AR5, WGII Sallu et al. 2010

Pastoralists, Botswana Olsson et al. 2014, Ch13, AR5, WGII; Sallu et al. 2010

Lagos: Sea Level Rise, Flooding, and Institutional Neglect Poor Rich Ajibade et al. 2013

Beyond Exposure: Structural Violence & Social Stigma Legacy of a dual city relocations Denial of housing rights & tenure security Encroachment of hazardous landscapes Erosion of natural resilience against flooding Environmentally intolerable coping strategies Waste filling (house construction, flood control) Symbol of livelihood struggle + pollution Threats of eviction wooden fragile houses Distrust in early warning legacy of evictions Exclusion from safety nets Badia/Bad Area Ajibade & McBean 2014

Gender, Class, Social Exclusion, and Discriminatory Health Policies Ajibade et al. 2013

Successful adaptation Channels for household risk management Impacts Prices & consumption Assets & capital accumulation Productivity & returns Opportunities Social protection Social protection Risk

Channels for household risk management Impacts Prices & consumption Assets & capital accumulation Productivity & returns Opportunities Social protection Uneven development.interacting with other stressors and hazards Risk Gender Class Ethnicity Age Race Dis(ability)

Successful adaptation Channels for household risk management Impacts Prices & consumption Assets & capital accumulation Productivity & returns Opportunities Social protection Traps! Social protection Uneven development.interacting with other stressors and hazards Risk Gender Class Ethnicity Age Race Dis(ability)

Dynamic Understanding of Inequality and Transformation Assessments Enhancing capacities for change Tschakert et al. 2013

Conclusion - Recommendations Go beyond impacts on the poor structural inequalities Focus on factors that push the poor into exposed areas and institutions & policies that keep them vulnerable No standardized metrics patterns of relational drivers Tackle dynamics that limit the poor s choices to cope with and adapt to crises, and enhance capacities for change Focus on enabling conditions for risk management among the poor and marginalized (social relations) Tailored policies that allow the poor to navigate between places to live and be and spaces of vulnerability Climate + poverty + social + housing + planning policies Mobile, flexible, creatively targeted social protection Trustworthy institutions training, preparedness, antidiscrimination campaigns, and promotion of rights

Conclusion - Recommendations Go beyond impacts on the poor structural inequalities Focus on factors that push the poor into exposed areas and institutions & policies that keep them vulnerable No standardized metrics patterns of relational drivers Tackle dynamics that limit the poor s choices to cope with and adapt to crises, and enhance capacities for change Foster enabling conditions for risk management among the poor and marginalized (less skewed social relations) Tailored programs/investments that recognize the poor + collective action (incl. the rich) to rectify growing imbalance Mobile, flexible social protection + strong inclusive growth Climate+poverty+social+housing+planning+ag+food policies Transparent pro-poor institutions training, preparedness, anti-discrimination campaigns, and promotion of rights