Adaptation to water-induced disaster: exploring local knowledge and Indigenous knowledge-led strategies

The magnitude of water-induced disasters is projected to increase in the coming decades. Yet, there is a substantial gap in the understanding of how local knowledge and Indigenous knowledge are employed to respond to climate change water-induced disasters. We examine this gap through a meta-review o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rittelmeyer, Pamela, Caretta, Martina Angela, Dowler, Calynn, Vora, Shuchi, Seigerman, Cydney K., Reddy, EB Uday Bhaskar, BR, Lakshmikantha, Parajuli, Jagadish, Srinivasan, Jaishri, Priya, Ritu, Mukherji, Aditi
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: SAGE Publications 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168325
Description
Summary:The magnitude of water-induced disasters is projected to increase in the coming decades. Yet, there is a substantial gap in the understanding of how local knowledge and Indigenous knowledge are employed to respond to climate change water-induced disasters. We examine this gap through a meta-review of literature published between 2014 and 2019 yielding 39 scholarly papers. The meta-review indicates that the literature highlights that marginalized people are facing multiple risks that threaten their ability to produce enough food for consumption, secure water for irrigation, live in sustainable communities, and maintain their health and well-being. Responses are largely incremental, autonomous adjustments, such as livelihood diversification, flood-proofing homes, and soil moisture conservation. Our findings show that there is a clear need to more closely attend to the processes by which local knowledge and Indigenous knowledge can be meaningfully integrated into adaptation to move toward transformative change for long-term climate resilience.