Adapting to changing climate risk by local government in New Zealand: institutional practice barriers and enablers |
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Authors: | Judy Lawrence Frances Sullivan Alison Lash Gavin Ide Chris Cameron Lisa McGlinchey |
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Affiliation: | 1. New Zealand Climate Change Research Institute, School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences, Level 1, Cotton Building, Wellington 6140, New Zealand;2. Local Government New Zealand, P O Box 1214, Wellington 6140, New Zealand;3. Kapiti Coast District Council, Private Bag 60601, Paraparaumu 5254, New Zealand;4. Hawke's Bay Regional Council, P O Box 6006, Napier 4142, New Zealand;5. Wellington City Council, PO Box 2199, Wellington 6140, New Zealand;6. Tasman District Council, Private Bag 4, Richmond 7050, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Adaptation to climate change has been reviewed in several developed nations, but in none where consideration of the effects of climate change is required by statute and devolved to local government. We examine the role of institutional arrangements, the players operating under them, the barriers and enablers for adaptation decision-making in the developed nation of New Zealand. We examine how the roles and responsibilities between national, regional and local governments influence the ability of local government to deliver long-term flexible responses to changing climate risk. We found that the disciplinary practices of law, engineering and planning, within legal frameworks, result in the use of static mechanisms which create inflexible responses to changing risk. Several enablers are identified that could create greater integration between the different scales of government, including better use of national policy instruments, shared professional experience, standardised information collection and risk assessment methods that address uncertainties. The framing of climate risk as dynamic and changing that differentiates activities over their lifetime, development of mechanisms to fund transitions towards transformational change, are identified as necessary conditions for delivering flexible responses over time. |
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Keywords: | climate change adaptation institutional barriers multi-scale governance local government |
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