Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change in Latin America and the Caribbean
Keywords
POPULATION DENSITYGREENHOUSE GAS
ETHNIC GROUPS
TROPICAL GLACIER
CONSERVATION AREAS
CLIMATE-CHANGE IMPACTS
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
POOR HEALTH
GREENHOUSE GASES
SEA LEVEL RISE
CANCER
HEAVY RAINS
STORMS
INTERTROPICAL CONVERGENCE ZONE
NEGATIVE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
WARMER AIR
CLIMATIC EXTREMES
PUBLIC POLICY
NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
ECONOMICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
CARBOHYDRATES
DISEASES
CLIMATE-CHANGE
CLIMATE CHANGE RISKS
HUMAN POTENTIAL
DRINKING WATER
IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE
WEATHER PATTERNS
SOCIAL DIMENSIONS
NATURAL RESOURCES
PRECIPITATION
CONVERGENCE
ECONOMIC IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE
HUMIDITY
IMPACTS FROM CLIMATE CHANGE
CULTURAL CHANGE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
RAINY SEASON
REGIONAL CLIMATE
NATURAL RESOURCE
SEASONAL PRECIPITATION
HUMAN ACTIVITY
RAINY SEASONS
AMAZON FOREST
FOREST CONSERVATION
MORTALITY RATE
DETRIMENTAL EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATIC VARIABILITY
CLIMATE-CHANGE MITIGATION
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
COLORS
UNEP
SOCIAL IMPACT
GOOD GOVERNANCE
POLAR REGIONS
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES
ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
WEATHER CONDITIONS
VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE
AMAZONIAN FOREST
GLACIERS
GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
AIR
CLIMATE SCIENCE
HURRICANES
IMPACT OF CLIMATE
NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
CLIMATE
IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATE CHANGE PROJECTIONS
GREENHOUSE
ARMED CONFLICT
TREE SPECIES
CLIMATE TRENDS
MITIGATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE
SOCIETAL LEVEL
PERSONAL COMMUNICATION
FORESTS
RAINFALL
NUTRITION
BASES
SMALLHOLDERS
CLIMATE CHANGE ISSUES
INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE
ATLANTIC FOREST
FORMAL EDUCATION
AWARENESS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
QUALITY OF LIFE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
POPULATION CENSUS
FOREST RESOURCES
ATMOSPHERIC TEMPERATURES
HUMAN HEALTH
ILLNESSES
EXTREME POVERTY
CLIMATIC VARIATION
SEA LEVEL
ITCZ
HIGH TEMPERATURES
CLIMATE CHANGE RESEARCH
GLACIER RETREAT
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
NATURAL DISASTERS
DESERTIFICATION
SEA-LEVEL
METEOROLOGICAL DATA
IPCC
TEMPERATURES
CORAL REEFS
SEA-LEVEL RISE
OZONE
BIODIVERSITY
COMMERCIAL FISHING
EMISSION
CULTURAL PRACTICES
TROPICAL FOREST
LAKES
RAIN
GLOBAL CLIMATE
POLITICAL UNREST
IMPLICATIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
FOREST FLOOR
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
FOOD PRODUCTION
CLIMATE CHANGE
FLOODS
RESPECT
EXTREME EVENTS
CLIMATE VARIABILITY
ECONOMIC RESOURCES
CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION
FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE
RURAL AREAS
EMISSIONS SCENARIOS
SURFACE TEMPERATURE
MARKET ECONOMY
CLOUD COVER
CLIMATIC CHANGE
SEVERE STORMS
VITAMINS
LAND DEGRADATION
CLIMATE MODELS
FOREST FRAGMENTATION
DISSEMINATION
TEMPERATURE INCREASE
EFFECT OF CLIMATE CHANGE
SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
STORM SURGES
RESILIENCE TO CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATE CHANGES
SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
PUBLIC HEALTH
LIFESTYLES
CARBON
SEASON
ATMOSPHERE
GHGS
SURFACE TEMPERATURES
SMOKE
SCARCITY OF WATER
LAND PRODUCTIVITY
FISH MIGRATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
URBAN AREAS
FORESTRY
FOOD INSECURITY
GLOBAL AVERAGE SURFACE WARMING
CLIMATIC CONDITIONS
VULNERABILITY
EMISSION SCENARIOS
MOTHER
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
LACK OF CAPACITY
NEGATIVE IMPACTS
REGIONAL CLIMATE CHANGE
INDIGENOUS GROUPS
ELDERLY
GOLD
SOCIAL JUSTICE
URBAN POPULATIONS
PH
CALCULATION
OZONE DEPLETION
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
LEGAL STATUS
MENSTRUATION
VULNERABLE GROUPS
EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION
FOOD SECURITY
THUNDERSTORMS
INCOME INEQUALITY
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
FOREST LANDS
CLIMATE CHANGE CONSEQUENCES
POPULATION SIZE
FOREST COVER
AIR TEMPERATURES
SOCIAL CONDITIONS
WATER RESOURCES
HUMAN CAPITAL
RAINFALL PATTERNS
TROPICAL FORESTS
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
DROUGHT
INDIGENOUS POPULATIONS
POLICY MAKERS
CLIMATIC CHANGES
SOCIAL CHANGES
HEALTH PROBLEMS
MORTALITY
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Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2472Abstract
Indigenous peoples across Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) already perceive and experience negative effects of climate change and variability. Although the overall economic impact of climate change on gross domestic product (GDP) is significant, what is particularly problematic is that it falls disproportionately on the poor including indigenous peoples, who constitute about 6.5 percent of the population in the region and are among its poorest and most vulnerable (Hall and Patrinos 2006). This book examines the social implications of climate change and climatic variability for indigenous communities in LAC and the options for improving their resilience and adaptability to these phenomena. By social implications, the authors mean direct and indirect effects in the broad sense of the word social, including factors contributing to human well-being, health, livelihoods, human agency, social organization, and social justice. This book, much of which relies on new empirical research, addresses specifically the situation of indigenous communities because our research showed them to be among the most vulnerable to the effects of climate change. A companion book (Verner 2010) provides information on the broader social dimensions of climate change in LAC and on policy options for addressing them. This book will help to place these impacts higher on the climate-change agenda and guide efforts to enhance indigenous peoples' rights and opportunities, whether by governments, indigenous peoples' organizations and their leaders, or non-state representatives.Date
2010Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/2472978-0-8213-8237-0
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2472
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 UnportedRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
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Indigenous Peoples and Climate
 Change in Latin America and the CaribbeanKronik, Jakob; Verner, Dorte (World Bank, 2012-03-19)Indigenous peoples across Latin America
 and the Caribbean (LAC) already perceive and experience
 negative effects of climate change and variability. Although
 the overall economic impact of climate change on gross
 domestic product (GDP) is significant, what is particularly
 problematic is that it falls disproportionately on the poor
 including indigenous peoples, who constitute about 6.5
 percent of the population in the region and are among its
 poorest and most vulnerable (Hall and Patrinos 2006). This
 book examines the social implications of climate change and
 climatic variability for indigenous communities in LAC and
 the options for improving their resilience and adaptability
 to these phenomena. By social implications, the authors mean
 direct and indirect effects in the broad sense of the word
 social, including factors contributing to human well-being,
 health, livelihoods, human agency, social organization, and
 social justice. This book, much of which relies on new
 empirical research, addresses specifically the situation of
 indigenous communities because our research showed them to
 be among the most vulnerable to the effects of climate
 change. A companion book (Verner 2010) provides information
 on the broader social dimensions of climate change in LAC
 and on policy options for addressing them. This book will
 help to place these impacts higher on the climate-change
 agenda and guide efforts to enhance indigenous peoples'
 rights and opportunities, whether by governments, indigenous
 peoples' organizations and their leaders, or non-state representatives.
-
Municipal Vulnerability to Climate Change and Climate-Related Events in Mexicode la Fuente, Alejandro; Borja-Vega, Christian (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2013-04)A climate change vulnerability index in agriculture is presented at the municipal level in Mexico. Because the index is built with a multidimensional approach to vulnerability (exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity), it represents a tool for policy makers, academics and government alike to inform decisions about climate change resilience and regional variations within the country. The index entails baseline (2005) and prediction (2045) levels based on historic climate data and future-climate modeling. The results of the analysis suggest a wide variation in municipal vulnerability across the country at baseline and prediction points. The vulnerability index shows that highly vulnerable municipalities demonstrate higher climate extremes, which increases uncertainty for harvest periods, and for agricultural yields and outputs. The index shows at baseline that coastal areas host some of the most vulnerable municipalities to climate change in Mexico. However, it also shows that the Northwest and Central regions will likely experience the largest shifts in vulnerability between 2005 and 2045. Finally, vulnerability is found to vary according to specific variables: municipalities with higher vulnerability have more adverse socio-demographic conditions. With the vast municipal data available in Mexico, further sub-index estimations can lead to answers for specific policy and research questions.
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Social Dimensions of Climate Change
 : Equity and Vulnerability in a Warming WorldNorton, Andrew; Mearns, Robin; Norton, Andrew; Mearns, Robin (World Bank, 2012-03-19)Climate change is widely acknowledged as
 foremost among the formidable challenges facing the
 international community in the 21st century. It poses
 challenges to fundamental elements of our understanding of
 appropriate goals for social and economic policy, such as
 the connection of prosperity, growth, equity, and
 sustainable development. This volume seeks to establish an
 agenda for research and action built on an enhanced
 understanding of the relationship between climate change and
 the key social dimensions of vulnerability, social justice,
 and equity. The volume is organized as follows. This
 introductory chapter first sets the scene by framing climate
 change as an issue of social justice at multiple levels, and
 by highlighting equity and vulnerability as the central
 organizing themes of an agenda on the social dimensions of
 climate change. Chapter two leads off with a review of
 existing theories and frameworks for understanding
 vulnerability, drawing out implications for pro-poor climate
 policy. Understanding the multilayered causal structure of
 vulnerability then can assist in identifying entry points
 for pro-poor climate policy at multiple levels. Building on
 such analytical approaches, chapters three and four,
 respectively, consider the implications of climate change
 for armed conflict and for migration. Those chapters are
 followed by a discussion of two of the most important social
 cleavages that characterize distinct forms of vulnerability
 to climate change and climate action: gender (chapter five)
 and ethnicity or indigenous identity (chapter six), in the
 latter case, focusing on the role of indigenous knowledge in
 crafting climate response measures in the Latin American and
 Caribbean region. Chapter seven highlights the important
 mediating role of local institutions in achieving more
 equitable, pro-poor outcomes from efforts to support
 adaptation to climate change. Chapter eight examines the
 implications of climate change for agrarian societies living
 in dry-land areas of the developing world, and chapter nine
 does the same for those living in urban centers. Chapter ten
 considers the role of social policy instruments in
 supporting pro-poor adaptation to climate change; and it
 argues for a focus on 'no-regrets' options that
 integrate adaptation with existing development approaches,
 albeit with modifications to take better account of the ways
 in which climate variables interact with other drivers of
 vulnerability. Finally, chapter eleven turns to the
 implications of climate policy and action for forest areas
 and forest people.