Eriksen Christine, Simon Gregory L, Roth Florian, Lakhina Shefali Juneja, Wisner Ben, Adler Carolina, Thomalla Frank, Scolobig Anna, Brady Kate, Bründl Michael, Neisser Florian, Grenfell Maree, Maduz Linda, Prior Timothy
Center for Security Studies, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zürich, Switzerland.
Australian Centre for Culture, Environment, Society and Space (ACCESS), School of Geography and Sustainable Communities, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia.
Clim Change. 2020;162(1):25-39. doi: 10.1007/s10584-020-02819-x. Epub 2020 Oct 26.
Affluence and vulnerability are often seen as opposite sides of a coin-with affluence generally understood as reducing forms of vulnerability through increased resilience and adaptive capacity. However, in the context of climate change and an increase in associated hazards and disasters, we suggest the need to re-examine this dynamic relationship-a complex association we define here as the Affluence-Vulnerability Interface (AVI). We review research in different national contexts to show how a more nuanced understanding of the AVI can (a) problematize the notion that increasing material affluence necessarily has a mitigating influence on social vulnerability, (b) extend our analysis of social vulnerability beyond low-income regions to include affluent contexts and (c) improve our understanding of how psychosocial characteristics influence people's vulnerability. Finally, we briefly outline three methodological approaches that we believe will assist future engagement with the AVI.
富裕与脆弱性常常被视为同一枚硬币的两面——人们普遍认为,富裕通过增强恢复力和适应能力来减少脆弱性的形式。然而,在气候变化以及相关危害和灾害增加的背景下,我们建议有必要重新审视这种动态关系——我们在此将这种复杂的关联定义为富裕 - 脆弱性界面(AVI)。我们回顾了不同国家背景下的研究,以表明对AVI更细致入微的理解如何能够(a)对物质财富增加必然会对社会脆弱性产生缓解影响这一观念提出质疑,(b)将我们对社会脆弱性的分析从低收入地区扩展到包括富裕背景,以及(c)增进我们对心理社会特征如何影响人们脆弱性的理解。最后,我们简要概述了三种我们认为将有助于未来对AVI进行研究的方法。