Enhancing a community-based water resource tool for assessing environmental change: the arctic water resources vulnerability index revisited
Andrew Kliskey (),
Paula Williams,
John T. Abatzoglou,
Lilian Alessa and
Richard B. Lammers
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Andrew Kliskey: University of Idaho
Paula Williams: University of Idaho
John T. Abatzoglou: University of Idaho
Lilian Alessa: University of Idaho
Richard B. Lammers: University of New Hampshire
Environment Systems and Decisions, 2019, vol. 39, issue 2, 183-197
Abstract:
Abstract People in the Arctic and sub-Arctic continue to face uncertainty in their livelihoods as they contend with environmental variability and change operating at multiple scales. The arctic water resources vulnerability index (AWRVI) was proposed as a tool that arctic communities could use to assess their susceptibility to both changing biophysical conditions affecting their water resources and socioeconomic conditions measuring their ability to respond to such changes. The application of AWRVI in six communities in Northwest Alaska and one in Southcentral Alaska is explored with a view to enhancing the tool as an adaptive capacity index, and a set of AWRVI indicators and parameters was refined by modifying the suite of biophysical measures and societal capacities to enhance the ability of the tool to gauge community adaptive capacity, and incorporate the use of more diverse datasets. A critical update was the development of an indicator for change in timing of precipitation in response to advice from Alaskan practitioners and scientists. Index scores based on the updated AWRVI are compared with the original AWRVI for the seven communities and show small to modest changes in the adaptive capacity scores. The role of the updated AWRVI is discussed as a tool to assist communities as they attempt to understand, negotiate, and reconcile adaptation measures for environmental change at local scales, potentially providing a guide for communities to target adaptive responses.
Keywords: Adaptive capacity; Adaptive capacity index; Arctic; Environmental change; Resilience; Vulnerability; Water resources; Change in timing of precipitation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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DOI: 10.1007/s10669-018-9712-7
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