Adaptation as a political arena: interrogating sedentarization as climate change adaptation in Central Vietnam

Lily Salloum Lindegaard

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

29 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Framings of climate change adaptation are increasingly being contested with implications for how adaptation is understood and carried out. Global framings are seen as producing a universalizing, technocratic domain, and an increasing body of literature de-frames these, highlighting their inherent assumptions and biases and arguing for better situating adaptation within particular historical and power dynamics. This article takes the logical next step, proposing a reframing of climate change adaptation as a political arena, and finds that particular framings determine the scope, targets and tools of adaptation. It uses a problematics of government approach, illustrated through the case of mandatory sedentarization of boat dwellers in Vietnam, which government officials present as climate change adaptation. This reframing historicizes and politicizes current adaptation, demonstrates how vulnerability is produced by political interventions and identifies how emic, rather than global, political rationalities heavily frame current adaptation initiatives. By contrasting it with accounts of the same sedentarizations that cleave more closely to dominant adaptation framings, the article illustrates how reframing adaptation as a political arena provides a more accurate basis upon which to engage with adaptation as an impetus and as intervention. These findings caution against drawing uncritically on dominant framings of climate change adaptation.
Original languageEnglish
JournalGlobal Environmental Change
Volume49
Pages (from-to)166-174
Number of pages9
ISSN0959-3780
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Climate change adaptation
  • Problematics of government
  • Governance
  • Sedentarization
  • Resettlement
  • Vietnam

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