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On being adaptable : transformative lessons on adaptation through problem-orientation : a case of the tourism sector in Alpine Shire, Victoria, Australia
Version 2 2017-05-17, 01:41Version 2 2017-05-17, 01:41
Version 1 2017-02-08, 04:53Version 1 2017-02-08, 04:53
thesis
posted on 2017-05-17, 01:41authored byRoman, Carolina Ester
Climate change is gaining attention as a significant strategic issue for local regions
that rely on tourism as a principal economic activity. Research seeks to characterise
the vulnerability of tourism to the likely impacts of future climate change. Most of
this research has used scenarios or ‘end-point’ approaches (Kelly and Adger, 2000).
Whilst useful, there are few demonstrable case studies that complement such work
with a ‘start-point’ approach that seeks to explore contextual vulnerability (O'Brien
et al., 2007). This broader approach is inclusive of climate change as a process
operating within a biophysical system and allows recognition of the complex
interactions that occur in the coupled human environmental system.
An interdisciplinary and problem-oriented approach was employed in Alpine Shire,
in northeast Victoria Australia, to characterise the tourism sector’s contextual
vulnerability and implications for adaptation to climate change. Using a policy
sciences approach, the objective was to identify factors that influence existing
vulnerabilities and that might consequently act as barriers to effective adaptation.
Analyses of preliminary results, suggested that climate change is just one of many
threats that compete for the resources, strategy and direction of local tourism
management bodies. Many complex and interacting factors define the vulnerability
and adaptive capacity of the Shire’s tourism sector to the challenges of climate
change. Further analysis of trends looked at possible reasons for these conditions,
consequently exploring options for maximising resilience and adaptive capacity.