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Challenges in using a Robust Decision Making approach to guide climate change adaptation in South Africa

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  • Joseph Daron

Abstract

Conventional forecast driven approaches to climate change adaptation create a cascade of uncertainties that can overwhelm decision makers and delay proactive adaptation responses. Robust Decision Making inverts the analytical steps associated with forecast-led methodologies, reframing adaptation in the context of a specific decision maker’s capacities and vulnerabilities. In adopting this bottom-up approach, the aim is to determine adaptation solutions which are insensitive to uncertainty. Yet despite the increased use of the approach in large-scale adaptation projects in developed countries, there is little empirical evidence to test whether or not it can be successfully applied in developing countries. The complex realities of decision making processes, the need to combine quantitative data with qualitative understanding and competing environmental, socio-economic and political factors all pose significant obstacles to adaptation. In developing countries, these considerations are particularly relevant and additional pressures exist which may limit the uptake and utility of the Robust Decision Making approach. In this paper, we investigate the claim that the approach can be deemed valuable in developing countries. Challenges and opportunities associated with Robust Decision Making, as a heuristic decision framework, are discussed with insights from a case study of adapting coastal infrastructure to changing environmental risks in South Africa. Lessons are extracted about the ability of this framework to improve the handling of uncertainty in adaptation decisions in developing countries. Copyright Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2015

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  • Joseph Daron, 2015. "Challenges in using a Robust Decision Making approach to guide climate change adaptation in South Africa," Climatic Change, Springer, vol. 132(3), pages 459-473, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:climat:v:132:y:2015:i:3:p:459-473
    DOI: 10.1007/s10584-014-1242-9
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    1. Luseno, Winnie K. & McPeak, John G. & Barrett, Christopher B. & Little, Peter D. & Gebru, Getachew, 2003. "Assessing the Value of Climate Forecast Information for Pastoralists: Evidence from Southern Ethiopia and Northern Kenya," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 31(9), pages 1477-1494, September.
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    1. Tiago Capela Lourenço & Ana Rovisco & Suraje Dessai & Richard Moss & Arthur Petersen, 2015. "Editorial introduction to the special issue on Uncertainty and Climate Change Adaptation," Climatic Change, Springer, vol. 132(3), pages 369-372, October.
    2. Julie Shortridge & Seth Guikema & Ben Zaitchik, 2017. "Robust decision making in data scarce contexts: addressing data and model limitations for infrastructure planning under transient climate change," Climatic Change, Springer, vol. 140(2), pages 323-337, January.

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