Litcius/Paper detail

Framing Loss and Damage from climate change as the failure of Sustainable Development

Chad Boda, Murray Scown, Turaj Faran, Maryam Nastar, Kelly Dorkenoo, Brian C. Chaffin, Emily Boyd

2020Climate and Development23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Debates around “Loss and Damage” (L&D) from anthropogenic climate change have expanded rapidly since the adoption of the Warsaw International Mechanism (WIM) in 2013. Despite the urgent need for scientific best practice to inform policies to avoid, minimize and address L&D, the nascent research field faces internal disagreements and lacks a coherent conceptual framing, which hinder scientific progress and practical implementation. We suggest that the most coherent, comprehensive and integrative approach to framing and dealing with L&D is by understanding it as resulting from a chain of failures or inabilities to maintain a Sustainable Development. Available theories of Sustainable Development give meaning and orientation to risk reduction efforts to avoid and minimize L&D, as well as to processes of L&D accounting and compensation; in particular clarifying “what should be sustained” when undertaking efforts to avoid, minimize or address residual L&D. However, different theories of Sustainable Development inevitably lead to different metrics to assess L&D and consequently different governance approaches when dealing with L&D, which has implications for future vulnerability and development. Our approach opens up new avenues for research, and has both conceptual and practical repercussions for the Paris Agreement and the global stocktake.

Topics & Concepts

Framing (construction)Sustainable developmentClimate changePolitical scienceCorporate governanceVulnerability (computing)Risk analysis (engineering)Engineering ethicsEnvironmental planningBusinessEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental ethicsComputer scienceEconomicsEnvironmental scienceEngineeringLawPhilosophyEcologyBiologyComputer securityStructural engineeringFinanceSustainability and Climate Change GovernanceClimate Change Policy and EconomicsClimate Change and Geoengineering