Assessing vulnerability to climate change and socioeconomic stressors in the Reef Islands group, Solomon Islands

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  • Thomas Birk
This article assesses the vulnerability to climatic and socioeconomic stresses in the Reef Islands, Solomon Islands, an atoll island group in the Southwest Pacific. Climate change and the associated sea-level rise are often seen as the most pressing challenges to atoll communities, yet this study aims at critically re-assessing this view by placing climate in the context of a range of other internal and external stressors affecting local livelihoods, including population growth, inadequate land use practices, and lack of economic potential, as well as external factors such as poorly developed infrastructure, economic marginalization and weak governance of Solomon Islands. Findings suggest that some of these non-climatic stresses are currently – and in the short term – more important determinants of local vulnerability than climate change and sea-level rise. Certainly, these stresses are likely to be exacerbated by different elements of climate change in the short, medium and long term, but generally speaking climate change does not appear to be a major driver of the current changes in the islands. On the basis of these observations, the possible adaptation options, relevant to different time scales, are discussed.
Original languageEnglish
JournalGeografisk Tidsskrift/Danish Journal of Geography
Volume114
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)59-75
Number of pages17
ISSN0016-7223
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

ID: 140308187