Adaptation to and Recovery from Global Catastrophe

@article{Maher2013AdaptationTA,
  title={Adaptation to and Recovery from Global Catastrophe},
  author={Timothy M. Jr. Maher and Seth D. Baum},
  journal={Sustainability},
  year={2013},
  volume={5},
  pages={1461-1479}
}
Global catastrophes, such as nuclear war, pandemics and ecological collapse threaten the sustainability of human civilization. To date, most work on global catastrophes has focused on preventing the catastrophes, neglecting what happens to any catastrophe survivors. To address this gap in the literature, this paper discusses adaptation to and recovery from global catastrophe. The paper begins by discussing the importance of global catastrophe adaptation and recovery, noting that successful… 

Island refuges for surviving nuclear winter and other abrupt sunlight-reducing catastrophes.

  • M. BoydN. Wilson
  • Geology
    Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis
  • 2022
Some island nations in the Southern Hemisphere might survive a severe sun-reducing catastrophe such as nuclear winter and be well placed to help reboot-collapsed human civilization. Such islands must

Resilience to global food supply catastrophes

Many global catastrophic risks threaten major disruption to global food supplies, including nuclear wars, volcanic eruptions, asteroid and comet impacts, and plant disease outbreaks. This paper

Optimizing Island Refuges against global Catastrophic and Existential Biological Threats: Priorities and Preparations

  • M. BoydN. Wilson
  • Political Science
    Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis
  • 2021
Analysis is presented supporting Australia, New Zealand, and Iceland as the leading candidate island nation refuges to safeguard the survival of humanity and a flourishing technological civilization from the threat of a catastrophic pandemic.

Global Catastrophes: The Most Extreme Risks

The most extreme risk are those that threaten the entirety of human civilization, known as global catastrophic risks. The very extreme nature of global catastrophes makes them both challenging to

The Most Extreme Risks: Global Catastrophes

The most extreme risk are those that threaten the entirety of human civilization, known as global catastrophic risks. The very extreme nature of global catastrophes makes them both challenging to

The future is behind us: traditional ecological knowledge and resilience over time on Hawai‘i Island

Local and traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) systems are thought to be particularly valuable for fostering adaptation and resilience to environmental and climate change. This paper investigates

Assessing natural global catastrophic risks

The risk of global catastrophe from natural sources may be significantly larger than previous analyses have found. In the study of global catastrophic risk (GCR), one line of thinking posits that

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 82 REFERENCES

Collapse, environment, and society

  • K. Butzer
  • Economics
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
  • 2012
Five Old World case studies are developed to identify interactive inputs, triggers, and feedbacks in devolution to emphasize resilience, as well as the historical roles of leaders, elites, and ideology.

Continuity and Change in Social-ecological Systems: the Role of Institutional Resilience

In recent years recurring political, economic, and environmental crises require questioning and re-evaluating dominant pathways of human development. However, political and economic frameworks seem

Resilience thinking: integrating resilience, adaptability and transformability

The capacity to transform at smaller scales draws on resilience from multiple scales, making use of crises as windows of opportunity for novelty and innovation, and recombining sources of experience and knowledge to navigate social-ecological transitions.

Collapse and Reorganization in Social-Ecological Systems: Questions, Some Ideas, and Policy Implications

We tested the explanatory usefulness and policy relevance of Holling’s (2001) “adaptive cycle” theory in exploring processes of “collapse,” also called “release,“ and recovery in regional

Catastrophe, Social Collapse, and Human Extinction

Humans have slowly built more productive societies by slowly acquiring various kinds of capital, and by carefully matching them to each other. Because disruptions can disturb this careful matching,

Resilience, Adaptive Capacity, and the “Lock-in Trap” of the Western Australian Agricultural Region

Using the Western Australian (WA) agricultural region as an example of a large-scale social-ecological system (SES), this paper applies a framework based on resilience theory to examine the region's

Double catastrophe: intermittent stratospheric geoengineering induced by societal collapse

Perceived failure to reduce greenhouse gas emissions has prompted interest in avoiding the harms of climate change via geoengineering, that is, the intentional manipulation of Earth system processes.

Critical perspectives on historical collapse

Longer-term diachronic experience offers insight into how societies have dealt with acute stress, a more instructive perspective for the future than is offered by apocalyptic scenarios.
...