Climate vulnerability mapping: A systematic review and future prospects

Abstract

Maps synthesizing climate, biophysical and socioeconomic data have become part of the standard tool‐kit for communicating the risks of climate change to society. Vulnerability maps are used to direct attention to geographic areas where impacts on society are expected to be greatest and that may therefore require adaptation interventions. Under the Green Climate Fund and other bilateral climate adaptation funding mechanisms, donors are investing billions of dollars of adaptation funds, often with guidance from modeling results, visualized and communicated through maps and spatial decision support tools. This paper presents the results of a systematic review of 84 studies that map social vulnerability to climate impacts. These assessments are compiled by interdisciplinary teams of researchers, span many regions, range in scale from local to global, and vary in terms of frameworks, data, methods, and thematic foci. The goal is to identify common approaches to mapping, evaluate their strengths and limitations, and offer recommendations and future directions for the field. The systematic review finds some convergence around common frameworks developed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, frequent use of linear index aggregation, and common approaches to the selection and use of climate and socioeconomic data. Further, it identifies limitations such as a lack of future climate and socioeconomic projections in many studies, insufficient characterization of uncertainty, challenges in map validation, and insufficient engagement with policy audiences for those studies that purport to be policy relevant. Finally, it provides recommendations for addressing the identified shortcomings.

Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
Alex de Sherbinin, Columbia University
Anamaria Bukvic, Virginia Tech
Guillaume Rohat, University of Geneva and University of Twente (ITC)
Melanie Gall, University of South Carolina
Brent McCusker, West Virginia University
Benjamin Preston, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Alex Apotsos, Williams College
Carolyn Fish, Penn State
Stefan Kienberger, University of Salzburg
Park Muhonda, University of West Virginia
Olga Wilhelmi, National Center for Atmospheric Research
Denis Macharia, Regional Center for Mapping of Resources for Development
William Shubert, Internews
Richard Sliuzas
Brian Tomaszewski, Rochester Institute of Technology
Sainan Zhang, UN Population Fund
Date
Journal
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change
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