Affiliation:
1. LUCSUS, Lund University Lund Sweden
2. York Law School, University of York York UK
3. Stockholm Environment Institute, Department of Environment and Geography University of York York UK
Abstract
AbstractWhile climate change adaptation research has increasingly focused on aspects of culture, a systematic treatment of the role of legal culture in how communities respond to climate risk has yet to be produced. This is despite the fact that law and legal authority are implicated in most, if not all, of the ways in which actors seek to reduce the risks posed to communities by climate change. Using a scoping review methodology, this article examines the intersection of climate change adaptation and legal culture in existing research. Overall, we find that the significance of legal culture for adaptation actions has been under‐explored. Yet, it is also clear that a focus on legal culture holds significant promise for our understanding of climate change adaptation. We set out a research agenda for the field, highlighting the ways in which a focus on legal culture may enrich existing key themes within climate change adaptation research.This article is categorized under:
Policy and Governance > Governing Climate Change in Communities, Cities, and Regions
Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change > Institutions for Adaptation
Subject
Atmospheric Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Global and Planetary Change