Climate Change, Agency Decision-Making, and the Resilience of Land-Based Livelihoods

Author:

Knapp Corrine Noel1,McNeeley Shannon M.2,Gioia John3,Even Trevor4,Beeton Tyler2

Affiliation:

1. Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming

2. Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

3. Western Colorado University, Gunnison, Colorado

4. Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

Abstract

AbstractMany rural communities in the western United States are surrounded by public lands and are dependent on these landscapes for their livelihoods. Climate change threatens to affect land-based livelihoods through both direct impacts and public land agency decision-making in response to impacts. This project was designed to understand how Bureau of Land Management (BLM) permittees, including ranching and recreation-based businesses in Colorado, are vulnerable to both climate change and management responses and how permittees and the BLM are adapting and could adapt to these changes. We conducted 60 interviews in two BLM field offices to gather permittee and agency employees’ observations of change, impacts, responses, and suggestions for adaptive actions. Data suggested that permittees are dependent on BLM lands and are sensitive to ecological and management changes and that current management policies and structures are often a constraint to adaptation. Managers and permittees are already seeing synergistic impacts, and the BLM has capacity to facilitate or constrain adaptation actions. Participants suggested increased flexibility at all scales, timelier within-season adjustments, and extension of current collaborative efforts to assist adaptation efforts and reduce impacts to these livelihoods.

Funder

U.S. Bureau of Land Management

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Global and Planetary Change

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