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Featured researches published by Helen Adams.


Environmental Research Letters | 2013

The contribution of ecosystem services to place utility as a determinant of migration decision-making

Helen Adams; W. Neil Adger

Environment migration research has sought to provide an account of how environmental risks and resources affect migration and mobility. Part of that effort has focused on the role of the environment in providing secure livelihoods through provisioning ecosystem services. However, many of the models of environment migration linkages fail to acknowledge the importance of social and psychological factors in the decision to migrate. Here, we seek to provide a more comprehensive model of migration decision-making under environmental change by investigating the attachment people form to place, and the role of the environment in creating that attachment. We hypothesize that environmental factors enter the migration decision-making process through their contribution to place utility, defined as a function of both affective and instrumental bonds to location, and that ecosystem services, the aspects of ecosystems that create wellbeing, contribute to both components of place utility. We test these ideas in four rural highland settlements in Peru sampled along an altitudinal gradient. We find that non-economic ecosystem services are important in creating place attachment and that ecological place attachment exists independently of use of provisioning ecosystem services. Individuals’ attitudes to ecosystem services vary with the type of ecosystem services available at a location and the degree of rurality. While social and economic factors are the dominant drivers of migration in these locations, a loss of non-provisioning ecosystem services leads to a decrease in place utility and commitment to place, determining factors in the decision to migrate. The findings suggest that policy interventions encouraging migration as an adaptation to environmental change will have limited success if they only focus on provisioning services. A much wider set of individuals will experience a decrease in place utility, and migration will be unable to alleviate that decrease since the factors that create it are specific to place.


Scientific Data | 2016

Spatial and temporal dynamics of multidimensional well-being, livelihoods and ecosystem services in coastal Bangladesh

Helen Adams; W. Neil Adger; Sate Ahmad; Ali Ahmed; Dilruba Begum; Attila N. Lázár; Zoe Matthews; Mohammed Mofizur Rahman; Peter Kim Streatfield

Populations in resource dependent economies gain well-being from the natural environment, in highly spatially and temporally variable patterns. To collect information on this, we designed and implemented a 1586-household quantitative survey in the southwest coastal zone of Bangladesh. Data were collected on material, subjective and health dimensions of well-being in the context of natural resource use, particularly agriculture, aquaculture, mangroves and fisheries. The questionnaire included questions on factors that mediate poverty outcomes: mobility and remittances; loans and micro-credit; environmental perceptions; shocks; and women’s empowerment. The data are stratified by social-ecological system to take into account spatial dynamics and the survey was repeated with the same respondents three times within a year to incorporate seasonal dynamics. The dataset includes blood pressure measurements and height and weight of men, women and children. In addition, the household listing includes basic data on livelihoods and income for approximately 10,000 households. The dataset facilitates interdisciplinary research on spatial and temporal dynamics of well-being in the context of natural resource dependence in low income countries.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Redefining community based on place attachment in a connected world

Georgina G. Gurney; Jessica Blythe; Helen Adams; W. Neil Adger; Matt Curnock; Lucy Faulkner; Thomas James; Nadine Marshall

Significance Effective environmental policy requires public participation in management, typically achieved through engaging community defined by residential location or resource use. However, current social and environmental change, particularly increasing connectedness, demands new approaches to community. We draw on place attachment theory to redefine community in the context of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Using a large dataset on place attachment, our analysis of local, national, and international stakeholders identified four communities differing in their attachment to the reef and spanning location and use communities. Our results suggest that place attachment can bridge geographic and social boundaries, and communities of attachment could thus be leveraged to foster transnational stewardship, which is crucial to addressing modern sustainability challenges in our globalized world. The concept of community is often used in environmental policy to foster environmental stewardship and public participation, crucial prerequisites of effective management. However, prevailing conceptualizations of community based on residential location or resource use are limited with respect to their utility as surrogates for communities of shared environment-related interests, and because of the localist perspective they entail. Thus, addressing contemporary sustainability challenges, which tend to involve transnational social and environmental interactions, urgently requires additional approaches to conceptualizing community that are compatible with current globalization. We propose a framing for redefining community based on place attachment (i.e., the bonds people form with places) in the context of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, a World Heritage Area threatened by drivers requiring management and political action at scales beyond the local. Using data on place attachment from 5,403 respondents residing locally, nationally, and internationally, we identified four communities that each shared a type of attachment to the reef and that spanned conventional location and use communities. We suggest that as human–environment interactions change with increasing mobility (both corporeal and that mediated by communication and information technology), new types of people–place relations that transcend geographic and social boundaries and do not require ongoing direct experience to form are emerging. We propose that adopting a place attachment framing to community provides a means to capture the neglected nonmaterial bonds people form with the environment, and could be leveraged to foster transnational environmental stewardship, critical to advancing global sustainability in our increasingly connected world.


Archive | 2018

Integrative Analysis Applying the Delta Dynamic Integrated Emulator Model in South-West Coastal Bangladesh

Attila N. Lázár; Andres Payo; Helen Adams; Ali Ahmed; Andrew Allan; Abdur Razzaque Akanda; Fiifi Amoako Johnson; Emily Barbour; Sujit Kumar Biswas; John Caesar; Alexander Chapman; D. Clarke; Jose A. Fernandes; Anisul Haque; Mostafa Ali Reza Hossain; Alistair Hunt; Craig W. Hutton; Susan Kay; Anirban Mukhopadhyay; Robert J. Nicholls; Abul Fazal M. Saleh; Mashfiqus Salehin; Sylvia Szabo; Paul Whitehead

A flexible meta-model, the Delta Dynamic Integrated Emulator Model (ΔDIEM), is developed to capture the socio-biophysical system of coastal Bangladesh as simply and efficiently as possible. Operating at the local scale, calculations occur efficiently using a variety of methods, including linear statistical emulators, which capture the behaviour of more complex models, internal process-based models and statistical associations. All components are tightly coupled, tested and validated, and their behaviour is explored with sensitivity tests. Using input data, the integrated model approximates the spatial and temporal change in ecosystem services and a number of livelihood, well-being, poverty and health indicators of archetypal households. Through the use of climate, socio-economic and governance scenarios plausible trajectories and futures of coastal Bangladesh can be explored.


Archive | 2018

Characterising Associations between Poverty and Ecosystem Services

Helen Adams; W. Neil Adger; Sate Ahmad; Ali Ahmed; Dilruba Begum; Mark Chan; Attila N. Lázár; Zoe Matthews; Mohammed Mofizur Rahman; Peter Kim Streatfield

Social survey and geographical data, stratified by social-ecological systems, are used to analyse multiple measures of poverty, in-depth information on rural livelihoods and coping strategies for populations in the delta region. The resultant dataset provides extensive information on the ways in which households use ecosystem services to generate well-being. Analysis of the data shows that any reliance on provisioning ecosystem services for farming, aquaculture, fisheries or forest products increases the likelihood of households being above the poverty line. However, high levels of ecosystem service use are associated with high levels of well-being only in those with significant land assets and associated social capital. The data also provide a quantitative baseline understanding that is fundamental to the integrated analysis.


Archive | 2018

Defining Social-Ecological Systems in South-West Bangladesh

Helen Adams; W. Neil Adger; Munir Ahmed; Hamidul Huq; Rezaur Rahman; Mashfiqus Salehin

Seven distinct social-ecological systems are defined for the Bangladesh delta, based on analysis of the ways in which social systems differ according to the ecological system. These systems are rain-fed and irrigated agriculture, brackish and freshwater aquaculture, Charlands, coastal zones, and areas dependent on the Sundarbans mangrove forest. The social systems that inhibit or facilitate access to ecosystem services vary between social-ecological systems. The timing and nature of ecosystem services give rise to different livelihood opportunities, means of access to ecosystem services, and coping mechanisms. Thus, while the common challenge across all social-ecological systems is to design mechanisms by which the poorest populations retain value and benefits, these mechanisms will differ depending on the system.


Archive | 2018

Ecosystem Services Linked to Livelihoods and Well-Being in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna Delta

Helen Adams; W. Neil Adger; Robert J. Nicholls

Deltas are dynamic and the relationships between ecosystem services, livelihoods and well-being within them are multi-scalar and often non-linear. Social mechanisms of access and management vary between different bundles of ecosystem services: a social-ecological system approach therefore identifies the trade-offs and interactions which occur across diverse temporal and spatial scales and communities. Although Bangladesh is moving towards a more urbanised future, access to ecosystem services continues to be critical to the well-being of populations in rural areas. However, rights to those services are available to a diminishing few. Current winners and losers from development processes are persistent, and ecosystem services are unlikely to lift the rural poor out of poverty without a complete restructuring of social and economic relations in rural areas.


Archive | 2018

Ecosystem Services, Well-Being and Deltas: Current Knowledge and Understanding

W. Neil Adger; Helen Adams; Susan Kay; Robert J. Nicholls; Craig W. Hutton; Susan Hanson; Md. Munsur Rahman; Mashfiqus Salehin

Deltas are distinct in terms of the concentration of freshwater, nutrients and especially sediment inputs to a small concentrated area of the coastal zone, creating conditions ideal for fertile ecosystems, dense population and high economic activity. Ecosystem services within these areas can provide services significant in the maintenance of well-being for both rural and urban populations. There are significant feedbacks between environmental processes and social dynamics that drive the economic and well-being outcomes for current and future populations. This chapter reviews ecosystem services in deltas and summarises the state of knowledge in this field on how to manage delta ecosystems for the benefit of resident populations and wider society.


Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts | 2015

Agricultural livelihoods in coastal Bangladesh under climate and environmental change – a model framework

Attila N. Lázár; D. Clarke; Helen Adams; Abdur Razzaque Akanda; Sylvia Szabo; Robert J. Nicholls; Zoe Matthews; Dilruba Begum; Abul Fazal M. Saleh; Md. Anwarul Abedin; Andres Payo; Peter Kim Streatfield; Craig W. Hutton; M. Shahjahan Mondal; Abu Zofar Moslehuddin


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2016

Integrated assessment of social and environmental sustainability dynamics in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna delta, Bangladesh

Robert J. Nicholls; Craig W. Hutton; Attila N. Lázár; Andrew Allan; W.N. Adger; Helen Adams; Judith Wolf; Munsur Rahman; Mashfiqus Salehin

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Craig W. Hutton

University of Southampton

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Mashfiqus Salehin

Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology

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Zoe Matthews

University of Southampton

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D. Clarke

University of Southampton

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