Framework for vulnerability analysis in sustainability science, A
Journal ArticleAuthors
B.L. Turner II, Roger E. Kasperson, Pamela A. Matson, James J. McCarthy, Robert W. Corell, Lindsey Christensen, Noelle Eckley, Jeanne X. Kasperson, Amy Luers*, Marybeth L. Martello, Colin Polsky, Alexander Pulsipher, Andrew Schiller
Published by
PNAS, Vol. 100, page(s) 8074-8079
July 8, 2003
Publication no. 14
Global environmental change and sustainability science increasingly recognize the need to address the consequences of changes taking place in the structure and function of the biosphere. These changes raise questions such as: Who and what are vulnerable to the multiple environmental changes underday, and where? Research demonstrates that vulnerability is registered not by exposure to hazards (perturbations and stresses) along but also resides in the sensitivity and resilience of the system experiencing such hazards. This recognition requires revisions and enlargements in the basic design of vulnerability assessments, including the capacity to treat coupled human-environment systems and those linkages within and without the systems that affect their vulnerability. A vulnerability framework for the assessment of coupled human-environment systems is presented.
Parent Publications
Illustrating the coupled human-environment system for vulnerability analysis: Three case studies
B.L. Turner II, Pamela A. Matson, James J. McCarthy, Robert W. Corell, Lindsey Christensen, Noelle Eckley, Grete K. Hovelsrud-Broda, Jeanne X. Kasperson, Roger E. Kasperson, Amy Luers, Marybeth L. Martello, Svein Mathiesen, Rosamond L. Naylor, Colin Polsky, Alexander Pulsipher, Andrew Schiller, Henrik Selin, Nicholas Tyler
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences vol. 100, 14 (2003)

Method for quantifying vulnerability, applied to the agricutlural system of the Yaqui Valley, Mexico, A
Amy Luers, David B. Lobell, Leonard S. Sklar, C. Lee Addams, Pamela A. Matson
Global Environmental Change vol. 13 (2003)



