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100 _aArgent, Neil
_950274
245 _aRural geography II: Scalar and social constructionist perspectives on climate change adaptation and rural resilience/
260 _bSage,
_c2019.
300 _aVol 43, issue 1, 2019 : (183-191 p.).
520 _aThis report considers rural geography scholarship in relation to the field of climate change adaptation. While applied perspectives on the modelling and mapping of the potential impacts of climate change-related hazard events on rural localities continue to be an important research theme, more theoretically sophisticated and interpretivist approaches are providing more challenging understandings of the multi-scalar nature of climate change adaptation processes, from the micro-scale of the farm operator to the global scale of shifting climate regimes. Social constructivism is being deployed to critique taken-for-granted interpretations of the natural processes underlying regionally-specific climate change impacts, further broadening the ontological and epistemological lens of the sub-discipline. Rural geography continues to be a fertile sub-disciplinary field for theoretical and methodological experimentation.
650 _aclimate change,
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650 _aclimate change adaptation,
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650 _afood security,
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650 _a gender,
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650 _a geographical scale,
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650 _asocial constructivism
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773 0 _012579
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_dLondon: Sage Publication Ltd, 2019.
_tProgress in human geography/
_x 03091325
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0309132517743115
942 _2ddc
_cART
999 _c12591
_d12591