Social‐Environmental Extremes: Rethinking Extraordinary Events as Outcomes of Interacting Biophysical and Social Systems

Extreme droughts, heat waves, fires, hurricanes, floods, and landslides cause the largest losses in the United States, and globally, from natural hazards linked to weather and climate. There is evidence that the frequency of such extremes is increasing, particularly for heat waves, large fires, and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth's future Jg. 8; H. 7
Hauptverfasser: Balch, Jennifer K., Iglesias, Virginia, Braswell, Anna E., Rossi, Matthew W., Joseph, Maxwell B., Mahood, Adam L., Shrum, Trisha R., White, Caitlin T., Scholl, Victoria M., McGuire, Bryce, Karban, Claire, Buckland, Mollie, Travis, William R.
Format: Journal Article
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: Bognor Regis John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.07.2020
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ISSN:2328-4277, 2328-4277
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Abstract Extreme droughts, heat waves, fires, hurricanes, floods, and landslides cause the largest losses in the United States, and globally, from natural hazards linked to weather and climate. There is evidence that the frequency of such extremes is increasing, particularly for heat waves, large fires, and intense precipitation, making better understanding of the probability and consequences of these events imperative. Further, these events are not isolated, but rather interact with each other and with other social and biophysical drivers and conditions, to amplify impacts. Less is known about the nature and strength of these interactions. Natural and social science subfields frame extreme events with different definitions and analytical approaches, often neglecting interactions and the subsequent novel extremes that can arise. Here we propose a framework for social‐environmental extremes, defined as extraordinary events that emerge from interactions among biophysical and social systems. We argue that this definition is critical because it constrains the focus to major events that are capturing societal and scientific attention because of their extreme biophysical drivers and/or the extreme social outcomes. We review how different fields approach extremes as interacting phenomena and propose a synthetic framework that allows analytical separation of the multiple drivers and responses that yield extreme events and extreme effects. We conclude with a future research agenda for understanding the extreme events that matter to society. This agenda will help to identify where, when, and why communities may have high exposure and vulnerability to social‐environmental extremes—informing future mitigation and adaptation strategies. Plain Language Summary The frequency and magnitude of some extremes are increasing, for example, heavy downpours, heat waves, and wildfires, while vulnerabilities in ecosystems and human infrastructure and livelihoods are also changing. This review defines extremes across both their social and environmental dimensions, helping to establish the extremes that matter to society. In 2017, large portions of the western United States saw the wettest winter season, the hottest summer temperatures, and one of the driest falls ever recorded—leading to one of the largest and most devastating wildfire seasons in California, which were then followed by deadly mudslides that were partly a response to the burned landscape. This suite of events forces the questions: Are extremes increasing because of changes in natural events or social vulnerability, or both? Are extremes isolated events, or are they acting in concert or emergent from linked biophysical and social drivers? This review establishes a critical set of research questions that need to be addressed to better diagnose, predict, and mitigate extremes—one of the most pressing scientific challenges of our time. Key Points Many extreme events have social and biophysical dimensions that are linked This review provides a definition and framework for understanding these events, termed social‐environmental extremes A proposed research agenda will help scientists better understand and predict the extremes that matter to society
AbstractList Extreme droughts, heat waves, fires, hurricanes, floods, and landslides cause the largest losses in the United States, and globally, from natural hazards linked to weather and climate. There is evidence that the frequency of such extremes is increasing, particularly for heat waves, large fires, and intense precipitation, making better understanding of the probability and consequences of these events imperative. Further, these events are not isolated, but rather interact with each other and with other social and biophysical drivers and conditions, to amplify impacts. Less is known about the nature and strength of these interactions. Natural and social science subfields frame extreme events with different definitions and analytical approaches, often neglecting interactions and the subsequent novel extremes that can arise. Here we propose a framework for social‐environmental extremes, defined as extraordinary events that emerge from interactions among biophysical and social systems. We argue that this definition is critical because it constrains the focus to major events that are capturing societal and scientific attention because of their extreme biophysical drivers and/or the extreme social outcomes. We review how different fields approach extremes as interacting phenomena and propose a synthetic framework that allows analytical separation of the multiple drivers and responses that yield extreme events and extreme effects. We conclude with a future research agenda for understanding the extreme events that matter to society. This agenda will help to identify where, when, and why communities may have high exposure and vulnerability to social‐environmental extremes—informing future mitigation and adaptation strategies. Plain Language Summary The frequency and magnitude of some extremes are increasing, for example, heavy downpours, heat waves, and wildfires, while vulnerabilities in ecosystems and human infrastructure and livelihoods are also changing. This review defines extremes across both their social and environmental dimensions, helping to establish the extremes that matter to society. In 2017, large portions of the western United States saw the wettest winter season, the hottest summer temperatures, and one of the driest falls ever recorded—leading to one of the largest and most devastating wildfire seasons in California, which were then followed by deadly mudslides that were partly a response to the burned landscape. This suite of events forces the questions: Are extremes increasing because of changes in natural events or social vulnerability, or both? Are extremes isolated events, or are they acting in concert or emergent from linked biophysical and social drivers? This review establishes a critical set of research questions that need to be addressed to better diagnose, predict, and mitigate extremes—one of the most pressing scientific challenges of our time. Key Points Many extreme events have social and biophysical dimensions that are linked This review provides a definition and framework for understanding these events, termed social‐environmental extremes A proposed research agenda will help scientists better understand and predict the extremes that matter to society
Extreme droughts, heat waves, fires, hurricanes, floods, and landslides cause the largest losses in the United States, and globally, from natural hazards linked to weather and climate. There is evidence that the frequency of such extremes is increasing, particularly for heat waves, large fires, and intense precipitation, making better understanding of the probability and consequences of these events imperative. Further, these events are not isolated, but rather interact with each other and with other social and biophysical drivers and conditions, to amplify impacts. Less is known about the nature and strength of these interactions. Natural and social science subfields frame extreme events with different definitions and analytical approaches, often neglecting interactions and the subsequent novel extremes that can arise. Here we propose a framework for social‐environmental extremes, defined as extraordinary events that emerge from interactions among biophysical and social systems. We argue that this definition is critical because it constrains the focus to major events that are capturing societal and scientific attention because of their extreme biophysical drivers and/or the extreme social outcomes. We review how different fields approach extremes as interacting phenomena and propose a synthetic framework that allows analytical separation of the multiple drivers and responses that yield extreme events and extreme effects. We conclude with a future research agenda for understanding the extreme events that matter to society. This agenda will help to identify where, when, and why communities may have high exposure and vulnerability to social‐environmental extremes—informing future mitigation and adaptation strategies.
Abstract Extreme droughts, heat waves, fires, hurricanes, floods, and landslides cause the largest losses in the United States, and globally, from natural hazards linked to weather and climate. There is evidence that the frequency of such extremes is increasing, particularly for heat waves, large fires, and intense precipitation, making better understanding of the probability and consequences of these events imperative. Further, these events are not isolated, but rather interact with each other and with other social and biophysical drivers and conditions, to amplify impacts. Less is known about the nature and strength of these interactions. Natural and social science subfields frame extreme events with different definitions and analytical approaches, often neglecting interactions and the subsequent novel extremes that can arise. Here we propose a framework for social‐environmental extremes, defined as extraordinary events that emerge from interactions among biophysical and social systems. We argue that this definition is critical because it constrains the focus to major events that are capturing societal and scientific attention because of their extreme biophysical drivers and/or the extreme social outcomes. We review how different fields approach extremes as interacting phenomena and propose a synthetic framework that allows analytical separation of the multiple drivers and responses that yield extreme events and extreme effects. We conclude with a future research agenda for understanding the extreme events that matter to society. This agenda will help to identify where, when, and why communities may have high exposure and vulnerability to social‐environmental extremes—informing future mitigation and adaptation strategies.
Extreme droughts, heat waves, fires, hurricanes, floods, and landslides cause the largest losses in the United States, and globally, from natural hazards linked to weather and climate. There is evidence that the frequency of such extremes is increasing, particularly for heat waves, large fires, and intense precipitation, making better understanding of the probability and consequences of these events imperative. Further, these events are not isolated, but rather interact with each other and with other social and biophysical drivers and conditions, to amplify impacts. Less is known about the nature and strength of these interactions. Natural and social science subfields frame extreme events with different definitions and analytical approaches, often neglecting interactions and the subsequent novel extremes that can arise. Here we propose a framework for social‐environmental extremes, defined as extraordinary events that emerge from interactions among biophysical and social systems. We argue that this definition is critical because it constrains the focus to major events that are capturing societal and scientific attention because of their extreme biophysical drivers and/or the extreme social outcomes. We review how different fields approach extremes as interacting phenomena and propose a synthetic framework that allows analytical separation of the multiple drivers and responses that yield extreme events and extreme effects. We conclude with a future research agenda for understanding the extreme events that matter to society. This agenda will help to identify where, when, and why communities may have high exposure and vulnerability to social‐environmental extremes—informing future mitigation and adaptation strategies. The frequency and magnitude of some extremes are increasing, for example, heavy downpours, heat waves, and wildfires, while vulnerabilities in ecosystems and human infrastructure and livelihoods are also changing. This review defines extremes across both their social and environmental dimensions, helping to establish the extremes that matter to society. In 2017, large portions of the western United States saw the wettest winter season, the hottest summer temperatures, and one of the driest falls ever recorded—leading to one of the largest and most devastating wildfire seasons in California, which were then followed by deadly mudslides that were partly a response to the burned landscape. This suite of events forces the questions: Are extremes increasing because of changes in natural events or social vulnerability, or both? Are extremes isolated events, or are they acting in concert or emergent from linked biophysical and social drivers? This review establishes a critical set of research questions that need to be addressed to better diagnose, predict, and mitigate extremes—one of the most pressing scientific challenges of our time. Many extreme events have social and biophysical dimensions that are linked This review provides a definition and framework for understanding these events, termed social‐environmental extremes A proposed research agenda will help scientists better understand and predict the extremes that matter to society
Author Mahood, Adam L.
Braswell, Anna E.
Rossi, Matthew W.
Iglesias, Virginia
Buckland, Mollie
White, Caitlin T.
Travis, William R.
Shrum, Trisha R.
Balch, Jennifer K.
Karban, Claire
Joseph, Maxwell B.
Scholl, Victoria M.
McGuire, Bryce
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  surname: Travis
  fullname: Travis, William R.
  organization: University of Colorado Boulder
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Snippet Extreme droughts, heat waves, fires, hurricanes, floods, and landslides cause the largest losses in the United States, and globally, from natural hazards...
Abstract Extreme droughts, heat waves, fires, hurricanes, floods, and landslides cause the largest losses in the United States, and globally, from natural...
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SubjectTerms Climate change
Drought
exposure
Extreme drought
extreme events
Extreme weather
Fires
Heat waves
Hurricanes
Landslides
Mitigation
natural hazards
System theory
Trends
vulnerability
Weather
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Title Social‐Environmental Extremes: Rethinking Extraordinary Events as Outcomes of Interacting Biophysical and Social Systems
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