Query Result Set
SLIM21 Home
Advanced Search
My Info
Browse
Arrivals
Expected
Reference Items
Journal List
Proposals
Media List
Rules
ActiveUsers:3230
Hits:25698116
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
Help
Topics
Tutorial
Advanced search
Hide Options
Sort Order
Natural
Author / Creator, Title
Title
Item Type, Author / Creator, Title
Item Type, Title
Subject, Item Type, Author / Creator, Title
Item Type, Subject, Author / Creator, Title
Publication Date, Title
Items / Page
5
10
15
20
Modern View
MALADAPTATION
(2)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
133100
International aid and cyclone shelters in Bangladesh: adaptation or maladaptation?
/ Dhakal, Subas P; Mahmood, Muhammad N
Dhakal, Subas P
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2014.
Summary/Abstract
This paper examines the unintended prospect of international aid-driven maladaptation in Bangladesh. While attempts by aid agencies to channel scarce resources to finance structural adaptation measures are commendable, complementary non-structural measures remain under the radar. Using an exploratory research approach this paper investigates the state of cyclone shelters in two coastal districts: Chittagong and Cox's Bazar. The findings indicate that the lack of adequate shelter capacity, maintenance funding, and community participation has exacerbated the vulnerability of Chittagong's marginalised urban population. The paper contends that international aid can avoid being maladaptive by accentuating community-based governance and facilitating community capacity to fund the maintenance of cyclone shelters in new ways
Key Words
Sri Lanka
;
International aid
;
Social Capital
;
Resilience
;
Natural Disasters
;
Community Participation
;
Urban Vulnerability
;
Cyclone Shelters
;
Maladaptation
;
Finance Structural Adaptation
Links
'Full Text'
In Basket
Export
2
ID:
178612
Risks of NATO’s maladaptation
/ Tardy, Thierry
Tardy, Thierry
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
This article deals with the process of adaptation that NATO has gone through over the last decade. It contends that while seeking congruence with its environment, NATO is facing a risk of maladaptation that pertains to its positioning as a defence or security actor. On the one hand, NATO has adapted by going back to the basics of deterrence and defence in the new Cold War context provoked by Russia’s annexation of Crimea; in the meantime though, this move has created tensions for the organisation as it had to simultaneously cope with an increasingly diverse security environment that tends to pull NATO away from a narrow defence-focused agenda. Whether NATO does defence or embraces a broader security agenda reflects dilemmas and trade-offs that are at the heart of the Alliance’s quest for relevance. This article explores NATO’s adaptation since 2014, unpacks the rationale, dilemmas and policy implications of the quest for congruence, and identifies vulnerabilities that the adaptation process may unintentionally lead to.
Key Words
NATO
;
Maladaptation
;
Organisational Adaptation
;
Congruence/Relevance
Links
'Full Text'
In Basket
Export