Journal of Environmental and Sustainability Science
Review Article
• Open Access
Bridging the Divide: Climate Vulnerability, Rural-Urban Disparities, and Adaptation Governance in the Global South
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Climate change acts not merely as an environmental stressor but as a profound amplifier of existing socioeconomic inequalities, particularly in the Global South. This research paper synthesizes empirical findings from four critical regions—the East African Community (EAC), Bangladesh, Nepal, and Zimbabwe—to explore the intersecting dynamics of climate vulnerability, rural-urban infrastructure disparities, and governance challenges. Drawing on comparative case studies, this paper examines how climate stressors differentially impact rural and urban populations, the efficacy of national adaptation policies, and the resulting socio-economic outcomes, including agricultural transformation and forced migration. Findings indicate that rural areas consistently bear the brunt of climate impacts due to infrastructure deficits, lower socio-economic capacity, and delayed policy implementation. In the EAC, climate variability widens rural-urban electricity gaps, severely constraining agricultural modernization. In Nepal, environmental degradation forces rural exodus and migration, while in Zimbabwe, a distinct rural-urban divide in climate awareness dictates divergent adaptation strategies. Meanwhile, Bangladesh exemplifies the complexities of climate governance, where robust national policies frequently falter at the implementation stage due to institutional fragmentation. The paper concludes that effective climate adaptation requires a paradigm shift: infrastructure must be treated as climate adaptation, governance must be decentralized and coordinated, and localized education must bridge the awareness gap. Without spatially targeted, institutionally coherent interventions, the global commitment to "leave no one behind" remains an unfulfilled aspiration.
Keywords
climate change adaptation, rural-urban divide, climate governance, agricultural transformation,References
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