Friday, 15 May 2026
Las Vegas News
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • News
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Las Vegas
  • Las
  • Vegas
  • news
  • Trump
  • crime
  • entertainment
  • politics
  • Nevada
  • man
Las Vegas NewsLas Vegas News
Font ResizerAa
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Search
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
News

Putting Social Vulnerability at the Heart of Adaptation

By Matthias Binder May 7, 2026
Bringing research into government: Dr Katie Jenkins on her British Academy Fellowship
Bringing research into government: Dr Katie Jenkins on her British Academy Fellowship - Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
SHARE

Bringing research into government: Dr Katie Jenkins on her British Academy Fellowship

Contents
From Academic Models to Real-World DecisionsWhy Hazards Alone Are Not EnoughBuilding Practical Tools from Existing EvidenceWhat Changes When Research Meets Policy

Bringing research into government: Dr Katie Jenkins on her British Academy Fellowship – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)

Climate change does not affect everyone equally. Some communities face far greater risks from heatwaves and flooding because of factors like income, mobility, or access to support networks. Dr Katie Jenkins is now working inside government to make sure those differences shape official adaptation plans rather than remaining an afterthought.

Through a British Academy Innovation Fellowship, she has been seconded to the Government Office for Science for twelve months. Her goal is to strengthen the evidence on social vulnerability and help policy teams use it when deciding where and how to act.

- Advertisement -

From Academic Models to Real-World Decisions

Jenkins has spent fifteen years building models that track the social and economic fallout from heat and drought. She began at the University of East Anglia during the first year of its climate-change master’s programme and later joined the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research. Her work has always crossed disciplines, yet the move into government has sharpened her focus on what decision-makers actually need.

She is now embedded in the Climate, Energy and Environment team. Rather than launching new research projects, she is synthesising existing evidence and identifying gaps that matter for upcoming policies. The pace is faster than academia, with outputs expected to feed directly into government priorities.

Why Hazards Alone Are Not Enough

Most climate models highlight where hazards will strike and who lives in those areas. Far less attention has gone to the social conditions that turn exposure into harm. Jenkins is co-designing work that maps current and future vulnerability so adaptation measures can be tailored to the people most at risk.

Consider air conditioning in a city like London. Wealthier households install units and lower their own overheating risk. The extra heat expelled outside raises temperatures further for everyone, especially those who cannot afford cooling. Actions that appear protective can therefore widen inequalities if vulnerability is ignored.

Adaptation must therefore look beyond simple exposure maps. It needs to account for residents without cars during evacuations, people who rely on carers, or households in the most deprived neighbourhoods. Without that layer, well-intentioned policies can leave the most vulnerable worse off.

- Advertisement -

Building Practical Tools from Existing Evidence

Before the fellowship, Jenkins created the UK’s first Adaptation Inventory. The searchable database records real examples of household and sector-level actions already underway, from slope stabilisation to tree planting along riverbanks. Interest now centres on evaluating whether these measures deliver the intended benefits and what additional social gains they produce.

She is exploring ways to capture co-benefits such as improved biodiversity, better mental health from greener spaces, and stronger community resilience. Linking these outcomes to vulnerability data could help government design incentives that reward actions with the widest social return.

What Changes When Research Meets Policy

The shift from academic freedom to policy constraints has already altered how Jenkins thinks about her own research. She now weighs evidence against immediate policy windows and considers who will use the findings. The civil service environment is described as efficient and fast-paced, with teams juggling diverse projects across multiple methods.

- Advertisement -

She plans to carry these lessons back to the Tyndall Centre, particularly around pitching ideas clearly for policymakers and writing outputs that fit government timelines. The fellowship ends in twelve months, yet the connections formed are expected to continue shaping how social science informs adaptation decisions.

Previous Article Tornadoes and Thunderstorms Damage More Than 1,000 Buildings in Mississippi Tornadoes and Storms Injure 17 Across Mississippi
Next Article What Domestic Destination Is a Deal Right Now? Vegas Hotel Rates Drop as Demand Weakens
Advertisement
The Evolution of the LVMPD: How Real-Time Crime Centers Are Changing the Way Neighborhoods Are Policed
The Evolution of the LVMPD: How Real-Time Crime Centers Are Changing the Way Neighborhoods Are Policed
Crime
Prisoner Release Protocols: What Happens Behind the Scenes When a High-Profile Inmate Re-Enters Society?
Prisoner Release Protocols: What Happens Behind the Scenes When a High-Profile Inmate Re-Enters Society?
Crime
The Digital Footprint: How Las Vegas Casinos Use Facial Recognition Beyond the Gaming Floor
The Digital Footprint: How Las Vegas Casinos Use Facial Recognition Beyond the Gaming Floor
Education
The Psychology of the Spend: Why Transitioning from Saving to Spending is Terrifying
The Psychology of the Spend: Why Transitioning from Saving to Spending is Terrifying
News
Child Protective Services in Crisis: The Reality of Nevada's Foster Care System in 2026
Child Protective Services in Crisis: The Reality of Nevada’s Foster Care System in 2026
Gallery
Categories
Archives
May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    
- Advertisement -

You Might Also Like

Lawsuit says, Toddler’s remains kept in ‘deplorable conditions’ at shuttered funeral home
News

Family Sues Shuttered Las Vegas Funeral Home Over Toddler’s Remains in ‘Deplorable’ Cooler

March 6, 2026
Report of the Yale Committee on Trust in Higher Ed
News

Yale Faculty Panel Issues 20 Recommendations to Restore Public Confidence in Universities

May 1, 2026
WATCH: Monks on a mission walk 2,300 miles from Texas to DC
News

Buddhist Monks Complete 2,300-Mile Peace Pilgrimage in Washington

February 11, 2026
Warrant issued for woman charged with abandoning dog at Harry Reid
News

Las Vegas Judge Issues $5,000 Warrant for Woman Who Abandoned Goldendoodle at Airport

March 31, 2026

© Las Vegas News. All Rights Reserved – Some articles are generated by AI.

A WD Strategies Brand.

Go to mobile version
Welcome to Foxiz
Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?