![]() We assess the extent to which four motivations and related mechanisms of policy diffusion-interests (linked with learning and competition), rights and duties (tied to coercion), ideology, and recognition (both connected with emulation)-are conceptually and empirically associated with adaptation. To address this gap, we offer a new interpretation and assessment of the extensive adaptation policy literature through a policy diffusion perspective we pay specific attention to diffusion drivers and barriers, motivations, mechanisms, outputs, and outcomes. Most existing adaptation studies do not explicitly examine policy diffusion, which is a form of interdependent policy-making among jurisdictions at the same or across different levels of governance. However, there is surprisingly limited systematic knowledge about whether and how adaptation policies have diffused and could diffuse in the future. Adapting to some level of climate change has become unavoidable. ![]()
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