Adaptation and development pathways for different types of farmersLindsay C. Stringer, Elisabeth Simelton|Environmental Science & Policy|2019Cited by 304
Typologies of crop-drought vulnerability: an empirical analysis of the socio-economic factors that influence the sensitivity and resilience to drought of three major food crops in China (1961–2001)Elisabeth Simelton, Andrew J. Dougill, Mette Termansen et al.|Environmental Science & Policy|2009Cited by 249
“Vulnerability hotspots”: Integrating socio-economic and hydrological models to identify where cereal production may decline in the future due to climate change induced droughtEvan Fraser, Elisabeth Simelton, Mette Termansen et al.|Agricultural and Forest Meteorology|2012Cited by 119
The socioeconomics of food crop production and climate change vulnerability: a global scale quantitative analysis of how grain crops are sensitive to droughtElisabeth Simelton, Piers Forster, Mette Termansen et al.|Food Security|2012Cited by 103