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DOI10.1016/j.crm.2020.100223
Local narratives of change as an entry point for building urban climate resilience
Marschütz B.; Bremer S.; Runhaar H.; Hegger D.; Mees H.; Vervoort J.; Wardekker A.
发表日期2020
ISSN2212-0963
起始页码2027
结束页码2056
卷号28
英文摘要Cities face increasing risks due to climate change, and many cities are actively working towards increasing their climate resilience. Climate change-induced risks and interventions to reduce these risks do not only impact urban risk management systems and infrastructures, but also people's daily lives. In order to build public support for climate adaptation and resilience-building and stimulate collaboration between authorities and citizens, it is necessary that adaptation and resilience-building are locally meaningful. Thus, interventions should be rooted in citizens’ concerns and aspirations for their city. Urban policymakers and researchers have started the search for better citizen participation in adaptation. However, tools to connect the relatively strategic and long-term notions of adaptation to a gradually changing climate held by planners and scientists with how citizens experience today's climate and weather remain elusive. This paper investigates the use of ‘narratives of change’ as an approach to elicit perceptions of past, present and future weather, water, and climate, and how these relate to citizens’ desired futures. We tested this by eliciting and comparing narratives of change from authorities and from citizens in the Dutch city of Dordrecht. Our analysis of the process showed that historical events, embedded in local memory and identity, have a surprisingly strong impact on how climate change is perceived and acted upon today. This contributes to an awareness and sense of urgency of some climate risks (e.g. flood risks). However, it also shifts attention away from other risks (e.g. intensified heat stress). The analysis highlighted commonalities, like shared concerns about climate change and desires to collaborate, but also differences in how climate change, impacts, and action are conceptualized. There are possibilities for collaboration and mutual learning, as well as areas of potential disagreement and conflict. We conclude that narratives are a useful tool to better connect the governance of climate adaptation with peoples’ daily experience of climate risks and climate resilience, thereby potentially increasing public support for and participation in resilience-building. © 2020 The Authors
英文关键词Citizen engagement; Climate resilience; Flooding; Narrative analysis
来源期刊Climate Risk Management
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/183181
作者单位Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands; Centre for the Study of the Sciences and the Humanities, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway; Forest and Nature Conservation Policy Group, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, Netherlands
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Marschütz B.,Bremer S.,Runhaar H.,et al. Local narratives of change as an entry point for building urban climate resilience[J],2020,28.
APA Marschütz B..,Bremer S..,Runhaar H..,Hegger D..,Mees H..,...&Wardekker A..(2020).Local narratives of change as an entry point for building urban climate resilience.Climate Risk Management,28.
MLA Marschütz B.,et al."Local narratives of change as an entry point for building urban climate resilience".Climate Risk Management 28(2020).
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