Climate Change Adaptation Tools at the Community Level: An Integrated Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
- Planning, designing and implementing climate change adaptation tools at the rural community level
- Considerations when planning the participation process at the rural community level
- Context-specificitySocio-economic and Livelihoods contextSocio-political and cultural context
- Objectives-clarity and Stakeholder identification and managementClarifying the objectives of the participation processIdentifying stakeholders for the participation process
- Considerations when designing the participation process at the rural community level
- Oral narratives
- PRA, CRA and VCA tools and techniques
- Participatory mapping
- Considerations when implementing the participation processes at the rural community level
- Risk communicationInformation-sharingExtraction
- Participatory modelling and scenarios building at the rural community levelParticipatory modellingScenarios building
- Assessing the sustainability of climate adaptation action plans
- Conference proceedings on environmental modelling: International Congress on Environmental Modelling and Software (iEMS). (URL Link: http://www.iemss.org/sites/iemss2016/).
3. Planning, Designing and Implementing Climate Change Adaptation Tools at the Rural Community Level
3.1. Considerations When Planning the Participation Process at the Rural Community Level
3.1.1. Context-Specificity
Socio-Economic and Livelihoods Context
Socio-Political and Cultural Context
“What people know is influenced by (and influences) their beliefs, lifestyle and behavior. To understand local knowledge one has to understand and account for people’s ways of knowing (i.e. different knowledge types) as much as their practices and beliefs, perceptions and values. Understanding all this is crucial because it can explain why people do things the way they do”[54] (p. 21).
3.1.2. Objectives-Clarity and Stakeholder Identification and Management
Clarifying the Objectives of the Participation Process
Identifying Stakeholders for the Participation Process
3.2. Considerations When Designing the Participation Process at the Rural Community Level
3.2.1. Oral Narratives
3.2.2. PRA, CRA and VCA Tools and Technique
3.2.3. Participatory Mapping
3.3. Considerations When Implementing the Participation Processes at the Rural Community Level
3.3.1. Risk Communication
Information-Sharing
Extraction
3.3.2. Participatory Modelling and Scenarios Building at the Rural Community Level
Participatory Modelling
Scenario Building
3.4. Assessing the Sustainability of Climate Adaptation Action Plans
4. Concluding Remarks
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- (1)
- http://www.cakex.org/ (Climate Adaptation Knowledge Exchange: CAKE).
- (2)
- http://www.csc.noaa.gov/digitalcoast/inundation/index.html (coastal inundation toolkit).
- (2.1.)
- https://www.csc.noaa.gov/digitalcoast/tools/criticalfacilities (Critical Facilities Flood Exposure Tool).
- (2.2.)
- https://www.csc.noaa.gov/digitalcoast/tools/climatewizard (Climate Wizard).
- (3)
- http://water.epa.gov/infrastructure/watersecurity/climate/creat.cfm (Climate Resilience Evaluation & Awareness Tool: CREAT).
- (4)
- http://water.epa.gov/infrastructure/watersecurity/climate/index.cfm (Climate Ready Water Utilities: CRWU).
- (5)
- http://sarasotabay.org/slr-web-map/ (Sea Level Rise Viewer).
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Stages of Participation (i.e., Degree of Participation/Rungs of Arnstein’s Ladder) | Main Purpose of Participation (i.e., Objectives of Participation) | Characteristics of the Stage (i.e., Direction of Communication Flows) | Type of Participation (i.e., Theoretical Basis/Pragmatic Participation etc.) |
---|---|---|---|
Information-sharing | Information | Information flows in one direction from the practitioners to the local community | Passive participation |
Consultation | Extraction | Information flows in one direction from the local community to the practitioners | |
Co-decision | Co-development (characterized by reciprocity of actions) | Flow of information is arranged in both directions: from the local community to the practitioners and vice versa- in a process of shared learning | Interactive participation |
Decision | Ownership | The local community becomes responsible for the planning, design and implementation of climate adaptation action plans | Active participation/self-organization/citizens control |
Classification/Criteria Used (Models/Methods) | |
---|---|
Stakeholder’s levels of interest and influence (Interest & Influence Matrix) [62] | Top-down approaches “Analytical Categorization” |
Competition or cooperation [63,64] | |
The strategic and the moral stakeholder [65] | |
Stakeholder’s potential powers to threaten or cooperate with the organization (cooperation and threat) [66] | |
The primary (with formal relationships) and the secondary (without formal relationships) [67] | |
Power, legitimacy and urgency (Stakeholder Salience Model) [68] | |
Network density and the centrality of the organization focus [69] | |
Power of influence, impact on the organization and affinity with organizational objectives [70] | |
Power and the level of interest [71] | |
Degree stakeholders affect or can be affected by problem or action-with a Rainbow Diagram [72] | |
Classical stakeholders, stakewatchers, stakekeepers [73] | |
Discourse Analysis-with a Q methodology [74,75,76,77,78,79] | Bottom-Up “Reconstructive Methods” |
Identify Stakeholders | Differentiate & Categorize Stakeholders | Investigate Relationships between Stakeholders |
---|---|---|
Self-selection Expert Opinion Focus Groups Semi-structured interviews Snowball Sampling Demographic data (age, gender, nationality, residence, occupation etc.) | Top-down Analytical Categorization using: Interest-Influence matrices Radical Transactiveness Bottom-up Stakeholder-led Stakeholder Categorization: Card Sorting Discourse Analysis Q Methodology Q sorting Strategic Perspectives Analysis | Actor-Linkage matrices Social Network Analysis Knowledge Mapping |
Scenarios | Exploratory | Future trends | Projective |
Prospective | |||
Anticipatory | Policy responsive | Expert judgement | |
Stakeholder defined |
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Nkoana, E.M.; Verbruggen, A.; Hugé, J. Climate Change Adaptation Tools at the Community Level: An Integrated Literature Review. Sustainability 2018, 10, 796. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10030796
Nkoana EM, Verbruggen A, Hugé J. Climate Change Adaptation Tools at the Community Level: An Integrated Literature Review. Sustainability. 2018; 10(3):796. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10030796
Chicago/Turabian StyleNkoana, Elvis Modikela, Aviel Verbruggen, and Jean Hugé. 2018. "Climate Change Adaptation Tools at the Community Level: An Integrated Literature Review" Sustainability 10, no. 3: 796. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10030796
APA StyleNkoana, E. M., Verbruggen, A., & Hugé, J. (2018). Climate Change Adaptation Tools at the Community Level: An Integrated Literature Review. Sustainability, 10(3), 796. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10030796