Entrepreneurial Strategies to Address Rural-Urban Climate-Induced Vulnerabilities: Assessing Adaptation and Innovation Measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Climate Change, Governance and Technology
- (1)
- Are the most effective innovations for climate adaptation the most technologically advanced ones, and to what extent does participant ownership matter?
- (2)
- How do gaps and tensions between entrepreneurial, beneficiary, and governmental understandings of effective mitigation and adaptation influence project selection and design?
- (3)
- How important are political considerations in the deployment of technical climate adaptation measures, and do perceptions by entrepreneurs of what is “the most valuable” effectively account for social justice needs to benefit the vulnerable?
2. Case and Methods
2.1. Climate Challenges and the Innovation and Adaptation Environments in Dhaka
2.2. Methods
3. Results
- (1)
- Turning Buzzwords into Successful Sustainability: The EcoPack Case
- (2)
- Low-Tech, High Impact, No Interest? The Saap-Sidi Game
4. Discussion of Findings
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
No | Item | Guide Questions/Description |
---|---|---|
Domain 1: Research team and reflexivity | ||
Personal Characteristics | ||
1. | Interviewer/facilitator | Authors and one Research Assistants (RA) based in Dhaka, Bangladesh, who worked as a facilitator, providing assistance and access as a trusted local member of the community |
2. | Credentials | Author 1: PhD, Development Studies. Author 2: PhD, political science |
3. | Occupation | Author 1: Senior Researcher and Post-Doctoral Fellow Author 2: Senior Researcher |
4. | Gender | Author 1: Male. Author 2: Male. RA: Male. |
5. | Experience and training | Authors have 10 years of extensive field experience each in developing country/crisis regions, specifically in conducting qualitative interviews with those in vulnerable communities. RA has 15 years of experience with climate issues and communities in Bangladesh |
Relationship with participants | ||
6. | Relationship established | No relationship with communities prior to study commencement. |
7. | Participant knowledge of the interviewer | Each interviewee was given a brief introduction of the affiliation of the interviewers, description of the project and its aims, assurances that interview data and responses would be kept anonymous, and opportunity to withdraw at any time. Consent was verbal. |
8. | Interviewer characteristics | See #7 and Methodology footnote in the article. |
Domain 2: study design | ||
Theoretical framework | ||
9. | Methodological orientation and Theory | Qualitative methodology was employed, specifically a perspectives method pinned to grounded theory/ethnography & uses content/contextual analysis. |
Participant selection | ||
10. | Sampling | Dhaka was selected due to the nature of business and economic development projects in the innovation/tech industry and Bangladesh’s connection to climate change.Participants were business owners or leaders, tech industry gatekeepers, government officials, startup CEOs and similar, selected by snowball technique, facilitated by local guides. |
11. | Method of approach | Face-to-face interviews, supplemented by three phone interviews and limited participant observation. Study conforms to the Norwegian National Committees for Research Ethics in the Social Sciences and Humanities (NESH) study design. |
12. | Sample size | 20 interviewees in three field visits in August 2019, September 2019 and February 2020. |
13. | Non-participation | No refusals due to security reasons or disinterest in discussion, but some individuals (typically management and government personnel) did not reply to requests for interviews. |
Setting | ||
14. | Setting of data collection | Dhaka, Bangladesh. Typically, offices of the interviewees, occasionally at a neutral location (e.g., coffee shop or hotel lobby). |
15. | Presence of non-participants | Additional persons were occasionally present, and author/RAs often attempted to interview without their presence to encourage more candid replies. Findings reflected minimal difference between interviews in which said non-participants were present and those in which they were not present. |
16. | Description of sample | 20 interviews plus selected follow-ups over phone/email, see #12.Sample is 75% male owing to similar gender dynamics of local technology/innovation actors and ownership across Bangladesh. Most respondents were between 25 and 50 years of age. |
Data collection | ||
17. | Interview guide | Questionnaire provided upon request. Otherwise no guides or prompting given, as no definitive answers were targeted per the selected methodology. |
18. | Repeat interviews | Several repeat interviews were conducted of key informants as relevant and to better triangulate findings. |
19. | Audio/visual recording | N/A |
20. | Field notes | Field notes were made during each interview and written up fully at the end of each day. |
21. | Duration | Each interview was typically one to two hours in length. |
22. | Data saturation | Partial saturation. Many interviews began to overlap on generalities of the Dhaka tech innovation landscape, but each interviewee had unique experiences navigating themselves/their companies through it. |
23. | Transcripts returned | Transcripts were not returned to participants for correction, but during interviews, responses of particular import were often asked twice to confirm responses. |
Domain 3: analysis and findings | ||
Data analysis | ||
24. | Number of data coders | Author 1 processed the data. |
25. | Description: coding tree | N/A per method. |
26. | Derivation of themes | Themes were collated in advance from existing innovation-climate literature as relevant for Bangladesh, then derived from data for presentation and discussion. |
27. | Software | N/A |
28. | Participant checking | Several participants gave findings feedback, through both second interviews as well as in discussions with RA, who maintains connections with several participants. |
Reporting | ||
29. | Quotations presented | In-text representative quotations were employed, selected based upon representativeness of the sample as a whole. |
30. | Data and findings consistent | Findings were driven by the data due to the methodology used. Thus, there was a strong correlation between the data and findings, and potential alternative explanations for such were studied and presented in the discussion section. As this is intended to be a pilot study, findings are by nature open-ended. |
31. | Clarity of major themes | Major themes developed through interviews, and are discussed more extensively in the analysis section of the paper. |
32. | Clarity of minor themes | Minor themes also arose, and are discussed in the analysis section of the paper, but these need more study. |
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Miklian, J.; Hoelscher, K. Entrepreneurial Strategies to Address Rural-Urban Climate-Induced Vulnerabilities: Assessing Adaptation and Innovation Measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Sustainability 2020, 12, 9115. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219115
Miklian J, Hoelscher K. Entrepreneurial Strategies to Address Rural-Urban Climate-Induced Vulnerabilities: Assessing Adaptation and Innovation Measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Sustainability. 2020; 12(21):9115. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219115
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiklian, Jason, and Kristian Hoelscher. 2020. "Entrepreneurial Strategies to Address Rural-Urban Climate-Induced Vulnerabilities: Assessing Adaptation and Innovation Measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh" Sustainability 12, no. 21: 9115. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219115
APA StyleMiklian, J., & Hoelscher, K. (2020). Entrepreneurial Strategies to Address Rural-Urban Climate-Induced Vulnerabilities: Assessing Adaptation and Innovation Measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Sustainability, 12(21), 9115. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219115