text
stringlengths 0
6.44k
|
---|
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041 |
Copyright: © 2022 Harrison et al. This is an open |
access article distributed under the terms of the |
Creative Commons Attribution License, which |
permits unrestricted use, distribution, and |
reproduction in any medium, provided the original |
author and source are credited. |
Data Availability Statement: Data are available in a |
data repository: https://doi.org/10.17604/p318- |
6n41. |
Introduction |
The effects of climate change pose threats to communities worldwide with many urban coastal |
communities facing multiple impacts from sea level rise, more frequent and intense storms, |
and heat events [1, 2]. As awareness of this existential threat grows among governments, community organizations, and community members, there is a pressing need to develop and test |
new adaptation strategies “that integrate stakeholders in the design and implementation |
responses (p. 1)” and account for sociocultural as well as geographical and climatic conditions |
[3]. A recent comprehensive assessment of global adaptation plans identified priorities for |
adaptation research, among them the development of strategies that “enable individuals and |
civil society to adapt,” which might entail collective action for social change [4]. Given that |
current strategies focused on preserving capital and property can leave large numbers of community members behind [5], interventions that draw upon the social and human capital of |
neighborhoods to identify vulnerabilities at a hyperlocal scale, and align decision making with |
locally relevant concerns and threats, might yield better outcomes [6–12], as there is increasing |
recognition that climate resiliency should revolve around the intersections of public policy and |
actions by individuals and households as well [13]. While calls for more participative processes |
are ongoing, methods and approaches to improve engagement are still under researched [14, |
15]. Echoing the research, our team, having observed more than a decade of regional, county, |
and municipal responses to threats from climate change in South Florida, recognized the limitations of responses that emphasize infrastructure to the near exclusion of social resilience, |
rely primarily on outside consultants who elicit minimal input from community members, |
and fail to lay the groundwork for long-term engagement by residents of affected neighborhoods [see, for example 16–18]. |
With the goal of advancing research and practice related to community-engaged research |
and hyperlocal climate adaptation, this paper (1) details how our approach to community |
engaged research builds on two existing processes of photovoice and design thinking, (2) |
describes our alternative, a synthesis approach that we conducted in online workshops with |
two Miami-Dade County neighborhoods (Homestead and Little River) in July 2020, during |
the early months of the Covid-19 pandemic, and (3) summarizes outcomes, including comparative analysis between the communities, the alignment and variations in the issues raised by |
community members in relation to vulnerabilities identified by geospatial data, and possible |
impacts of the HyLo process on individual and community capacity. Key representatives from |
local government planning offices participated in all of the workshops, with additional representatives joining during a final exhibition and discussion by participants that focused on how |
to move projects forward using existing resources. Comparisons between the two neighborhoods to examine variations in local perceptions of risk and desired solutions are key to our |
findings about the importance of focusing on hyperlocal adaptation. In addition to key findings, we discuss lessons learned about community engagement around climate adaptation in |
the pandemic environment. |
The hyperlocalism method |
Focusing on local engagement and action, we developed and piloted the Hyperlocalism |
approach—hereafter ‘HyLo’—a community-driven method for climate-adaptation planning |
[19]. The HyLo method builds on partnerships among local community organizations, residents, and representatives from local government departments to address existing and future |
challenges at the neighborhood level and create a more equitable future for communities facing enhanced social and geographic climate risks. The HyLo method utilizes a communication |
as design (CAD) approach [20, 21] to redesign two widely used community-based protocols of |
PLOS CLIMATE |
Advancing a hyperlocal approach to community engagement in climate adaptation |
PLOS Climate | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041 June 8, 2022 2 / 26 |
Funding: This work was supported by funding |
from the University of Miami Laboratory for |
Integrated Knowledge: Award #U-LINK 19-764 (JL) |
and from AT&T Argonne Labs: Award |
#2020737015 (SP). The funders had no role in |
study design, data collection and analysis, decision |
to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. |
Competing interests: The authors have declared |
that no competing interests exist. |
inquiry and deliberation, photovoice and design-thinking. CAD approaches [19–21] seek to |
change communication processes from “what is” to “what is desired” by examining communication structures for their normative goals, redesigning protocols and interactions to help |
achieve those goals, and addressing unexpected outcomes and limitations of the communication protocols. We further developed an Integrated Climate Risk Assessment (ICRA) tool that |
would enable users to consider multiple aspects of risk. This effort responds to a growing recognition that climate risks intersect across multiple physical threats (heat, flooding, |
drought. . .etc.), as well as social, economic, and ecological vulnerabilities [22]. Overall, our |
approach combines education and geospatial mapping of risk with our integrated approach to |
community-based participatory action to provide a framework for residents to share their |
lived experiences, advance collective knowledge about neighborhood assets and vulnerabilities, |
imagine possible solutions, and communicate their priorities with government leaders. We |
designed the HyLo method with scalability and replicability in mind. Central to our approach |
is the aim of enabling community organizations in diverse circumstances and locations to replicate the HyLo method. |
Below we review photovoice and design thinking, identifying key strengths, limitations, |
and gaps to each process. |
Photovoice: Goals, current research, and gaps. Photovoice is a process whereby community members take photographs and tell stories about their communities, engage in dialogue, |
and present their work through exhibition to policymakers [23]. We view photovoice as the |
enactment of hyperlocal identification of risk, vulnerability, and potential for action. Photographs and stories from participants focus on their direct experience in their communities and |
represent concerns for the locations that impact their daily lives. As such, photovoice is a central component of our novel community-based participatory approach to stakeholder engagement and climate adaptation planning. |
A distinct extension of photo novella [24] that was formally introduced by Wang and Burris |
in 1997 [24], this qualitative method of inquiry empowers individuals to capture experiences |
in their communities, promote dialogue that produces collective knowledge, and communicate with policymakers and other stakeholders in positions of power [25]. Due to its flexibility |
and adaptability, photovoice is particularly well suited for community-based participatory |
research [23, 26]. Over the last two decades, photovoice has grown in popularity [26, 27] and |
been used in contexts from physical and mental health [27, 28] to community development |
[29] and been shown to be accessible to people in a range of age groups and other demographics [30, 31]. Photovoice can be delivered effectively in person or online [32, 33]. |
An emerging area of interest in photovoice research relates to the environment, emergency |
management, and climate resilience planning [34]. In this context, investigators have solicited |
the experiences and perspectives of members of rural and indigenous communities recovering |
from severe rain and wind events [35], coastal fishing village residents experiencing climatedriven marine ecosystem changes [36], and women in Nepal facing mental health impacts |
from drought, water scarcity, and other climate related changes [28]. In work in a coastal setting in Australia, Chandler and Baldwin [37] described the use of photovoice as participants |
shared stories demonstrating community understandings of climate change effects and their |
capacity as a persuasive tool. Many of these studies have sought to understand the role of social |
capital in community resilience, and to explore its place in equitable climate governance [38]. |
In addition to co-producing new knowledge and developing potential solutions to local |
problems, the process of photovoice can build strength and resiliency within individuals |
and communities [23], while increasing social capital [38]. Additionally, the photovoice |
approach is responsive to the concerns, such as those expressed by members from Isle de Jean |
Charles, Louisiana, threatened by sea level rise, regarding the need for, and importance of, |
PLOS CLIMATE |
Advancing a hyperlocal approach to community engagement in climate adaptation |
PLOS Climate | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041 June 8, 2022 3 / 26 |
community-led approaches and solutions [39]. As such, photovoice is “highly consistent” with |
Subsets and Splits