TY - JOUR
T1 - Collaborative Governance for Climate Change Adaptation
T2 - Mapping citizen–municipality interactions
AU - Brink, Ebba
AU - Wamsler, Christine
PY - 2018/3/1
Y1 - 2018/3/1
N2 - Increasing climate change impacts are a major threat to sustainable urban development, and challenge current governance structures, including actors' responsibilities for dealing with climate variability and extremes. The need for distributed risk governance and citizen engagement is increasingly recognised; however, few empirical studies systematically assess interactions between citizens and municipalities in climate risk management and adaptation. Here, we develop an explorative framework, applied to three Swedish municipalities, to map existing ‘adaptation interactions’ and analyse how responsibilities for climate adaptation manifest and are (re)negotiated. The results show that adaptation planners rarely consider collaborations with citizens, despite positive adaptation outcomes from related local processes. Structures and mechanisms for systematic monitoring and learning are also lacking. We argue that fostering collaborations with citizens – to support long-term adaptation and reduce the adaptation burden of those most at risk – requires consideration of four strategic issues: proactive engagement; equity and ‘responsibilisation’; nature-based approaches; and systematic adaptation mainstreaming. Finally, we discuss how our analytical framework can contribute to further theorising municipalities' engagement with citizens on climate risk.
AB - Increasing climate change impacts are a major threat to sustainable urban development, and challenge current governance structures, including actors' responsibilities for dealing with climate variability and extremes. The need for distributed risk governance and citizen engagement is increasingly recognised; however, few empirical studies systematically assess interactions between citizens and municipalities in climate risk management and adaptation. Here, we develop an explorative framework, applied to three Swedish municipalities, to map existing ‘adaptation interactions’ and analyse how responsibilities for climate adaptation manifest and are (re)negotiated. The results show that adaptation planners rarely consider collaborations with citizens, despite positive adaptation outcomes from related local processes. Structures and mechanisms for systematic monitoring and learning are also lacking. We argue that fostering collaborations with citizens – to support long-term adaptation and reduce the adaptation burden of those most at risk – requires consideration of four strategic issues: proactive engagement; equity and ‘responsibilisation’; nature-based approaches; and systematic adaptation mainstreaming. Finally, we discuss how our analytical framework can contribute to further theorising municipalities' engagement with citizens on climate risk.
KW - autonomous adaptation
KW - citizen participation
KW - climate change adaptation
KW - co-creation
KW - co-production
KW - collaborative arrangements
KW - collaborative governance
KW - disaster risk reduction
KW - individual adaptation
KW - nature-based solutions
KW - private adaptation
KW - risk governance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85045210283&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/eet.1795
DO - 10.1002/eet.1795
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85045210283
SN - 1756-932X
VL - 28
SP - 82
EP - 97
JO - Environmental Policy and Governance
JF - Environmental Policy and Governance
IS - 2
ER -