The Ripple Effect: Building Commitment to Urban Adaptation Planning
Transcription
The Ripple Effect: Building Commitment to Urban Adaptation Planning
SESSION DESCRIPTION A5 The Ripple Effect: Building Commitment to Urban Adaptation Planning Knowledge Café Workshop Date: Monday, 8 June, 2015 Time: 14:30-16:00 Rooms: S34/35 (tbc) Language: English Contact: Kara E. Reeve E-mail/web: [email protected] www.rti.org Organized by: Kara E Reeve OBJECTIVE Although preparing for the impacts of climate change is integral to achieving urban resilience, cities are having difficulty generating commitment and political and policy support for adaptation. This session builds on the research of the late JoAnn Carmin, Ph.D., a Professor at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), and will draw from her research focused on developed and developing country cities. Previous research draws primarily from organizational studies with focus on new initiatives in institutionalized arenas and how entrepreneurs form new organizations or promote change within established organizations and fields. However, we know little about how cities initiate action and generate commitment in nascent policy domain. Therefore, this session will present emerging research themes and guide participants through a session that moves from theory to practice as they learn from the research and also from each other. The session will seek to help participants better understand how cities may build commitment and gain support for climate adaptation initiatives, as well as lessons can be drawn from the adaptation activities of cities related to promoting commitment to urban resilience, including new policy initiatives. This session will first share the ways in which pioneering cities have generated acceptance, commitment, and support for climate adaptation planning, including a practical presentation on the adaptation experience of the City of Ekurhuleni, South Africa. Next, participants will break into smaller groups to discuss how cities may overcome challenges building support commitment, and acceptance for climate adaptation, such as by linking adaptation to local goals and priorities, engaging departments, attending to the political and policy realities of local officials, and enlisting the support of diverse stakeholders. In small groups, participants will discuss a set of questions such as, “How do local leaders get the commitment of other city councils and the mayor?; From your experience, what to you see as the leverage points for getting buy-in across municipal departments?” Last, the facilitators will lead the group through a final session to reflect on the small group discussions to share thoughts, insight, and ideas that may have emerged. OUTCOMES Participants will leave the workshop with: A better understanding of the ways in which pioneering cities have generated acceptance, commitment, and support for climate adaptation planning; A new peer network that can be used to share stories and ideas for building acceptance, commitment and support for adaptation; and An overview of cutting-edge research that can be used inform and enhance adaptation planning activities in their cities and/or in the cities of peers and colleagues. METHODOLOGY Page 1 of 2 - Resilient Cities Congress Secretariat, ICLEI, World Secretariat, Bonn, Germany, Phone: +49-228/976 299 28, [email protected] The workshop will use a “Knowledge Café” format. The facilitator will provide an overview of key research themes, followed by a practical presentation hi-lighting the ways in which these themes have surfaced, created roadblocks, or have been overcome in the adaptation activities of Ekurhuleni, South Africa. After the introductory presentations, the facilitators will pose a set of open-ended questions to the audience, which will then break into small groups, with about five people in each group. Each small group will discuss the questions for a set period of time. The small group discussions are not led by a facilitator, and no summary of the discussion is captured for subsequent feedback to the large group. Participants then re-convene and the facilitators will lead the group through a final session, in which people reflect on the small group discussions. Facilitator(s) Kara E. Reeve*, Urban Management Specialist, RTI International, USA Freddie Aucamp, Divisional Head, Environmental Strategic Planning, City of Ekurhuleni, South Africa 14:30 - 14:55 Description. The facilitators will lead a brief ice-breaker with welcoming activities, provide a short presentation on key research themes related to building acceptance, commitment, and support for adaptation in cities. Led by Kara E. Reeve, Urban Management Specialist, RTI International, USA 14:55 – 14:15 City Spotlight: Ekurhuleni, South Africa Freddie Aucamp, Divisional Head, Environmental Strategic Planning, City of Ekurhuleni, South Africa Water resource management is likely to be one of South Africa’s most complex problems for municipalities in the future due to Climate change, urbanization, and other factors. Therefore, building acceptance, commitment, and support for adaptation activities is critical; Mr. Aucamp will discuss these issues from the Ekurhuleni perspective and provide a means to ground-truth the theory presented in the first part of the workshop. 14:15 – 15:40 15:40 – 16:00 Small group break-outs to discuss open-ended questions, share opportunities and challenges related to building acceptance, commitment, and support for urban adaptation Facilitated discussion of break-out sessions to share thoughts, insight, and ideas that may have emerged With thanks to JoAnn Carmin and Isabelle Anguelovski*, Linda Shi*, Eric Chu*, Daniel Gallagher*, Kian Goh*, Zachary Lamb*, and Hannah Teicher.* *Current and former students of Dr. Carmin at MIT. Page 2 of 2 - Resilient Cities Congress Secretariat, ICLEI, World Secretariat, Bonn, Germany, Phone: +49-228/976 299 28, [email protected]