This book examines how expert-driven approaches to mitigating the impacts of climate variability alone are inadequate for addressing the challenges of related cascading crises. The work argues for a fundamental shift in framing risk mitigation options drawn from a range of different yet complementary perspectives on inclusive, participatory risk governance that engage community views alongside scientific expertise. Throughout, the authors advocate for breaking down disciplinary silos and embracing transdisciplinary collaboration. They emphasize the importance of community agency, stakeholder engagement, and integrating multiple forms of knowledge - scientific, organizational, and experiential - in climate adaptation planning. The volume explores this theme through diverse case studies and methodological approaches. Key chapters include an examination of Post-Normal Science approaches to climate adaptation decision making, ethical dilemmas facing disaster management leaders, and urban energy transitions in Cape Town's complex socio-political context. Other sections focus on urban resilience challenges ranging from environmental health impacts of increasing heat and humidity, holistic approaches to healthy cities that move beyond medical-focused solutions, and AI-enabled heat risk assessments in Indian cities that empower local communities. The book also critically examines Tokyo's resilience strategies, questioning whether expert-driven modernist approaches can adequately prepare communities for climate uncertainties. The book ultimately calls for transforming risk governance from centralized, technocratic decision making toward more adaptive, equitable approaches that recognize the complex interconnections between human settlements, environmental systems, and governance structures in a rapidly changing climate reality.
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Wallingford
Großbritannien
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Maße
Höhe: 244 mm
Breite: 172 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-80062-413-9 (9781800624139)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Dr Paul Barnes is the Judith Neilson Research Fellow (Disaster Resilience) at the University of New South Wales and Coordinator of UNSW's Resilient Futures Collective. He has over 25 years of experience as an applied academic and public sector manager covering emergency and risk management, and policy development at both State and Federal levels. He also serves as a visiting Professorial Fellow attached to the Torrens Resilience Initiative at Flinders University, Adelaide, an adjunct Associate Professor within the School of Engineering & Information Technology at UNSW/ADFA, and as a Senior Fellow at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute - where he established and served as Head of the Risk & Resilience Program. He is a Member of the International Military Council on Climate & Security (Washington DC), the World Economic Forum Expert Network on Risk & Resilience, UN Global Risk Assessment Framework (GRAF) Working Group(s), and a (Non-Resident) Associate Fellow of the Geneva Centre for Security Policy.
Herausgeber*in
University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
1: Breaking Silos: Multi-Sectoral Approaches to Mitigating the Cascading Impacts of Climate and Natural Hazards 2: Who Decides? Choosing Adaptation Tools to Climate Risk: A Post-Normal Science Problem 3: Ethics in Climate Risk Mitigation and Policy Development 4: Addressing the Polycrisis in Our Cities: Systems Thinking for Vulnerability, Risk and Resilience 5: Is Better Policy Enough? Governance of Urban Energy Transitions in the Global South 6: Wetter and Hotter: Dealing with the Environmental Health Impacts of Changing Weather and Climate 7: Healthy, Resilient Cities 8: Sustaining Urban Food Gardens for Community Resilience: A Case Study of the Langa Agrihub, Cape Town, South Africa 9: Adaptive Urban Resilience Using Artificial Intelligence 10: Tokyo's Perpetual Resilience Project: Between Local Knowledges and Universal Modernist Concepts 0: Introduction 11: Conclusion