Literature DB >> 34197514

How to tackle complexity in urban climate resilience? Negotiating climate science, adaptation and multi-level governance in India.

Mahendra Sethi1,2,3, Richa Sharma4, Subhakanta Mohapatra5, Shilpi Mittal3,6.   

Abstract

As the world's population is expected to be over 2/3rd urban by 2050, climate action in cities is a growing area of interest in the inter-disciplines of development policy, disaster mitigation and environmental governance. The climate impacts are expected to be quite severe in the developing world, given its urban societies are densely packed, vastly exposed to natural elements while possessing limited capabilities. There is a notable ambiguity and complexity that inhibits a methodical approach in identifying urban resilience measures. The complexity is due to intersection of large number of distinct variables in climate geoscience (precipitation and temperature anomalies at different locations, RCPs, timeline), adaptation alternatives (approach, priority, intervention level) and urban governance (functional mandate, institutional capacity, and plans & policies). This research examines how disparate and complex knowledge and information in these inter-disciplines can be processed for systematic 'negotiation' to situate, ground and operationalize resilience in cities. With India as a case, we test this by simulating mid-term and long-run climate scenarios (2050 & 2080) to map regional climate impacts that shows escalation in the intensity of climate events like heat waves, urban flooding, landslides and sea level rise. We draw on suitable adaptation measures for five key urban sectors- water, infrastructure (including energy), building, urban planning, health and conclude a sleuth of climate resilience building measures for policy application through national/ state policies, local urban plans and preparation of city resilience strategy, as well as advance the research on 'negotiated resilience' in urban areas.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34197514     DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253904

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  1 in total

1.  Advancing whole-of-government approaches to tobacco control: Article 5.3 and the challenge of policy coordination in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India and Uganda.

Authors:  Rachel Ann Barry; S M Abdullah; Aastha Chugh; Selamawit Hirpa; Praveen Kumar; Denis Male; Rob Ralston; Tracey Wagner-Rizvi; Jeff Collin
Journal:  Tob Control       Date:  2022-02-11       Impact factor: 6.953

  1 in total

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