Volume 43, Issue 4, May 2011, Pages 400–412

Special Issue: Community Engagement for Sustainable Urban Futures

Edited By Greg Hearn, Marcus Foth and Tony Stevenson

Future visioning of local climate change: A framework for community engagement and planning with scenarios and visualisation

  • a CALP, Dept. of Forest Resources Management/Landscape Architecture Program, Forest Sciences Centre, 2045–2424 Main Mall, UBC, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4 Canada
  • b School of Sustainability, Arizona State University, PO Box 875502, Tempe, AZ 85287-5502, USA
  • c Metro Vancouver, 4330 Kingsway, Burnaby, BC, V5H 4G8 Canada
  • d Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, UBC, Aquatic Ecosystem Research Laboratory, 447–2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada
  • e AIRD, Environment Canada, Dept. of Forest Resources Management, Forest Sciences Centre, UBC, 2424 Main Mall, UBC, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada

Abstract

There is an urgent need for meaningful information and effective public processes at the local level to build awareness, capacity, and agency on climate change, and support planning and decision-making. This paper describes a conceptual framework to meet these requirements by generating alternative, coherent, holistic climate change scenarios and visualizations at the local scale, in collaboration with local stakeholders and scientists. The framework provides a template for a process to integrate emission scenarios with both mitigation and adaptation strategies, and to link local manifestations of impacts and responses with global climate change scenarios. The article outlines the empirical application of this framework in the Local Climate Change Visioning Project in British Columbia, Canada. The project collaboratively localized, spatialized, and visualized possible climate change effects and community responses in the community's ‘backyards’. The article concludes with lessons learned and suggested principles for future visioning efforts to engage communities in possible policy and behavioural choices.

Corresponding author. Tel.: +1 604 822 6582; fax: +1 604 822 9106.
1

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2

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3

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4

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