TY - JOUR
T1 - Co-producing research and data visualization for environmental justice advocacy in climate change adaptation: The Milwaukee Flood-Health Vulnerability Assessment
AU - Herreros-Cantis, Pablo
AU - Hoffman, Lawrence
AU - Kennedy, Christopher
AU - Kim, Young
AU - Charles, Joel
AU - Gillet, Victoria
AU - Getzin, Anne
AU - Littlefield, Danya
AU - Zielinski, Alexandria
AU - Bernstein, Joanne
AU - Settle-Robinson, Rene’
AU - Langemeyer, Johannes
AU - Neumann, Marc B.
AU - McPhearson, Timon
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Cities in the world are experiencing increases in the severity of extreme weather events, leading to significant threats for urban dwellers. Ensuring an equitable implementation of risk reduction interventions requires considering the uneven distributions of risk. However, adaptation planning often fails to adequately consider the distributional injustices of risk, potentially reproducing spatial inequalities. Current forms of engagement hinder the effective contribution of local stakeholders to the development of risk assessments for the design of interventions. Here, we present a co-production process in which place-based advocacy organizations and healthcare practitioners actively participate in the identification of flooding exposure and vulnerability priority areas. The process is applied in Milwaukee, WI, where we developed the Milwaukee Flood-Health Vulnerability Assessment (FHVA) to identify priority areas for implementing stormwater management strategies including nature-based solutions such as urban green infrastructure. We discuss the process underpinning the analysis and the development of dissemination tools that enable advocacy organizations, urban planners, and policy makers to make use of the FHVA. We find co-production to be a critical component of making vulnerability and exposure analyses useful both for policy makers and stakeholders in need of usable scientific information to support advocacy on equitable adaptation. © 2024 The Authors
AB - Cities in the world are experiencing increases in the severity of extreme weather events, leading to significant threats for urban dwellers. Ensuring an equitable implementation of risk reduction interventions requires considering the uneven distributions of risk. However, adaptation planning often fails to adequately consider the distributional injustices of risk, potentially reproducing spatial inequalities. Current forms of engagement hinder the effective contribution of local stakeholders to the development of risk assessments for the design of interventions. Here, we present a co-production process in which place-based advocacy organizations and healthcare practitioners actively participate in the identification of flooding exposure and vulnerability priority areas. The process is applied in Milwaukee, WI, where we developed the Milwaukee Flood-Health Vulnerability Assessment (FHVA) to identify priority areas for implementing stormwater management strategies including nature-based solutions such as urban green infrastructure. We discuss the process underpinning the analysis and the development of dissemination tools that enable advocacy organizations, urban planners, and policy makers to make use of the FHVA. We find co-production to be a critical component of making vulnerability and exposure analyses useful both for policy makers and stakeholders in need of usable scientific information to support advocacy on equitable adaptation. © 2024 The Authors
KW - Climate change adaptation
KW - Distributional justice
KW - Flood risk
KW - Knowledge co-production
KW - Vulnerability
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205927477&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/312c711b-ae60-3de3-b000-fe78c6658f9e/
U2 - 10.1016/j.cities.2024.105474
DO - 10.1016/j.cities.2024.105474
M3 - Article
SN - 0264-2751
VL - 155
JO - Cities
JF - Cities
M1 - 105474
ER -