The aim of this Thematic Network is to explore how communities confront climate change, including assessment of governance structures around climate adaptation or processes dealing with it, and how they seek to adapt to emerging challenges arising from increases in temperature and more extreme weather events. Research will facilitate a better understanding of local expertise and highlight, in particular, the value a community planning perspective brings to discourse on climate resilience. It will shed light on local government decision dynamics around motivational factors and extent of planning for climate resilience.
The TN aims to work collaboratively with local actors and key stakeholders to identify current and future environmental challenges, and to scope how research through the TN can assist communities increase their resilience to the impacts of climate variability, be it through the co-development of policy approaches, on-the-ground action implementation, research capacity and/ or knowledge mobilization, for example. One of the distinctive aspects of this TN is that it will work within and across scales from larger urban centres to small communities, including attention to Indigenous forms of community planning for climate resilience.
- Collaboration: University of Alaska Anchorage and the UArctic Thematic Network on Local-scale Planning, Climate Change and Resilience are collaborating on a National Science Foundation AccelNet grant: Facilitating wide-ranging public policy collaboration for an economically resilient and environmentally sustainable future.
- Scholarship Winner! Nicole Bonnett, from the University of Alberta, was awarded (September 2024) the highly competitive Steve and Elaine Antoniuk Grad Scholarship in Arctic Research, for her work on managed relocation (retreat) and climate adaptation planning.
- Northern Spotlights Speaker Series: The Northern Students' Association at the University of Alberta is beginning a new speaker series Fall 2024/Winter 2025. It will highlight faculty and student northern research, meaningful experiences, and relevant topics in the north. We request your participation as speakers, storytellers, or workshop hosts. Please sign up with a preliminary topic and your availability by September 7 to participate in the Fall 2024 term, and by December 1 to participate in the Winter 2025 term. We will coordinate speakers with related topics and formalize a schedule as each term proceeds.
- FORMAT: We recommend 12–18 minutes for student research talks, 40–55 minutes for faculty research talks, or 40–80 minutes for prepared activities like workshops or discussion circles. We anticipate that a majority of presenters may share traditional research talks, but we welcome all ways of sharing and creating knowledge.
- TIME/LOCATION: Talks will be hosted on campus over lunch (11:30 AM - 1:30 PM). Remote presenters' talks will be broadcast in person on campus.
- We hope you will participate, share your insights, and attend to learn about research and experiences occurring broadly across our academic community. For further information, please contact us” csanorth@ualberta.ca
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More information and past activities can be found here.
Thematic Network Cross-links:
Video interview: Jeff Birchall, Lead of the UArctic Thematic Network on Local-Scale Planning, Climate Change and Resilience