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Resilient by Youth Engagement The Alameda Creek Atlas

Page history last edited by Richard Beach 1 year, 8 months ago

Climate change is often conceptualized as an impending ecological disaster. However, vulnerability to its impacts is more accurately defined by social factors which present challenges to communities every day. Moreover, the predicted impacts are often difficult to comprehend or ignored. Building resilience to these impacts will require engaging communities in defining indicators for vulnerability and co-designing opportunities for adaptation. This is especially true for communities of youth who will inherit the socio-ecological challenges of our current climate crisis. New tools are needed for communicating impacts, defining vulnerability, and engaging diverse publics in planning for resilience; these tools must meet you ‘where they are’ by integrating with existing interests and concerns. 

          This chapter argues for place-based participatory design as an effective youth engagement tool that can lead to greater community resilience to climate impacts. The authors discuss the current challenges to, and existing models of, successful youth-based community engagement with climate adaptation planning. This includes the use of popular social media to build youth capacity for observing and communicating climate concerns and advocating for resilience. Finally, the site-specific climate engagement project Alameda Creek Atlas is detailed as a case study for employing such a methodology, and preliminary results are discussed. Alameda Creek Atlas served as the public engagement tool for the selected finalist team, Public Sediment, for the 2017-18 Rockefeller funded Resilient by Design, Bay Area Challenge.

 

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