The ‘More Than Maps’ framework for building research capacity among young people in coastal climate change adaptation

Author:

van der Plank Sien1ORCID,Appeaning Addo Kwasi2,Anderson Romario3,Boruff Bryan4,Bruce Eleanor5,Chambers Kishna3,Duncan John4,Davies Kevin5,Escoffery Damoi3,Fidai Yanna1,Fletcher Darren3,Hickey Sharyn4,Jayson‐Quashigah Philip‐Neri2,Maxam Ava3,Pauli Natasha4,Schlenker Marie6,Sowah Winnie Naa Adjorkor7,Dash Jadu1

Affiliation:

1. School of Geography and Environmental Science University of Southampton Southampton UK

2. Institute for Environment and Sanitation Studies University of Ghana Accra Ghana

3. Mona Geoinformatics Institute The University of the West Indies Kingston Jamaica

4. The University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

5. The University of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia

6. Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences University of Southampton Southampton UK

7. University of Ghana Accra Ghana

Abstract

AbstractWhen young people engage with climate change education, they are often left feeling disempowered and daunted. But past research has shown that there are ways to design and deliver climate change education that can be empowering and enabling. The delivery of climate change education was further challenged in 2020 by the shift to online learning driven by the COVID‐19 pandemic restrictions. However, the challenges of the pandemic context also offered an opportunity to engage new audiences and establish new collaborations in climate change education. In this paper, we explore how the shift to online research, collaboration and education can also be harnessed to develop interdisciplinary coastal adaptation training for young people interested in better understanding the complexities of our coastal environments. The resulting ‘More than Maps’ framework draws on qualitative and quantitative data collected over a two‐year programme focused on the design and delivery of an international climate change research capacity building workshop series, across the United Kingdom, Ghana, Jamaica and Australia. Carried out by an interdisciplinary team of early career researchers and established academics, 15 workshops were developed on coastal adaptation research methods, targeting a range of ‘young’ audiences who are and will continue to be impacted by climate change. Building on reflections from the workshops' design and delivery, we developed a scalable framework to aid researchers in sharing open‐access, replicable methods for studying climate change mitigation and adaptation. This work demonstrates that our workshop participants had increased confidence, sought to apply learned methods to other contexts, and wanted to share this knowledge with others. We conclude that the COVID‐19 online workspace facilitated rather than hindered the international collaboration and delivery of these coastal adaptation research methods workshops, and we provide best practice tips to researchers delivering climate change education.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geography, Planning and Development

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