Dialogue and Disruption at the Doorstep: Participant Perceptions during a City Walk as a Climate Communication Format
-
Published:2024-05-25
Issue:11
Volume:16
Page:4490
-
ISSN:2071-1050
-
Container-title:Sustainability
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Sustainability
Author:
Hartmann Elisabeth1, Geneuss Katrin1, Hoppe Imke1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Department of Geography, Faculty of Geosciences, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, 80333 Munich, Germany
Abstract
Since there is a broad empirical consensus that linear science communication focusing on disaster framing rarely empowers audiences and prompts transformative action, alternative climate communication formats are needed. This paper explores an alternative climate communication format, which integrates the issue into a local context (Munich, Germany) via transdisciplinary cooperation, specifically through collaboration with local climate educators and tapping into the scientific expertise of local stakeholders. The conceptualized format of a City Walk on the subject of climate justice addresses urban citizens and tests the effectiveness of climate justice as an alternative framing. Drawing on an accompanying empirical study with qualitative group discussions (n = 14, October 2023), this article explores how the format and framing are perceived by the participants. Based on these findings, we discuss the potentials and pitfalls of the format for transdisciplinary science communication. In summary, the City Walk deepened participants’ understanding of local climate justice—that is to say, how heat and flooding could amplify existing inequalities, and why adaptation and mitigation measures have not yet been implemented more thoroughly. Here, the crucial point is not whether the shift from climate change being a general topic to a personal one is supported by technical aspects of communication (e.g., virtual simulations). However, perceived local climate justice barriers (like bureaucracy) led participants to prioritize individual action (‘footprint’) over collective action (e.g., addressing local change). With these results, this study underlines the importance of new transdisciplinary formats for climate communication to address local change.
Reference92 articles.
1. IPCC (2022). Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability: Working Group II Contribution to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Cambridge University Press. 2. Böcker, M., Brüggemann, H., Christ, M., Knak, A., Lage, J., and Sommer, B. (2021). Wie Wird Weniger Genug? Suffizienz als Strategie für Eine Nachhaltige Stadtentwicklung, Oekom Verlag. 3. Coger, T., Dinshaw, A., Tye, S., Kratzer, B., Thazin Aung, M., Cunningham, E., Ramkissoon, C., Gupta, S., Bodrud-Doza, M., and Karamallis, A. (2022). Locally Led Adaptation: From Principles to Practice, World Resources Institute. 4. Extending the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) to support local adaptation planning—A climate service for Flensburg, Germany;Reimann;Futures,2021 5. Kohler, M., Engels, A., Koury, A.P., and Zengerling, C. (2021). Thinking Urban Transformation through Elsewhere: A Conversation between Real-World Labs in São Paulo and Hamburg on Governance and Practical Action. Sustainability, 13.
|
|