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Facing climate injustices: Community trust-building for climate services through arts and sciences narrative co-production

Authors :
Juan Baztan
Jean-Paul Vanderlinden
Lionel Jaffrès
Bethany Jorgensen
Zhiwei Zhu
Source :
Climate Risk Management, Vol 30, Iss , Pp 100253- (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

The goal of this paper is to analyze how and with what results place-based climate service co-production may be enacted within a community for whom climate change is not a locally salient concern. Aiming to initiate a climate-centered dialogue, a hybrid team of scientists and artists collected local narratives within the Kerourien neighbourhood, in the city of Brest in Brittany, France. Kerourien is a place known for its stigmatizing crime, poverty, marginalization and state of disrepair. Social work is higher on the agenda than climate action. The team thus acknowledged that local narratives might not make much mention of climate change, and recognized part of the work might be to shift awareness to the actual or potential, current or future, connections between everyday non-climate concerns and climate issues. Such a shift called for a practical intervention, centered on local culture.The narrative collection process was dovetailed with preparing the neighbourhood’s 50th anniversary celebration and establishing a series of art performances to celebrate the neighbourhood and its residents. Non-climate and quasi-climate stories were collected, documented, and turned into art forms. The elements of climate service co-production in this process are twofold. First, they point to the ways in which non-climate change related local concerns may be mapped out in relation to climate change adaptation, showing how non-climate change concerns call for climate information. Secondly, they show how the co-production of climate services may go beyond the provision of climate information by generating procedural benefits such as local empowerment – thus generating capacities that may be mobilized to face climate change. We conclude by stressing that “place-based climate service co-production for action” may require questioning the nature of the “services” rendered, questioning the nature of “place,” and questioning what “action” entails. We offer leads for addressing these questions in ways that help realise empowerment and greater social justice.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22120963
Volume :
30
Issue :
100253-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Climate Risk Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.09b6dc9c9fe149e596f1e946db8a7e3e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crm.2020.100253