“Shared learning” for building urban climate resilience – experiences from Asian cities

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
“Shared learning” for building urban climate resilience – experiences from Asian cities
Abstract
This paper considers how resilience thinking and, in particular, its emphasis on learning has been applied in 10 cities in Vietnam, India, Thailand and Indonesia. Applying a “shared learning” approach in the Asian Cities Climate Change Resilience Network (ACCCRN) has helped to create or strengthen networks, build appreciation for complexity and uncertainty among stakeholders, provide a space for deliberating concepts such as vulnerability and resilience, and build knowledge and capacities for stakeholders to engage and represent their own interests. Shared learning approaches face considerable challenges navigating politicized urban environments, in which the nature and value of existing systems − and therefore the value of building resilience − are contested. This article suggests that deliberate, strategic intervention by facilitators may contribute to more transformative change on behalf of equitable, socially just outcomes – and thus cautions against seeing urban climate vulnerability as a technical challenge, or shared learning as a “toolkit” for building resilience.
Publication
Environment and Urbanization
Volume
25
Issue
2
Pages
393-412
Date
October 1, 2013
Journal Abbr
Environment and Urbanization
Language
en
ISSN
0956-2478
Accessed
02/05/2019, 20:40
Library Catalogue
SAGE Journals
Citation
Orleans Reed, S., Friend, R., Toan, V. C., Thinphanga, P., Sutarto, R., & Singh, D. (2013). “Shared learning” for building urban climate resilience – experiences from Asian cities. Environment and Urbanization, 25(2), 393–412. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956247813501136