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Triggering transformative change: a development path approach to climate change response in communities
Authors:Sarah Burch  Alison Shaw  Ann Dale  John Robinson
Institution:1. Department of Geography and Environmental Management, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1, Canadasburch@uwaterloo.ca;3. School of Environment and Sustainability, Royal Roads University, 2005 Sooke Road, Vancouver, British Columbia V9B 5Y2, Canada;4. Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability;5. Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, 2260 West Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada
Abstract:While climate change action plans are becoming more common, it is still unclear whether communities have the capacity, tools, and targets in place to trigger the transformative levels of change required to build fundamentally low-carbon, resilient, healthy communities. Evidence increasingly supports the finding that this transformation is not triggered by climate policy alone, but rather is shaped by a broad array of decisions and practices that are rooted in underlying patterns of development. Even so, these findings have rarely penetrated the domain of practice, which often remains squarely focused on a relatively narrow set of climate-specific policies. This article builds a conceptual framework for understanding the dynamics of community-level development path transformations that may both dramatically reduce GHG emissions and significantly enhance community resilience. This framework illuminates eight critical enablers of innovation on climate change, each of which is illustrated by compelling examples of community-level experimentation on climate change across the province of British Columbia, Canada. It is concluded that community-based climate (or sustainability) policy might be more likely to trigger development path shifts if it employs a longer time horizon, recognition of adaptability and feedbacks, integrated decision making, and systems thinking.
Keywords:adaptive management  climate change policies  community planning  development pathways  governance
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