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James D. Ford KC Bolton, J Shirley, T Pearce, M Tremblay, M Westlake www.jamesford.ca IPY Conference, Montreal, April 23 rd 2012 Mapping the human dimensions of climate change research in the Canadian Arctic

Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

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Page 1: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

James  D.  Ford  KC  Bolton,  J  Shirley,  T  Pearce,    

M  Tremblay,  M  Westlake        www.jamesford.ca      IPY  Conference,  Montreal,  April  23rd  2012    

Mapping  the  human  dimensions  of  climate  change  research  in  the  Canadian  Arctic  

Page 2: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  Explosion  of  human  dimensions  of  climate  change  (HDCC)  research    •  6,800  hits  for  CC  and  adaptation    

•  Similar  trend  in  Canadian  Arctic  

Introduction    

Page 3: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  Need  to  keep  track  of  publishing  trends  •  Research  duplication    •  Gaps  neglected    

•  Project  aim:  what  we  know  about  HDCC  in  eastern  Canadian  Arctic  (Nunavut,  Nunavik,  Nunatsiavut)  

The  Challenge  

Page 4: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  How  to  do  a  lit  review?    •  ‘Narrative’  literature  reviews  •  IPCC,  ACIA,  National  assessments  •  Comprehensive  BUT  transparency,  replicability  

•  Systematic  lit  review  methodology  •  Address  specific  question    •  Systematic  and  explicit  methods  •  Aim  for  replicability  and  external  validation  •  (e.g.  Ford  and  Pearce  2010  in  Env  Res  Letters;  Ford  et  al  2011  in  Climatic  Change  )    

Methodology    

Page 5: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  Search  procedure    •  2070  initial  hits    •  117  articles  retained  for  full  review    

•  Analysis    •  Quantitative  coding  scheme  •  Qualitative  analysis    

Methodology  

Page 6: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

Rapid  growth  in  HDCC  research  

ArcticNet  &  Nasivvik  

established  

IPY  begins    

INAC  &  FNIHB  CC  projects  

Harper  elected    

ACIA  published  

Canadian  National  

Assessment  published  

Canada  ratifies  Kyoto  

#  pub

lications

 

Year    

Page 7: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  Social  sciences  •  Vulnerability  /  impacts  assessment  •  Identification  of  adaptation  options    •  Resource  management    

•  Biophysical  sciences    •  Animal  populations  (polar  bears,  caribou)  

•  Health  sciences    •  Slow  to  emerge  •  Food  security  and  safety  focus  predominant    

The  social  sciences  and  increasingly  prominent    

Page 8: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  Major  development  in  recent  work  •  Documenting  change  •  Knowledge  system  evolution    •  Characterize  vulnerability  &  resilience    •  Underpinning  adaptive  capacity  

•  BUT  •  Need  for  critical  reflection  on  methodology  to  incorporate  TK  

TK  is  widely  utilized  in  HDCC  studies  

Page 9: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

Stakeholder  engagement  increasing  

}  Author  analysis  }  2005  first  paper  authored  with  community  members  

Page 10: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

Stakeholder  engagement  increasing  

}  Author  analysis  }  2005  first  paper  authored  with  community  members  

}  42%  authors  geography  /  env.  sciences      }  24%  ecology  }  8%  health  sciences  }  17%  earth  &  atmospheric  science    }  0%  law,  economics  

Page 11: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  Regional  analysis  •  39%  NU  •  9%  Nunavik  •  4%  Nunatsiavut  •  21%  Arctic  generally    

•  Research  hotspots  •  Small,  traditional  settlements  overrepresented  

•  Large  number  of  communities  with  no  research  (see  online  google  map)  

Significant  geographic  disparities  in  publishing    

Page 12: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

Sectoral  disparities  pronounced  

Page 13: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  Address  geographic  disparities    •  Need  for  broader  spread  of  studies  to  allow  for  

generalization    •  Address  sectoral  bias  •  Business  &  economy  (mining  in  particular,  

tourism,  fisheries)  •  Opportunities  from  CC  

•  Health  

 

Research  needs    

Page 14: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  Future  focus  •  What  do  future  scenarios  mean  

•  Adaptation  research  •  Effectiveness,  durability,  socio-­‐economic  and  ecological  implications,  long  term  viability  and  cost  

•  Vulnerable  sub-­‐groups    

Research  needs    

Page 15: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

•  We  know  a  lot    •  2.7  articles  per  1000  people  

•  Take  stock  every  5  years    •  Same  methodology  –  track  evolution  of  knowledge  

•  To  read  more:  Ford  J  et  al  (in  press).  A  literature  review  and  gap  analysis  of  human  dimensions  of  climate  change  research  in  Nunavut,  Nunavik,  and  Nunatsiavut.  Arctic.    

 

Conclusion  

Page 16: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

Thank-­‐You      

Page 17: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic

Stakeholder  engagement  increasing  

}  Author  analysis    

Page 18: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic
Page 19: Mapping the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic