Developing socio-ecological scenarios: A participatory process for engaging stakeholders
Developing socio-ecological scenarios: A participatory process for engaging stakeholders
Deltas are experiencing profound demographic, economic and land use changes and human-induced catchment and climate change. Bangladesh exemplifies these difficulties through multiple climate risks including subsidence/sea-level rise, temperature rise, and changing precipitation patterns, as well as changing management of the Ganges and Brahmaputra catchments. There is a growing population and economy driving numerous more local changes, while dense rural population and poverty remain significant. Identifying appropriate policy and planning responses is extremely difficult in these circumstances. This paper adopts a participatory scenario development process incorporating both socio-economic and biophysical elements across multiple scales and sectors as part of an integrated assessment of ecosystem services and livelihoods in coastal Bangladesh. Rather than simply downscale global …
Allan, Andrew
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Barbour, Emily J.
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Nicholls, Robert J.
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Hutton, Craig
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Lim, Michelle
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Salehin, Mashfiqus
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Rahman, Md. Munsur
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11 October 2021
Allan, Andrew
d167b4a4-7c6d-4598-a200-7e9b94b9e41d
Barbour, Emily J.
ae705093-b67c-496f-b85f-e5d03c9f0aab
Nicholls, Robert J.
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Hutton, Craig
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Lim, Michelle
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Salehin, Mashfiqus
9081b2bb-adfc-478b-b1e3-b60506a5eab3
Rahman, Md. Munsur
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Allan, Andrew, Barbour, Emily J., Nicholls, Robert J., Hutton, Craig, Lim, Michelle, Salehin, Mashfiqus and Rahman, Md. Munsur
(2021)
Developing socio-ecological scenarios: A participatory process for engaging stakeholders.
Science of the Total Environment, 807 (Part 1), [0048-9697].
(doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.150512).
Abstract
Deltas are experiencing profound demographic, economic and land use changes and human-induced catchment and climate change. Bangladesh exemplifies these difficulties through multiple climate risks including subsidence/sea-level rise, temperature rise, and changing precipitation patterns, as well as changing management of the Ganges and Brahmaputra catchments. There is a growing population and economy driving numerous more local changes, while dense rural population and poverty remain significant. Identifying appropriate policy and planning responses is extremely difficult in these circumstances. This paper adopts a participatory scenario development process incorporating both socio-economic and biophysical elements across multiple scales and sectors as part of an integrated assessment of ecosystem services and livelihoods in coastal Bangladesh. Rather than simply downscale global …
Text
1-s2.0-S0048969721055893-main
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 September 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 September 2021
Published date: 11 October 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 456191
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456191
ISSN: 0048-9697
PURE UUID: ac27a282-46c0-41c7-9ae4-7b589f74f992
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Date deposited: 26 Apr 2022 16:37
Last modified: 23 Feb 2023 02:43
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Contributors
Author:
Andrew Allan
Author:
Emily J. Barbour
Author:
Robert J. Nicholls
Author:
Michelle Lim
Author:
Mashfiqus Salehin
Author:
Md. Munsur Rahman
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