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Communicating Climate Change Information for Decision-Making

  • Book
  • © 2018

Overview

  • Includes up-to-date information on interdisciplinary research concerning climate change science
  • Includes examples of application of climate science/ knowledge to policy and practice
  • Offers an international perspective as it brings examples from around the world
  • Examples comprise several fields of knowledge, i.e. health, ecology, disaster, water, transport, communication, coastal management

Part of the book series: Springer Climate (SPCL)

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Table of contents (15 chapters)

  1. Developing Climate Change Information

  2. Applying Climate Change Information: Case Studies

  3. Conclusion

Keywords

About this book

This book provides important insight on a range of issues focused on three themes; what new climate change information is being developed, how that knowledge is communicated and how it can be usefully applied across international, regional and local scales. There is increasing international investment and interest to develop and communicate updated climate change information to promote effective action. As change accelerates and planetary boundaries are crossed this information becomes particularly relevant to guide decisions and support both proactive adaptation and mitigation strategies. Developing new information addresses innovations in producing interdisciplinary climate change knowledge and overcoming issues of data quality, access and availability. This book examines effective information systems to guide decision-making for immediate and future action. Cases studies in developed and developing countries illustrate how climate change information promotes immediate and future actions across a range of sectors.


Editors and Affiliations

  • Cities Research Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia

    Silvia Serrao-Neumann, Liese Coulter

  • Unité de recherche ESPACE-DEV, IRD, Universités UM UR UG UA, Maison Teledetect, Montpellier, France

    Anne Coudrain

About the editors

Silvia Serrao-Neumann is a Senior Research Fellow for the Cooperative Research Centre for Water Sensitive Cities (CRC-WSC) at the Cities Research Institute, Griffith University, Australia. Her research focuses on climate change adaptation from multiple perspectives, including: catchment scale landscape planning for water sensitive city-regions; cross-border planning and collaboration; disaster recovery under a stakeholder-focused collaborative panning approach; natural resource management; and action / intervention research applied to planning for climate change adaptation.

Anne Coudrain is an engineer in water sciences (PhD - Paris School of Mines) and a Doctor of Sciences and auditor of the “Institut des Hautes Études pour la Science et la Technologie”. She is currently Honorary Research Director at the research unit Espace-dev in the science-societies field on climate change. Beginning her career in 1980 at the National Mining Industry Company in Mauritania, she researched the safety analysis of underground nuclear waste repositories, and the relationships between hydrosphere and climate, before becoming involved in managing research for development.


Liese Coulter is a Lecturer in Science, Technology, and Society at Griffith University. Her research focuses on how climate knowledge is used to envision, communicate, and manage environmental and social issues associated with climate change. Previously, Liese was Communication Manager for the CSIRO Climate Change Adaptation Flagship, and the National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (NCCARF).

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