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 perspectives, the analysis was driven by a large and diverse stakeholder group who met with the researchers over four years as the assessment was designed, implemented and applied. There were four main stages: (A) establish meta-framework for the analysis; (B) develop qualitative scenarios of key trends; (C) translate these scenarios into quantitative form for the integrated assessment model analysis; and (D) a review of the model results, which raises new stakeholder insights (e.g., preferred adaptation and policy responses) and questions. Step D can be repeated leading to an iterative learning loop cycle, and the process can potentially be ongoing. The strong and structured process of stakeholder engagement gave strong local ownership of the scenarios and the wider process. This process can be generalised for widespread application across socio-ecological systems following the same four-stage approach. It demands sustained engagement with stakeholders and hence needs to be linked to a long-term research process. However, it facilitates a more credible foundation for planning especially where there are multiple interacting factors.

Highlights

  • 1.1 BackgroundScenarios are descriptions of possible futures that facilitate analysis for a variety of purposes

  • This paper describes a participatory method for scenario development and wider stakeholder engagement to inform and engage with an integrated assessment process

  • Moving from Stage A to Stage B, step 4 necessitated the integration of the issues identified in step 2 with the narrative scenarios to be produced in step 5, in effect extending the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) to the national level

Read more

Summary

Introduction

1.1 BackgroundScenarios are descriptions of possible futures that facilitate analysis for a variety of purposes. Scenario analysis can inform decision making in circumstances of uncertainty, and explore a range of plausible future states and their challenges Effective involvement of stakeholders in scenario development can assist in enhancing both the acceptance and plausibility of the resulting scenarios (Alcamo, 2001; McBride et al, 2017). This is especially valuable where levels of complexity and uncertainty are high, such as strongly connected social and ecological systems (Berkes et al, 2003; Berkes and Folke, 1998; Bizikova et al, 2014). Projecting changes in cropland and grassland." Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment 107 (2-3):117135

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call