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Reflections on a key component of co-producing climate services: Defining climate metrics from user needs

Katharine Vincent, Emma Archer, Rebecka Henriksson, Joanna Pardoe, Neha Mittal

2020Climate Services32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is increasing recognition of the importance of co-producing climate services to bridge the current “usability” gap in climate information for decision-making – yet understanding precisely how this should take place is less well elaborated. One key stage of the co-production process involves identifying specifically which climate metrics can usefully inform decisions – but methods that can be drawn upon to construct this information are often overlooked. We discuss how the choice and application of four existing social science methods (interview-informed role play workshop, open-ended interviews, prioritised surveys and enhanced surveys) arose out of, and was in turn embedded within, a different epistemological approach characteristic of co-production to identify decision-relevant climate metrics for the water and agriculture sectors in Malawi and Tanzania. In so doing, we reflect on the evolution of our understanding of co-production as our assumptions were challenged, from the expectation that we would be able to “obtain” metrics from users, to a dynamic mutual definition based on better understanding of the decision-making contexts. Such reflections inform emerging experiences of co-production of climate services, as well as having implications for broader contexts beyond the climate change space in which co-production is attempted to improve science-society interactions.

Topics & Concepts

Construct (python library)Production (economics)Climate changeUsabilityComponent (thermodynamics)Key (lock)Knowledge managementProcess (computing)Ecosystem servicesAgricultureComputer scienceEnvironmental resource managementData scienceGeographyEcologyEnvironmental scienceEconomicsHuman–computer interactionThermodynamicsArchaeologyPhysicsComputer securityEcosystemProgramming languageOperating systemMacroeconomicsBiologySustainability and Climate Change GovernanceInnovative Approaches in Technology and Social Developmentdemographic modeling and climate adaptation
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