Innovations for enabling urban climate governance: evidence from Mumbai
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In: Environment & Planning C: Government and Policy, Vol. 31, No. 5, 01.10.2013, p. 926-945.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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RIS
TY - JOUR
T1 - Innovations for enabling urban climate governance
T2 - evidence from Mumbai
AU - Boyd, Emily
AU - Ghosh, Aditya
PY - 2013/10/1
Y1 - 2013/10/1
N2 - Climate change is a ‘wicked’ problem. No central authority manages climate change, and those creating the problem are also trying to solve it. Climate change brings uncertainty in ways that cities have not tackled previously. There is a need to explore new governance forms able to deal with change and to enable transformations. In this paper we explore seven local climate innovations to better understand the enabling conditions underpinning success and the governance barriers that are encountered. We connect the more formal and emergent climate governance ‘innovations' through adaptation and mitigation experiments in Mumbai, India. Case studies indicate an emerging development model. Effective climate governance has to be an inevitable part of new development in the South. While climate externality exists in all development planning and implementation, smaller community-level efforts indicate how opportunities are offered within existing systems to integrate with larger institutional climate governance.
AB - Climate change is a ‘wicked’ problem. No central authority manages climate change, and those creating the problem are also trying to solve it. Climate change brings uncertainty in ways that cities have not tackled previously. There is a need to explore new governance forms able to deal with change and to enable transformations. In this paper we explore seven local climate innovations to better understand the enabling conditions underpinning success and the governance barriers that are encountered. We connect the more formal and emergent climate governance ‘innovations' through adaptation and mitigation experiments in Mumbai, India. Case studies indicate an emerging development model. Effective climate governance has to be an inevitable part of new development in the South. While climate externality exists in all development planning and implementation, smaller community-level efforts indicate how opportunities are offered within existing systems to integrate with larger institutional climate governance.
KW - Transdisciplinary studies
KW - Geography
KW - Environmental planning
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84886838930&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1068/c12172
DO - 10.1068/c12172
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 31
SP - 926
EP - 945
JO - Environment & Planning C: Government and Policy
JF - Environment & Planning C: Government and Policy
SN - 2399-6544
IS - 5
ER -