Human health and climate change: Leverage points for adaptation in urban environments

Publication Type:
Journal Article
Citation:
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2012, 9 (6), pp. 2134 - 2158
Issue Date:
2012-06-01
Filename Description Size
Thumbnail2011005541OK.pdfPublished Version722.42 kB
Full metadata record
The design of adaptation strategies that promote urban health and well-being in the face of climate change requires an understanding of the feedback interactions that take place between the dynamical state of a city, the health of its people, and the state of the planet. Complexity, contingency and uncertainty combine to impede the growth of such systemic understandings. In this paper we suggest that the collaborative development of conceptual models can help a group to identify potential leverage points for effective adaptation. We describe a three-step procedure that leads from the development of a high-level system template, through the selection of a problem space that contains one or more of the group's adaptive challenges, to a specific conceptual model of a sub-system of importance to the group. This procedure is illustrated by a case study of urban dwellers' maladaptive dependence on private motor vehicles. We conclude that a system dynamics approach, revolving around the collaborative construction of a set of conceptual models, can help communities to improve their adaptive capacity, and so better meet the challenge of maintaining, and even improving, urban health in the face of climate change. © 2012 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: