The impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project

Encouraging adaptation to climate change is fundamentally about encouraging changes in human behaviour. To promote these changes, governments, non-profits and multilateral institutions have invested in a range of adaptation projects. Yet there is little empirical evidence about which project co...

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Autores principales: Alpízar, Francisco, Bermedo Carpio, María del, Ferraro, Paul J., Meiselman, Ben S.
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CATIE, Turrialba (Costa Rica) 2019
Acceso en línea:https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9272
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2018.12.002
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spelling RepoCATIE92722022-08-05T19:16:11Z The impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project Alpízar, Francisco Bermedo Carpio, María del Ferraro, Paul J. Meiselman, Ben S. Encouraging adaptation to climate change is fundamentally about encouraging changes in human behaviour. To promote these changes, governments, non-profits and multilateral institutions have invested in a range of adaptation projects. Yet there is little empirical evidence about which project components are effective in changing human behaviour1,2. This lack of evidence is concerning, given that the failure of adaptation initiatives has been described as the global risk with the highest likelihood of occurring and with the largest negative impacts3. Here we report on a scholar–practitioner collaboration in which a simple one-day workshop delivering two ubiquitous components of adaptation projects4—capacity building and the dissemination of climate science—was randomly assigned among the management councils of over 200 community water systems in an arid region of Central America. The workshop was based on more than three years of scientific research and local collaborations, and it aimed to convey downscaled climate modelling and locally informed, expert-recommended adaptation practices. Two years later, we detect no differences in pricing and non-pricing management practices of participant versus non-participant councils. These results suggest weaknesses in the common practice of using simple workshops for delivering capacity building and climate science. 2019-12-11T14:19:37Z 2019-12-11T14:19:37Z 2019 Artículo https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9272 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2018.12.002 en Nature Climate Change, volumen 9, páginas 587-591 info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess application/pdf CATIE, Turrialba (Costa Rica)
institution Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza
collection Repositorio CATIE
language Inglés
description Encouraging adaptation to climate change is fundamentally about encouraging changes in human behaviour. To promote these changes, governments, non-profits and multilateral institutions have invested in a range of adaptation projects. Yet there is little empirical evidence about which project components are effective in changing human behaviour1,2. This lack of evidence is concerning, given that the failure of adaptation initiatives has been described as the global risk with the highest likelihood of occurring and with the largest negative impacts3. Here we report on a scholar–practitioner collaboration in which a simple one-day workshop delivering two ubiquitous components of adaptation projects4—capacity building and the dissemination of climate science—was randomly assigned among the management councils of over 200 community water systems in an arid region of Central America. The workshop was based on more than three years of scientific research and local collaborations, and it aimed to convey downscaled climate modelling and locally informed, expert-recommended adaptation practices. Two years later, we detect no differences in pricing and non-pricing management practices of participant versus non-participant councils. These results suggest weaknesses in the common practice of using simple workshops for delivering capacity building and climate science.
format Artículo
author Alpízar, Francisco
Bermedo Carpio, María del
Ferraro, Paul J.
Meiselman, Ben S.
spellingShingle Alpízar, Francisco
Bermedo Carpio, María del
Ferraro, Paul J.
Meiselman, Ben S.
The impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project
author_facet Alpízar, Francisco
Bermedo Carpio, María del
Ferraro, Paul J.
Meiselman, Ben S.
author_sort Alpízar, Francisco
title The impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project
title_short The impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project
title_full The impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project
title_fullStr The impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project
title_full_unstemmed The impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project
title_sort impacts of a capacity-building workshop in a randomized adaptation project
publisher CATIE, Turrialba (Costa Rica)
publishDate 2019
url https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9272
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2018.12.002
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