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20 options + winter 2014/2015 www.iiasa.ac.at
I IASA stakeholders include farmers in Africa, Asia, and
South America affected by climate change; EU officials and
international governments developing air pollution and
climate policies; and world leaders at the top levels of global
decision-making, including United Nations processes on climate
change and sustainable development.
“A stakeholder can be anyone with an interest, concern, or
knowledge about an issue,” says Joanne Bayer, director of IIASA’s
Risk, Policy and Vulnerability Program, “At its most basic level,
‘stakeholder consultation’ just means going to people to get informa-
tion that can inform research.” But today, the term means far more:
intimate and innovative processes that engage stakeholders in model
development and policy formation, not just informing research, but
also ensuring that the people involved have ownership of the science. The people behind the models
Much IIASA research relies on complex models that can explore
future changes across multiple linked areas. Researchers use these
models to produce scenarios that can project how different policy
choices may lead to different future developments. For example,
the Global Biosphere Management Model (GLOBIOM) is used
to analyze competition between agriculture, bioenergy, and
forestry in land use.
GLOBIOM researchers talk to stakeholders to understand what
factors drive land use change, and how. But to put these drivers
in their model, scientists need numbers, while the farmers and
policymakers they work with rarely think in terms of spreadsheets,
percentages, and plus and minus signs.
IIASA researcher Amanda Palazzo traveled to Nepal, Vietnam,
Costa Rica, and Colombia in 2013 to help facilitate a series of
scenario-building workshops as part of a project on food security,
environment, and rural livelihoods for the Climate Change,
Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) research program of the
global agriculture consortium CGIAR.
During the workshops, Palazzo and her colleagues worked
step-by-step with the stakeholders to understand what factors
they expect to influence future agriculture, working together to
develop the verbal descriptions into more quantitative indicators
that could be fed into a model.
Following the workshop, the researchers then ran the model and
came back with a set of scenarios for the stakeholders to discuss.
Palazzo says, “We asked them if the scenarios looked credible,
and why or why not, and then we went back to refine them.”
When the quantitative modeling results did not fit the context
of the region or the storylines, the group made changes, and then
ran the model again, repeating until the scenarios seemed useful.
from story
Stakeholder consultations, engaged
scholarship, bottom-up science—
Buzzwords in IIASA research, but
what do they mean in practice?
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Buch options, Band winter 2014/2015"
options
Band winter 2014/2015
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2014/2015
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2014
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine