2 research outputs found

    Community Resilience to Climate Change : Outcomes of the Scottish Borders Climate Resilient Communities Project

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    Aims and Objectives: This report presents findings from an action research project conducted in the Scottish Borders between May 2015 and September 2016. The project aimed to:1) Support a local process of community change through building partnerships, learning and capacity building; and2) Understand the critical factors involved in facilitating the development of community resilience to climate change to draw out key levers for change nationally.The project was a collaboration between the University of Dundee, the Scottish Borders Council, Tweed Forum, Southern Uplands Partnership, International Futures Forum and the Scottish Association of Marine Sciences. It worked with three communities that had experience of flooding in the Borders council area and involved bringing together diverse organisations and community members in workshops and other activities

    Community Resilience to Climate Change : Summary for policy and practice

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    The Scottish Borders Climate Resilient Communities Project (SBCRC)1 was a participatory action research project that sought to build community resilience to climate change through working in three communities with a history of flooding in the Scottish Borders. It aimed to:- Understand some of the critical factors that contribute to shaping community resilience in the context of climate disadvantage;- Understand how community resilience to climate change can be developed in different local contexts in practice by supporting and facilitating engagement between members of three local communities and other stakeholders in the Scottish Borders region, and evaluating outcomes;- Draw out lessons for policymakers and practitioners on how to support the development of community resilience in the context of climate change.The project was structured around nine workshops (three per community) that brought together different organisations (e.g. the Scottish Borders Council, local NGOs) to examine issues and develop actions to build community resilience in the context of climate change. A tenth workshop used the outcomes from the work within the communities to examine how a more integrated and synergistic national policy landscape in Scotland could be developed to enhance community resilience to climate change. An evaluation helped to inform project delivery and the overall findings
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