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Publication Date
1 November 2023

How Humanists, Climate Scientists, and Communities Can Co-Produce Narratives for Action

Subtitle
Exploiting gaps in climate information can stimulate collaborative storytelling leading to effective climate action.
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Science

Fostering scientifically-based climate action requires more than just the description of human-natural connections: it requires direct relationship building that combines climate science with the needs, concerns, and values of our community partners. For this we incorporate social capital building, with its emphasis on collaborative ties for resilience across diversity—a focus that we strengthen through community-empowerment work from performance studies. Also, and most profoundly, the environmental humanities expand the human ties of social capital to kinships across the human and more-than-human realms (including Indigenous cosmologies) and elevate narratives of the silenced and the marginalized).

Impact

Successful outcomes in our community engagement occur through three types of narrative gaps purposely included in our engagement tools: gaps of non-specificity, multiplicity, and revision. Gaps of non-specificity invite researchers and community members to share their narratives and enter the conversation as equally needed experts. Gaps of multiplicity foster exploration of multiple and competing ideas in what could be brittle places in climate change uncertainty and disagreement (as identified by noted geographer Mike Hulme)—but in a low-stakes context where individuals might find a common place to layer knowledge together. Such gaps build agency through diversity and foster collaborative storytelling across different ontologies. Finally, gaps of revision evoke and invite counter-stories that draw attention to the blind spots in the original climate-research narratives and then use these places of brittleness as opportunities to envision new possibilities that communities and researchers create together as fully collaborating experts.

Summary

Minding the gaps in climate science information offers a way to acknowledge vulnerability and uncertainty as dynamic places for collaboration and interdependence. As such these sites become loci for responsibility that require turning—continuously—outward from the solidity of one’s own perspectives to engage in the larger knowledge ecosystems that surround us, including those of the more-than-human. It is about humility and kinship. It is about allowing what we do not know to be a strength that urges us to collaborate. Kinship and responsibility through uncertainties is precisely what climate collaboration needs to embrace.

Point of Contact
Linda Shenk
Institution(s)
Iowa State University
Funding Program Area(s)
Publication