Eakin Hallie, Bojórquez-Tapia Luis A, Miquelajauregui Yosune, Grave Ileana, Aguilar Bertha Hernandez, Janssen Marco A
School of Sustainability, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-7904.
Laboratorio Nacional de Ciencias de la Sostenibilidad, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, Mexico City 04510, Mexico.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Sep 3;121(36):e2313191121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2313191121. Epub 2024 Aug 28.
Achieving more sustainable adaptation to social-environmental change demands the transformation of the narratives that provide the rationale for risk governance. These narratives often reflect long-standing beliefs about social and political relationships, ascribe actions and responsibilities, and specify solutions to risk. When such solutions are implemented through material investments in landscapes, these narratives become embedded in physical infrastructure with long legacies. Dominant narratives can mask a range of divergent problem framings. By masking alternatives, narratives can contribute to the persistence of unsustainable governance trajectories. Decision-support tools have begun to represent narratives as drivers of system dynamics; making narratives visible can reveal opportunities for more sustainable governance. We present the results of the project "The Dynamics of Multi-Scalar Adaptation in the Megalopolis", a dynamic, exploratory model of socio-hydrological risks in Mexico City that was designed to both endogenize and simultaneously challenge the dominant narratives that characterize water-risk governance in the city. Qualitative data characterize dominant narratives at city and borough scales. An agent-based model, informed by multicriteria decision analysis and coupled with hydrological, urbanization, and climatic model inputs, permitted the development of exploratory governance scenarios designed to challenge dominant narratives. Scenarios revealed how dominant narratives may contribute to the persistence of vulnerability "hotspots" in the city, despite stated goals of equity and vulnerability alleviation. Participatory workshops with representatives of the city government illustrate how making such narratives visible through exploratory modeling can lead to a questioning of prior assumptions and causal relations, recognition of a need for intersectoral collaboration, and insights into potential management strategies.
要实现对社会环境变化更可持续的适应,需要转变为风险治理提供理论依据的叙述方式。这些叙述往往反映了关于社会和政治关系的长期信念,赋予行动和责任,并明确风险解决方案。当通过对景观进行实质性投资来实施这些解决方案时,这些叙述就会融入具有长期影响的物理基础设施中。主导性叙述可能会掩盖一系列不同的问题框架。通过掩盖其他可能性,叙述可能会导致不可持续治理轨迹的持续存在。决策支持工具已开始将叙述视为系统动态的驱动因素;使叙述可见可以揭示实现更可持续治理的机会。我们展示了“大都市多尺度适应动态”项目的结果,这是一个关于墨西哥城社会水文风险的动态探索性模型,旨在将城市水风险治理的主导性叙述内生化并同时对其提出挑战。定性数据描绘了城市和行政区层面的主导性叙述。一个基于主体的模型,由多标准决策分析提供信息,并与水文、城市化和气候模型输入相结合,允许开发旨在挑战主导性叙述的探索性治理情景。情景揭示了尽管有公平和减轻脆弱性的既定目标,但主导性叙述可能如何导致城市中脆弱性“热点”的持续存在。与市政府代表进行的参与性研讨会说明了通过探索性建模使这些叙述可见如何能够引发对先前假设和因果关系的质疑,认识到跨部门合作的必要性,并深入了解潜在的管理策略。