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Tina-Simone Neset
Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research, Department of Thematic Studies-Environmental Change, Linköping University, SE-581 83 Linköping, Sweden

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Journal article
Published: 29 May 2021 in ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
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People living in urban areas are often exposed to heat and inundation caused by heavy rains. Therefore, pedestrian routing in areas exposed to weather-related threats can be of value to citizens. In this study, water accumulated on roads, sidewalks and footpaths after rainfall and snowmelt was used as a case of adverse environmental conditions. Pedestrian routing was implemented in the web tool WayFinder and a group of 56 participants tested the tool in Trondheim, Norway. The study aimed to gain insight into their perspectives on the implemented pedestrian routing functionality to examine to what extent pedestrians find such functionality helpful for navigating in regions that are likely to be inundated. Each participant was asked to (1) use the tool in practice; (2) when walking, report on observed inundated areas; and (3) complete three questionnaires to provide feedback on the WayFinder tool. Although most of the participants were successful in using WayFinder, they preferred the selection of routes that passed through areas likely to be inundated and obtaining information about the risks than selecting a single route suggestion that already avoided exposed areas.

ACS Style

Tomasz Opach; Carlo Navarra; Jan Rød; Tina-Simone Neset. Pedestrian Routing and Perspectives: WayFinder’s Route down the Lane—Come on with the Rain. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 2021, 10, 365 .

AMA Style

Tomasz Opach, Carlo Navarra, Jan Rød, Tina-Simone Neset. Pedestrian Routing and Perspectives: WayFinder’s Route down the Lane—Come on with the Rain. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information. 2021; 10 (6):365.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tomasz Opach; Carlo Navarra; Jan Rød; Tina-Simone Neset. 2021. "Pedestrian Routing and Perspectives: WayFinder’s Route down the Lane—Come on with the Rain." ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 10, no. 6: 365.

Journal article
Published: 17 October 2020 in Environmental Science & Policy
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Climate change adaptation measures and practices may induce fundamental changes i.e. transformations in socio-ecological systems. Adaptation that intentionally aims for transformation is often intended to increase benefits and synergies with other broader societal development goals such as sustainability. Adaptation measures also have possible unintended negative effects that, in the case of system transformations, may be difficult to reverse. This study seeks to identify characteristic features of the adaptation processes that may result in agri-food system transformations. We introduce an integrated framework to identify these features and ‘adaptation activity spaces’, and apply this framework to the Nordic context, analysing stakeholder interviews that integrated serious gaming. The results show how transformations may result from adaptation measures targeted towards climate risks with an objective of changing either current practices or surrounding supportive structures. This study addresses reasons why transformative adaptation is not occurring in Nordic agri-food systems and presents novel information that may contribute to policymaking and further research needs on transformations in relation to adaptation decision-making.

ACS Style

Janina Käyhkö; Lotten Wiréhn; Sirkku Juhola; Tina-Simone Neset. Integrated framework for identifying transformative adaptation in agri-food systems. Environmental Science & Policy 2020, 114, 580 -586.

AMA Style

Janina Käyhkö, Lotten Wiréhn, Sirkku Juhola, Tina-Simone Neset. Integrated framework for identifying transformative adaptation in agri-food systems. Environmental Science & Policy. 2020; 114 ():580-586.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Janina Käyhkö; Lotten Wiréhn; Sirkku Juhola; Tina-Simone Neset. 2020. "Integrated framework for identifying transformative adaptation in agri-food systems." Environmental Science & Policy 114, no. : 580-586.

Focus article
Published: 03 June 2020 in WIREs Climate Change
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This article explores the methodological challenges and opportunities of climate change communication research in a digital landscape. It scrutinizes the potential and limitations of combining group‐based qualitative interview methods, such as focus groups, with new digital media tools such as serious games. The paper brings together three strands of research: Climate change communication studies, methods literature on focus groups, and literature on (digital) serious gaming. Our review demonstrates that studies that deliberately combine focus groups methods with serious gaming have hitherto been scarce. There is a proliferation of digital visualization tools in climate change communication. We therefore see the need to critically explore what and how the integration of digital tools into qualitative group‐based studies can contribute to enhancing research into climate change communication and knowledge development. To illuminate the opportunities and challenges for the integration of serious gaming in focus group studies in the area of climate change communication, we bring in a few illustrative examples from a research project that integrated focus group methodology with a serious game on climate adaptation in Nordic agriculture. Introducing digital serious games in focus group‐based climate change communication studies can benefit climate change communication research in at least three ways: (a) by spurring participants’ in‐depth discussions, facilitating analysis of how sense‐making occurs; (b) by providing opportunities to evaluate features of the game itself and to develop it for different target audiences; and (c) by forming part of participatory climate change communication activities, engaging lay people and/or experts in co‐creating knowledge. This article is categorized under: Perceptions, Behavior, and Communication of Climate Change > Perceptions of Climate Change

ACS Style

Victoria Wibeck; Tina‐Simone Neset. Focus groups and serious gaming in climate change communication research—A methodological review. WIREs Climate Change 2020, 11, 1 .

AMA Style

Victoria Wibeck, Tina‐Simone Neset. Focus groups and serious gaming in climate change communication research—A methodological review. WIREs Climate Change. 2020; 11 (5):1.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Victoria Wibeck; Tina‐Simone Neset. 2020. "Focus groups and serious gaming in climate change communication research—A methodological review." WIREs Climate Change 11, no. 5: 1.

Journal article
Published: 27 February 2020 in Sustainability
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Serious gaming has gained increasing prominence in climate change communication, and provides opportunity to engage new audiences and new platforms for knowledge co-creation and dialogues. This paper presents the design and evaluation of a serious game on climate adaptation, primarily targeted towards high school students, practitioners and politicians. The game aims to provide an experience of the impact of climate adaptation measures, and illustrates links with selected Agenda 2030 goals, which the player has to consider, while limiting impacts of hazardous climate events. The game design builds on the key goals in Education for Sustainable Development combining comprehensive views, action competence, learner engagement and pluralism. This study draws on game sessions and surveys with high school students in Sweden, and aims to assess to what extent different aspects of the game can support an increased understanding of the needs and benefits of adaptation actions. The results of this study indicate that the game can engage players to reflect upon challenges related to climate adaptation decision making, but also point towards the challenge of including a high degree of complexity which can make it difficult to grasp consequences of individual measures, as well as to link these to the natural variability of the occurrence of extreme climatic events.

ACS Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Lotta Andersson; Ola Uhrqvist; Carlo Navarra. Serious Gaming for Climate Adaptation—Assessing the Potential and Challenges of a Digital Serious Game for Urban Climate Adaptation. Sustainability 2020, 12, 1789 .

AMA Style

Tina-Simone Neset, Lotta Andersson, Ola Uhrqvist, Carlo Navarra. Serious Gaming for Climate Adaptation—Assessing the Potential and Challenges of a Digital Serious Game for Urban Climate Adaptation. Sustainability. 2020; 12 (5):1789.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Lotta Andersson; Ola Uhrqvist; Carlo Navarra. 2020. "Serious Gaming for Climate Adaptation—Assessing the Potential and Challenges of a Digital Serious Game for Urban Climate Adaptation." Sustainability 12, no. 5: 1789.

Original article
Published: 08 February 2020 in Regional Environmental Change
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In light of the increased focus on climate change adaptation, there is a need to understand when and how adaptation decision-making generates trade-offs. This study presents a novel framework for adaptation trade-off assessments, which integrates (I) two trade-off mechanisms (direct and interactions) and (II) two types of trade-off characteristics (substantive and processual). Perspectives on adaptation trade-offs were collected from 37 Swedish and Finnish agricultural experts through semi-structured interviews supported by serious gaming and visualization. The data were thematically analysed based on the provided analytical framework. The results show that trade-offs in agricultural adaptation decision-making processes involve balancing a number of socio-ecological system aspects that are of different character and have different functions. The study identified 20 aspects generating trade-offs related to adaptation management in Swedish and Finnish agriculture, among which ‘crop yield and profitability’, ‘farm economy’, ‘pest and weed robustness’ and ‘soil quality’ were discussed as the most prominent by respondents. The framework enables an examination of complex trade-off structures that can have implications for adaptation management decisions. The results show that the identified aspects constitute different components and functions of trade-offs, including both processual and/or substantive ones. In conclusion, the 20 identified aspects and the framework together demonstrate the importance of the two types of adaptation trade-offs and the resulting complexity of climate change adaptation decision-making in Swedish and Finnish agriculture. Furthermore, the study asserts the potential of applying the framework for various strategic contexts—to recognize and cope with trade-offs in adaptation management.

ACS Style

Lotten Wiréhn; Janina Käyhkö; Tina-Simone Neset; Sirkku Juhola. Analysing trade-offs in adaptation decision-making—agricultural management under climate change in Finland and Sweden. Regional Environmental Change 2020, 20, 18 .

AMA Style

Lotten Wiréhn, Janina Käyhkö, Tina-Simone Neset, Sirkku Juhola. Analysing trade-offs in adaptation decision-making—agricultural management under climate change in Finland and Sweden. Regional Environmental Change. 2020; 20 (1):18.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Lotten Wiréhn; Janina Käyhkö; Tina-Simone Neset; Sirkku Juhola. 2020. "Analysing trade-offs in adaptation decision-making—agricultural management under climate change in Finland and Sweden." Regional Environmental Change 20, no. 1: 18.

Journal article
Published: 18 January 2020 in Sustainability
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Citizen participation is obligated in municipal planning but is often criticized because of its inadequate implementation. To increase the usefulness of citizen participation and the involvement of underrepresented groups, online participatory tools (OPTs) have attracted attention, in particular, on topics related to climate change. Although many OPTs have been developed and are becoming more widely used, assessments of their usefulness in real-world planning remain scarce. This study aimed to disentangle prospects and pitfalls of this still novel way of practicing citizen dialogue. Specifically, we apply criteria derived from related literatures to assess a mainstreamed OPT in Norrköping, Sweden. The CityPlanner™ tool was discussed with citizens and planners using focus group methodology and semi-structured individual interviews. Moreover, citizen contributions in four applications of the OPT were analyzed. The results reveal that the biggest challenges for citizen dialogues on planning in general and on climate change, in particular, appear not mainly rooted in the technical functions of the OPT. Rather, problems lie in (i) the lack of municipal strategy for citizen participation and in applying OPTs, (ii) a disparagement in citizens’ abilities to contribute to forming robust and sustainable cities, and (iii) in diverging views about the role of citizen contributions. This is reflected in how the OPT is used. While the examined OPT shows potential, the results indicate that visualized contexts for planning might be too scant to be entirely meaningful, and it lacks mechanisms for feedback. Not using the full potential of the OPT makes citizens less engaged and risks to adversely affect learning and citizens’ contributions to solving complex issues.

ACS Style

Erik Glaas; Mattias Hjerpe; Martin Karlson; Tina-Simone Neset. Visualization for Citizen Participation: User Perceptions on a Mainstreamed Online Participatory Tool and Its Usefulness for Climate Change Planning. Sustainability 2020, 12, 705 .

AMA Style

Erik Glaas, Mattias Hjerpe, Martin Karlson, Tina-Simone Neset. Visualization for Citizen Participation: User Perceptions on a Mainstreamed Online Participatory Tool and Its Usefulness for Climate Change Planning. Sustainability. 2020; 12 (2):705.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Erik Glaas; Mattias Hjerpe; Martin Karlson; Tina-Simone Neset. 2020. "Visualization for Citizen Participation: User Perceptions on a Mainstreamed Online Participatory Tool and Its Usefulness for Climate Change Planning." Sustainability 12, no. 2: 705.

Journal article
Published: 01 October 2019 in Ecological Indicators
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Agriculture is often described as one of the sectors most vulnerable to future climate change, and its vulnerability is commonly assessed through quantitative indices. However, such indices differ significantly depending on their selected indicators, weighting mechanisms, and summarizing methods, often leading to divergent assessments of vulnerability for the same geographic area. The use of generic indicators might also lead to a loss of information about contextual risks and vulnerabilities. This may reduce the perceived usefulness of indices among stakeholders. This study analyses the role of indicators in assessing agricultural vulnerability to climate change. It analyses how indices are understood and used through three separate focus group sessions, involving agricultural experts professionally active in south-eastern Sweden. The paper presents how agricultural practitioners perceive a set of common vulnerability indicators, presented through a visualization tool, and their relevance, logic, and applicability to assess and address vulnerability to climate change. The results of this study contribute with perspectives on (i) the relevance and applicability of the commonly used generic indicators for agricultural vulnerability (ii) the assumed correlation of indicators with climate vulnerability and (iii) the identification of missing vulnerability indicators. The study finds that commonly used vulnerability indicators are perceived hard to apply in practice, as definitions and thresholds are often depending on the geographical and temporal scale, as well as the regional context. Additional exposure factors that were identified included extreme events, such as heavy precipitation and external factors such as global food demand and trade-patterns. Further, participants expressed that it is important to include indices that combine effects of multiple climatic changes and in-direct factors, such as policies, regulations and measures. Inherent complexities, context dependencies, and multiple factors should further be included, but entail difficulties in developing suitable indicators. These factors must be addressed by a broader set of qualitative and quantitative indicators, and greater flexibility in the assessment methodology. The interactive vulnerability assessments presented in this paper indicate a need for an integration of quantitative and qualitative aspects and how such indicators could be developed and applied.

ACS Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Lotten Wiréhn; Tomasz Opach; Erik Glaas; Björn-Ola Linnér. Evaluation of indicators for agricultural vulnerability to climate change: The case of Swedish agriculture. Ecological Indicators 2019, 105, 571 -580.

AMA Style

Tina-Simone Neset, Lotten Wiréhn, Tomasz Opach, Erik Glaas, Björn-Ola Linnér. Evaluation of indicators for agricultural vulnerability to climate change: The case of Swedish agriculture. Ecological Indicators. 2019; 105 ():571-580.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Lotten Wiréhn; Tomasz Opach; Erik Glaas; Björn-Ola Linnér. 2019. "Evaluation of indicators for agricultural vulnerability to climate change: The case of Swedish agriculture." Ecological Indicators 105, no. : 571-580.

Journal article
Published: 24 September 2019 in Sustainability
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This study explores how geopolitical aspects can affect actors’ sense of agency to achieve the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its ambition to transform the world sustainably by studying the linkages between global change and the 2030 Agenda as described by Swedish change agents. Sweden has a self-declared ambition for leadership in the 2030 Agenda. The world’s high-income countries, including Sweden, have been given a specific responsibility to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. The results of this focus group study show that the geopolitical landscape encompasses a multitude of actors and roles whose relationships are filled with tension, creating dichotomies between them. The analysis indicates that Sweden is assessed to be dependent on functioning ecosystems, both locally and globally, as well as causing global environmental change. Two narratives have emerged: (i) the narrative of the 2030 Agenda, referring to deliberate societal transformations that can be controlled and steered, and that have a direction; and (ii) the narrative of geopolitics, indicating perceptions of emergent transformations that appear uncontrollable, drifting aimlessly towards an unknown future. These narratives might influence the understanding of societal transformations, and need to be considered in the facilitation of platforms for deliberative transformations or responses to emerging transformations.

ACS Style

Karin Eliasson; Victoria Wibeck; Tina-Simone Neset. Opportunities and Challenges for Meeting the UN 2030 Agenda in the Light of Global Change—A Case Study of Swedish Perspectives. Sustainability 2019, 11, 5221 .

AMA Style

Karin Eliasson, Victoria Wibeck, Tina-Simone Neset. Opportunities and Challenges for Meeting the UN 2030 Agenda in the Light of Global Change—A Case Study of Swedish Perspectives. Sustainability. 2019; 11 (19):5221.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Karin Eliasson; Victoria Wibeck; Tina-Simone Neset. 2019. "Opportunities and Challenges for Meeting the UN 2030 Agenda in the Light of Global Change—A Case Study of Swedish Perspectives." Sustainability 11, no. 19: 5221.

Ecosystem governance in the baltic sea
Published: 21 September 2019 in Ambio
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This study explores visualization-supported dialogues with water management and ecosystem stakeholders from four catchments in Sweden, Latvia, Germany and Poland. An interactive visualization tool was designed to present information regarding modelled effects of chosen future pathways including different measures that address ecosystem issues under present and future scenarios of land use and climate change, and estimated benefits and costs of the measures. This paper assesses if and how visualization-supported dialogues hinder or support key components of good governance of water and ecosystem management among expert stakeholders. We discuss challenges and opportunities related to the tool and dialogue design, and performance of dialogues. Results from a cross-case workshop indicate that the form and functionality of the tool contributes to participation, empowerment, accessibility and flexibility, while dialogue design is instrumental for encouraging trust and inclusion of local knowledge and competence.

ACS Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Julie Wilk; Carlo Navarra; René Capell; Alena Bartosova. Visualization-supported dialogues in the Baltic Sea Region. Ambio 2019, 48, 1314 -1324.

AMA Style

Tina-Simone Neset, Julie Wilk, Carlo Navarra, René Capell, Alena Bartosova. Visualization-supported dialogues in the Baltic Sea Region. Ambio. 2019; 48 (11):1314-1324.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Julie Wilk; Carlo Navarra; René Capell; Alena Bartosova. 2019. "Visualization-supported dialogues in the Baltic Sea Region." Ambio 48, no. 11: 1314-1324.

Article
Published: 18 February 2019 in Climatic Change
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The need for climate change adaptation has been widely recognised and examples of successful adaptation are increasingly reported in the literature, but little attention has so far been paid to the potential negative impacts of implemented adaptation measures. As the agricultural sector is implementing measures to adapt to or cope with climatic variability and change, the potential negative consequences of these measures need to be explored in order to avoid increased vulnerability or (unintended) environmental impacts. This paper employs serious gaming and focus group methodology to study how agricultural stakeholders in Sweden and Finland frame and negotiate the unintended negative impacts of adaptation measures. The results of our interactional frame analysis suggest that the participants negotiated the potential maladaptive outcomes depending on: (1) whether they agreed that this was indeed a potential consequence of an adaptation measure, (2) whether they considered this to be a negative outcome, and if so whether it was (3) a negative outcome which they could adapt to, (4) a negative outcome that would make it preferable not to adapt at all (5) negotiable in terms of a trade-off with alternative outcomes. While it may be obvious that adaptation options that increase vulnerability should be avoided, this study illustrates the complex, value based, individual, yet dialogical processes and contextual basis for identifying and assessing maladaptation.

ACS Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Therese Asplund; Janina Käyhkö; Sirkku Juhola. Making sense of maladaptation: Nordic agriculture stakeholders’ perspectives. Climatic Change 2019, 153, 107 -121.

AMA Style

Tina-Simone Neset, Therese Asplund, Janina Käyhkö, Sirkku Juhola. Making sense of maladaptation: Nordic agriculture stakeholders’ perspectives. Climatic Change. 2019; 153 (1-2):107-121.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Therese Asplund; Janina Käyhkö; Sirkku Juhola. 2019. "Making sense of maladaptation: Nordic agriculture stakeholders’ perspectives." Climatic Change 153, no. 1-2: 107-121.

Journal article
Published: 23 January 2019 in Sustainability
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The production of food can have large impacts on sustainable development in relation to various socio-ecological dimensions, like climate change, the environment, animal welfare, livestock epidemiology, and the economy. To achieve a sustainable food production system in Sweden, an integrated approach that considers all five of these dimensions, and all parts of the food production chain, is necessary. This paper systematically reviewed the literature related to food production in Sweden, especially in association with resource distribution and recycling logistics, and identified potential sustainability interventions and assessed their effects according to the five dimensions. Participation of stakeholders across the food production chain contributed with the focus of the literature search and subsequent synthesis. In general, there were synergies between the sustainability interventions and their effect on climate change and the environment, while there often were trade-offs between effects on the economy and the other dimensions. Few interventions considered effects on animal welfare or livestock epidemiology and few studies dealt with resource distribution and recycling logistics. This indicates that there is a need for future research that considers this in particular, as well as research that considers the whole food production chain and all dimensions at once, and investigates effects across multiple scales.

ACS Style

Malin Tälle; Lotten Wiréhn; Daniel Ellström; Mattias Hjerpe; Maria Huge-Brodin; Per Jensen; Tom Lindström; Tina-Simone Neset; Uno Wennergren; Geneviève Metson. Synergies and Trade-Offs for Sustainable Food Production in Sweden: An Integrated Approach. Sustainability 2019, 11, 601 .

AMA Style

Malin Tälle, Lotten Wiréhn, Daniel Ellström, Mattias Hjerpe, Maria Huge-Brodin, Per Jensen, Tom Lindström, Tina-Simone Neset, Uno Wennergren, Geneviève Metson. Synergies and Trade-Offs for Sustainable Food Production in Sweden: An Integrated Approach. Sustainability. 2019; 11 (3):601.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Malin Tälle; Lotten Wiréhn; Daniel Ellström; Mattias Hjerpe; Maria Huge-Brodin; Per Jensen; Tom Lindström; Tina-Simone Neset; Uno Wennergren; Geneviève Metson. 2019. "Synergies and Trade-Offs for Sustainable Food Production in Sweden: An Integrated Approach." Sustainability 11, no. 3: 601.

Journal article
Published: 13 December 2018 in Climate Risk Management
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Climatic changes are expected to pose challenges to Nordic agriculture. While some changes may provide opportunities for higher productivity, others may severely increase agricultural vulnerability. Farmers attempt to adapt or cope with these changes by taking measures to decrease vulnerability or to take advantage of potential benefits, but little is known what outcomes these adaptation measures might have. This study identifies unintended negative impacts of adaptation measures, drawing on a literature review and interviews with farmers and agricultural officials and experts in Sweden and Finland. Based on the conceptual framework of maladaptation, this study identifies outcomes that either increase the vulnerability of the implementing actor, shift the vulnerability to other actors or sectors or affect common pool resources. While a large number of adaptation measures rebound vulnerability to the implementing actor, several potential maladaptive outcomes may shift vulnerability or affect common pool resources. The findings point to the large number of trade-offs that are involved in adaptation decision-making and lead to the conclusion that raising awareness of these aspects can support future adaptation strategies.

ACS Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Lotten Wiréhn; Natacha Klein; Janina Käyhkö; Sirkku Juhola. Maladaptation in Nordic agriculture. Climate Risk Management 2018, 23, 78 -87.

AMA Style

Tina-Simone Neset, Lotten Wiréhn, Natacha Klein, Janina Käyhkö, Sirkku Juhola. Maladaptation in Nordic agriculture. Climate Risk Management. 2018; 23 ():78-87.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Lotten Wiréhn; Natacha Klein; Janina Käyhkö; Sirkku Juhola. 2018. "Maladaptation in Nordic agriculture." Climate Risk Management 23, no. : 78-87.

Essay
Published: 03 July 2018 in Climatic Change
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This essay discusses the concept of usefulness of research for climate change adaptation. Based on prior research and stakeholder interactions with policymakers and practitioners in the Nordic countries, we contend that critical issues related to the usefulness of adaptation research seem less associated with content (i.e. research outputs), but rather centre around the efforts made to design and communicate research, that is, to put research at the service of society and make the case for adaptation on the political agenda. This, we argue, to some extent mirrors the situation and political context in the Nordic countries, where adaptation in many locations still is an issue in its infancy, not firmly established on the political agendas, and where working procedures are not yet institutionally settled. In this context, science is considered and sometimes used as a discursive tool to make the case for adaptation. Based on the calls for research that inspires, raises hope and helps to raise the issue of adaptation on the political agendas, we elaborate the role of honest issue advocates for researchers in the field of adaptation science.

ACS Style

Anna Bohman; Erik Glaas; Johannes Klein; Mia Landauer; Tina-Simone Neset; Björn-Ola Linnér; Sirkku Juhola. On the call for issue advocates, or what it takes to make adaptation research useful. Climatic Change 2018, 149, 121 -129.

AMA Style

Anna Bohman, Erik Glaas, Johannes Klein, Mia Landauer, Tina-Simone Neset, Björn-Ola Linnér, Sirkku Juhola. On the call for issue advocates, or what it takes to make adaptation research useful. Climatic Change. 2018; 149 (2):121-129.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Anna Bohman; Erik Glaas; Johannes Klein; Mia Landauer; Tina-Simone Neset; Björn-Ola Linnér; Sirkku Juhola. 2018. "On the call for issue advocates, or what it takes to make adaptation research useful." Climatic Change 149, no. 2: 121-129.

Journal article
Published: 20 December 2017 in Environmental Communication
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In recent years, effort has been put into developing various forms of climate visualization to create opportunities for people to explore and learn about local climate change risks and adaptation options. However, how target audiences make sense of such climate visualization has rarely been studied from a communication perspective. This paper analyses how Nordic homeowners made sense of a specific climate visualization tool, the VisAdapt™ tool. Involving 35 homeowners from three cities in 15 group test sessions, this study analyses the interpretive strategies participants applied to make sense of and assess the relevance of the visualized data. The study demonstrates that participants employed a set of interpretive strategies relating to personal experience and well-known places to make sense of the information presented, and that critical negotiation of content played an important role in how participants interpreted the content.

ACS Style

Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne; Erik Glaas; Tina-Simone Neset; Victoria Wibeck. Localizing Climate Change: Nordic Homeowners’ Interpretations of Visual Representations for Climate Adaptation. Environmental Communication 2017, 12, 638 -652.

AMA Style

Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne, Erik Glaas, Tina-Simone Neset, Victoria Wibeck. Localizing Climate Change: Nordic Homeowners’ Interpretations of Visual Representations for Climate Adaptation. Environmental Communication. 2017; 12 (5):638-652.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne; Erik Glaas; Tina-Simone Neset; Victoria Wibeck. 2017. "Localizing Climate Change: Nordic Homeowners’ Interpretations of Visual Representations for Climate Adaptation." Environmental Communication 12, no. 5: 638-652.

Journal article
Published: 01 February 2017 in Landscape and Urban Planning
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ACS Style

Erik Glaas; Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne; Tina-Simone Neset; Björn-Ola Linnér. Visualization for supporting individual climate change adaptation planning: Assessment of a web-based tool. Landscape and Urban Planning 2017, 158, 1 -11.

AMA Style

Erik Glaas, Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne, Tina-Simone Neset, Björn-Ola Linnér. Visualization for supporting individual climate change adaptation planning: Assessment of a web-based tool. Landscape and Urban Planning. 2017; 158 ():1-11.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Erik Glaas; Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne; Tina-Simone Neset; Björn-Ola Linnér. 2017. "Visualization for supporting individual climate change adaptation planning: Assessment of a web-based tool." Landscape and Urban Planning 158, no. : 1-11.

Original research article
Published: 28 October 2016 in Frontiers in Nutrition
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The impact of global phosphorus scarcity on food security has increasingly been the focus of scientific studies over the past decade. However, systematic analyses of alternative futures for phosphorus supply and demand throughout the food system are still rare and provide limited inclusion of key stakeholders. Addressing global phosphorus scarcity requires an integrated approach exploring potential demand reduction as well as recycling opportunities. This implies recovering phosphorus from multiple sources, such as food waste, manure and excreta, as well as exploring novel opportunities to reduce the long-term demand for phosphorus in food production such as changing diets. Presently, there is a lack of stakeholder and scientific consensus around priority measures. To therefore enable exploration of multiple pathways and facilitate a stakeholder dialogue on the technical, behavioral and institutional changes required to meet long-term future phosphorus demand, this paper introduces an interactive web-based tool, designed for visualizing global phosphorus scenarios in real-time. The interactive global phosphorus scenario tool builds on several demand and supply side measures that can be selected and manipulated interactively by the user. It provides a platform to facilitate stakeholder dialogue to plan for a soft landing and identify a suite of concrete priority options, such as investing in agricultural phosphorus use efficiency, or renewable fertilizers derived from phosphorus recovered from wastewater and food waste, to determine how phosphorus demand to meet future food security could be attained on a global scale in 2040 and 2070. This paper presents four example scenarios, including (1) the potential of full recovery of human excreta, (2) the challenge of a potential increase in non-food phosphorus demand, (3) the potential of a decreased animal product consumption, and (4) the potential decrease in phosphorus demand from increased efficiency and yield gains in crop and livestock systems.

ACS Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Dana Cordell; Steve Mohr; Froggi VanRiper; Stuart White. Visualizing Alternative Phosphorus Scenarios for Future Food Security. Frontiers in Nutrition 2016, 3, 1 .

AMA Style

Tina-Simone Neset, Dana Cordell, Steve Mohr, Froggi VanRiper, Stuart White. Visualizing Alternative Phosphorus Scenarios for Future Food Security. Frontiers in Nutrition. 2016; 3 ():1.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Dana Cordell; Steve Mohr; Froggi VanRiper; Stuart White. 2016. "Visualizing Alternative Phosphorus Scenarios for Future Food Security." Frontiers in Nutrition 3, no. : 1.

Journal article
Published: 01 September 2016 in Applied Geography
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ACS Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Erik Glaas; Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne; Björn-Ola Linnér; Tomasz Opach; Carlo Navarra; Jimmy Johansson; Anna Bohman; Jan Ketil Rød; Michael Goodsite. Climate change effects at your doorstep: Geographic visualization to support Nordic homeowners in adapting to climate change. Applied Geography 2016, 74, 65 -72.

AMA Style

Tina-Simone Neset, Erik Glaas, Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne, Björn-Ola Linnér, Tomasz Opach, Carlo Navarra, Jimmy Johansson, Anna Bohman, Jan Ketil Rød, Michael Goodsite. Climate change effects at your doorstep: Geographic visualization to support Nordic homeowners in adapting to climate change. Applied Geography. 2016; 74 ():65-72.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tina-Simone Neset; Erik Glaas; Anne Gammelgaard Ballantyne; Björn-Ola Linnér; Tomasz Opach; Carlo Navarra; Jimmy Johansson; Anna Bohman; Jan Ketil Rød; Michael Goodsite. 2016. "Climate change effects at your doorstep: Geographic visualization to support Nordic homeowners in adapting to climate change." Applied Geography 74, no. : 65-72.

Journal article
Published: 12 May 2016 in Journal of Environmental Planning and Management
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Lotten Wiréhn; Tomasz Opach; Tina-Simone Neset. Assessing agricultural vulnerability to climate change in the Nordic countries – an interactive geovisualization approach. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 2016, 60, 115 -134.

AMA Style

Lotten Wiréhn, Tomasz Opach, Tina-Simone Neset. Assessing agricultural vulnerability to climate change in the Nordic countries – an interactive geovisualization approach. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management. 2016; 60 (1):115-134.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Lotten Wiréhn; Tomasz Opach; Tina-Simone Neset. 2016. "Assessing agricultural vulnerability to climate change in the Nordic countries – an interactive geovisualization approach." Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 60, no. 1: 115-134.

Journal article
Published: 01 January 2016 in Environmental Science & Policy
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As experiences of implementation of climate change adaptation are accumulating, there is a need to increase the understanding of the potential negative consequences of adaptation actions that might occur, and the capacity of research to assess them. Maladaptation used in this context has remained elusively defined and sparingly used, and therefore difficult to apply. Based on a literature review, we discuss the conceptual boundaries of maladaptation and how it can be used to analyse negative outcomes of adaptation and propose a refined definition. We present a typology of maladaptation that distinguishes between three types of maladaptive outcomes – rebounding vulnerability, shifting vulnerability and eroding sustainable development, and argue that maladaptation can be defined as a result of an intentional adaptation policy or measure directly increasing vulnerability for the targeted and/or external actor(s), and/or eroding preconditions for sustainable development by indirectly increasing society's vulnerability. We note that the recognition of adaptation as an intentional action and the importance of setting clear spatial and temporal boundaries, as well as thresholds, are key to analysing negative outcomes.

ACS Style

Sirkku Juhola; Erik Glaas; Björn-Ola Linnér; Tina-Simone Neset. Redefining maladaptation. Environmental Science & Policy 2016, 55, 135 -140.

AMA Style

Sirkku Juhola, Erik Glaas, Björn-Ola Linnér, Tina-Simone Neset. Redefining maladaptation. Environmental Science & Policy. 2016; 55 ():135-140.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Sirkku Juhola; Erik Glaas; Björn-Ola Linnér; Tina-Simone Neset. 2016. "Redefining maladaptation." Environmental Science & Policy 55, no. : 135-140.

Journal article
Published: 01 December 2015 in Urban Climate
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Erik Glaas; Tina-Simone Neset; Erik Kjellström; Anders-Johan Almås. Increasing house owners adaptive capacity: Compliance between climate change risks and adaptation guidelines in Scandinavia. Urban Climate 2015, 14, 41 -51.

AMA Style

Erik Glaas, Tina-Simone Neset, Erik Kjellström, Anders-Johan Almås. Increasing house owners adaptive capacity: Compliance between climate change risks and adaptation guidelines in Scandinavia. Urban Climate. 2015; 14 ():41-51.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Erik Glaas; Tina-Simone Neset; Erik Kjellström; Anders-Johan Almås. 2015. "Increasing house owners adaptive capacity: Compliance between climate change risks and adaptation guidelines in Scandinavia." Urban Climate 14, no. : 41-51.