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Collaboration Across Worldviews: Managers and Scientists on Hawaiʻi Island Utilize Knowledge Coproduction to Facilitate Climate Change Adaptation

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Abstract

Complex socio-ecological issues, such as climate change have historically been addressed through technical problem solving methods. Yet today, climate science approaches are increasingly accounting for the roles of diverse social perceptions, experiences, cultural norms, and worldviews. In support of this shift, we developed a research program on Hawaiʻi Island that utilizes knowledge coproduction to integrate the diverse worldviews of natural and cultural resource managers, policy professionals, and researchers within actionable science products. Through their work, local field managers regularly experience discrete land and waterscapes. Additionally, in highly interconnected rural communities, such as Hawaiʻi Island, managers often participate in the social norms and values of communities that utilize these ecosystems. Such local manager networks offer powerful frameworks within which to co-develop and implement actionable science. We interviewed a diverse set of local managers with the aim of incorporating their perspectives into the development of a collaborative climate change research agenda that builds upon existing professional networks utilized by managers and scientists while developing new research products. We report our manager needs assessment, the development process of our climate change program, our interactive forums, and our ongoing research products. Our needs assessment showed that the managers’ primary source of information were other professional colleagues, and our in-person forums informed us that local managers are very interested in interacting with a wider range of networks to build upon their management capacities. Our initial programmatic progress suggests that co-created research products and in-person forums strengthen the capacities of local managers to adapt to change.

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Acknowledgements

We are grateful to the Hawaiʻi managers whose extensive interviews created the foundation of our program, as well as the growing networks of managers, scientists, and graduate students currently collaborating within the Manager Climate Corps. We thank the anonymous reviewers, as well as Joseph Genz, Department of Anthropology, University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo, and Rick Camp of the Hawaiʻi Cooperative Studies Unit, University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo. Their collective efforts offered fundamental guidance for this manuscript. We gratefully acknowledge our funding support from the U.S. Department of the Interior Pacific Islands Climate Adaptation Science Center managed by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) National Climate Adaptation Science Center through Cooperative Agreements G12AC00003 and G14AP00176. This project is the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official view of the Pacific Islands Climate Adaptation Science Center or USGS. This manuscript is submitted for publication with the understanding that the United States Government is authorized to reproduce and distribute reprints for Government purposes.

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Correspondence to Scott Laursen.

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Laursen, S., Puniwai, N., Genz, A.S. et al. Collaboration Across Worldviews: Managers and Scientists on Hawaiʻi Island Utilize Knowledge Coproduction to Facilitate Climate Change Adaptation. Environmental Management 62, 619–630 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-018-1069-7

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