POLARIS: The Pursuing Opportunities for Long-term Arctic Resilience for Infrastructure and Society
Abstract
Alaskan coastal Indigenous communities face severe, urgent, and complex social and infrastructural challenges resulting from environmental changes. However, the magnitude and significance of impacts are unclear; as is how local communities will respond to resulting disruptions and disasters. This POLARIS project investigates how interconnected environmental stressors and infrastructure disruptions are affecting coastal Alaskan communities and identifies the important assets (social, environmental, infrastructural, institutional) to help them adapt and become more resilient to climate-related changes. The POLARIS project has identified three convergent research pillars to help communities adapt: environmental hotspots of disruption to communities and infrastructure, food in complex adaptive systems, and migration and community relocation. The pillars are interconnected and build upon the convergence of social and natural systems and built environments. Research will integrate the pillars where system responses and uncertainties will be predicted under several socio-environmental scenarios. We work directly with local stakeholders in three study communities representing different regions of the coastal Bering Sea and Arctic, with varying social, cultural, demographic, and ecological characteristics. We combine data from surveys, interviews, focus groups, and economic experiments with environmental and secondary social data, to be analyzed with a combination of spatial analysis, agent-based modeling, and scenario planning within a complex systems framework. The co-produced knowledge will be generalized and transferred to other Arctic and subarctic Indigenous communities. This integrated research project will enable communities to become more resilient with both stronger societies, civic culture, and improved infrastructure needed as the new Arctic continues to emerge.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2020
- Bibcode:
- 2020AGUFMGC0390012C
- Keywords:
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- 1605 Abrupt/rapid climate change;
- GLOBAL CHANGE;
- 1622 Earth system modeling;
- GLOBAL CHANGE;
- 1630 Impacts of global change;
- GLOBAL CHANGE;
- 4329 Sustainable development;
- NATURAL HAZARDS