1. Rapid Research and Assessment on COVID-19 and Climate in New York City
- Author
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Gernot Wagner, Nicole Maher, Peter M. Groffman, John Shapiro, Nicholas B. Rajkovich, Deborah Balk, Joel Towers, Justin M. Gundlach, Maureen George, Nancy Holt, Katherine A. McComas, Illya Azaroff, Timon McPhearson, Arthee Jahangir, Adam Parris, William Calabrese, Thomas Matte, Rachel Hogan Carr, Kim Knowlton, Laurie Schoeman, Janice Barnes, John Tchen, Ana Baptista, Kevin A. Reed, Nora I. Kyrkjebo, Thaddeus Pawlowski, Peter J. Marcotullio, Richard H. Moss, Bobuchi Ken-Opurum, Danielle Spiegel-Feld, Radley M. Horton, Treston Codrington, Farzana Gandhi, Christian Braneon, S. Kyle McKay, Guy J.P. Nordenson, Jessica Colon, and Robin Leichenko
- Subjects
History ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Climate change ,Environmental planning - Abstract
In May 2020, the New York City (NYC) Mayor’s Office of Climate Resiliency (MOCR) began convening bi-weekly discussions, called the Rapid Research and Assessment (RRA) Series, between City staff and external experts in science, policy, design, engineering, communications, and planning. The goal was to rapidly develop authoritative, actionable information to help integrate resiliency into the City’s COVID response efforts. The situation in NYC is not uncommon. Extreme events often require government officials, practitioners, and citizens to call upon multiple forms of scientific and technical assistance from rapid data collection to expert elicitation, each spanning more or less involved engagement. We compare the RRA to similar rapid assessment efforts and reflect on the nature of the RRA and similar efforts to exchange and co-produce knowledge. The RRA took up topics on social cohesion, risk communication, resilient and healthy buildings, and engagement, in many cases strengthening confidence in what was already known but also refining the existing knowledge in ways that can be helpful as the pandemic unfolds. Researchers also learned from each other ways to be supportive of the City of New York and MOCR in the future. The RRA network will continue to deepen, continue to co-produce actionable climate knowledge, and continue to value organizational sensemaking as a usable climate service, particularly in highly uncertain times. Given the complex, rare, and, in many cases, unfamiliar context of COVID-19, we argue that organizational sensemaking is a usable climate service.
- Published
- 2021
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