What do New Yorkers Think about Impacts and Adaptation to Heat Waves? An Evaluation Tool to Incorporate Perception of Low-Income Groups into Heat Wave Adaptation Scenarios in New York City

Low-income residents are among the most vulnerable groups to climate change in urban areas, particularly regarding heat stress. However, their perceptions about heat and the impacts they face go often undocumented, and are seldom considered in decision-making processes delivering adaptation. This pa...

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Main Authors: Sadra Matmir, Diana Reckien, Johannes Flacke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-07-01
Series:ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/6/8/229
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spelling doaj-62dc29302c5744a8bf0fa61eac3e871c2020-11-25T01:42:57ZengMDPI AGISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information2220-99642017-07-016822910.3390/ijgi6080229ijgi6080229What do New Yorkers Think about Impacts and Adaptation to Heat Waves? An Evaluation Tool to Incorporate Perception of Low-Income Groups into Heat Wave Adaptation Scenarios in New York CitySadra Matmir0Diana Reckien1Johannes Flacke2Department of Urban and Regional Planning and Geo-information Management, ITC Faculty, University of Twente, 7500 AE Enschede, The NetherlandsDepartment of Urban and Regional Planning and Geo-information Management, ITC Faculty, University of Twente, 7500 AE Enschede, The NetherlandsDepartment of Urban and Regional Planning and Geo-information Management, ITC Faculty, University of Twente, 7500 AE Enschede, The NetherlandsLow-income residents are among the most vulnerable groups to climate change in urban areas, particularly regarding heat stress. However, their perceptions about heat and the impacts they face go often undocumented, and are seldom considered in decision-making processes delivering adaptation. This paper presents a robust tool to allow the integration of perception, concerns and impacts of different income groups in urban adaptation planning and governance, using the City of New York as a case study. Employing online interviews—a solid method to reach poorer households—and Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping, we compare impacts and adaptation perception to heat and simulate adaptation scenarios. Results reveal that lower income groups are more concerned about impacts of heat waves than middle- and high-income populations. All income groups see citizens more in charge of adaptation, although more people from the lower income groups regard it necessary to do much more to protect themselves, proportionately more people from the higher income groups think they are doing the right amount. The scenario analysis shows that, compared to investments in the water/electricity and health system, improvements in the transit system would yield the largest decrease in negative impacts during heat, benefitting all income groups jointly.https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/6/8/229climate changeclimate governancevulnerabilityheat waveFCM (Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping)New York Cityincome groups
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sadra Matmir
Diana Reckien
Johannes Flacke
spellingShingle Sadra Matmir
Diana Reckien
Johannes Flacke
What do New Yorkers Think about Impacts and Adaptation to Heat Waves? An Evaluation Tool to Incorporate Perception of Low-Income Groups into Heat Wave Adaptation Scenarios in New York City
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
climate change
climate governance
vulnerability
heat wave
FCM (Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping)
New York City
income groups
author_facet Sadra Matmir
Diana Reckien
Johannes Flacke
author_sort Sadra Matmir
title What do New Yorkers Think about Impacts and Adaptation to Heat Waves? An Evaluation Tool to Incorporate Perception of Low-Income Groups into Heat Wave Adaptation Scenarios in New York City
title_short What do New Yorkers Think about Impacts and Adaptation to Heat Waves? An Evaluation Tool to Incorporate Perception of Low-Income Groups into Heat Wave Adaptation Scenarios in New York City
title_full What do New Yorkers Think about Impacts and Adaptation to Heat Waves? An Evaluation Tool to Incorporate Perception of Low-Income Groups into Heat Wave Adaptation Scenarios in New York City
title_fullStr What do New Yorkers Think about Impacts and Adaptation to Heat Waves? An Evaluation Tool to Incorporate Perception of Low-Income Groups into Heat Wave Adaptation Scenarios in New York City
title_full_unstemmed What do New Yorkers Think about Impacts and Adaptation to Heat Waves? An Evaluation Tool to Incorporate Perception of Low-Income Groups into Heat Wave Adaptation Scenarios in New York City
title_sort what do new yorkers think about impacts and adaptation to heat waves? an evaluation tool to incorporate perception of low-income groups into heat wave adaptation scenarios in new york city
publisher MDPI AG
series ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
issn 2220-9964
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Low-income residents are among the most vulnerable groups to climate change in urban areas, particularly regarding heat stress. However, their perceptions about heat and the impacts they face go often undocumented, and are seldom considered in decision-making processes delivering adaptation. This paper presents a robust tool to allow the integration of perception, concerns and impacts of different income groups in urban adaptation planning and governance, using the City of New York as a case study. Employing online interviews—a solid method to reach poorer households—and Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping, we compare impacts and adaptation perception to heat and simulate adaptation scenarios. Results reveal that lower income groups are more concerned about impacts of heat waves than middle- and high-income populations. All income groups see citizens more in charge of adaptation, although more people from the lower income groups regard it necessary to do much more to protect themselves, proportionately more people from the higher income groups think they are doing the right amount. The scenario analysis shows that, compared to investments in the water/electricity and health system, improvements in the transit system would yield the largest decrease in negative impacts during heat, benefitting all income groups jointly.
topic climate change
climate governance
vulnerability
heat wave
FCM (Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping)
New York City
income groups
url https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/6/8/229
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