[online]
URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art11/
Synthesis, part of a Special Feature on Implementing Participatory Water Management: Recent
Advances in Theory, Practice and Evaluation
Co-engineering Participatory Water Management Processes: Theory and
Insights from Australian and Bulgarian Interventions
Katherine A. Daniell 1, Ian White 2, Nils Ferrand 3, Irina S. Ribarova 4, Peter
/media/loftslag/Moellenkampetal_etal-2010.pdf
To which extent and how do you involve stakeholders in the scenario building?
o What are the adaptation options in the different scenarios?
5. How do you deal with uncertainty in the scenarios?
6. What are the critical assumptions regarding risk perceptions and behavioural responses in the
different scenarios?
7. How should the scenarios be applied in the planning process?
8. Capacity
/media/loftslag/Horsens_breakout_12August.pdf
The NOMEK Memorandum of Understanding has been followed for the past
three years and formalises the principles which are used arranging the
course. The courses have now run over more than 10 years and over the
years small changes to the principles of how the course is run and funded
have been introduced by the changing host. This formal description of the
principles for the NOMEK has been
/media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2009/NOMEK09_Report.pdf
superimpose both
heating and cooling effects, i.e.,
– wind = cooling
– temperature, solar radiation = heating
June 2010 5
• Limit to how much heat the wire can be
exposed to
• Amount of allowable current based on
ambient conditions is known as ‘rating’
Network capacity (ampacity)
Too much heat
causes ‘sag’ where
minimum ground
clearance is not
achieved
June 2010 6
How are ratings determined
/media/ces/Cradden_Lucy_CES_2010.pdf
were M 3.6 at 03:42 and M 3.2 at 07:47. Since the afternoon of 23 October, a new cluster of earthquakes has occurred about 5 km north-northwest of Gjögurtá on the intersection of the eastern end of Eyjafjarðaráll and the Húsavík-Flatey Fault (HFF). The largest events in this region were M 3.1 at 23:38 on 23 October and 3.2 at 22:20 on 24 October (see the map).
Movements on the fault of the M
/about-imo/news/nr/2561
4 Identify (policy) actions. The penultimate step of the backcasting process was to discuss what (policy) actions are needed
to reach milestones; overcome obstacles; and/or make use of opportunities. Stakeholders were asked to be as specic as
possible on: Why, How, When, How long, What, and Who?
Step 5 Robust strategies. As a last step of the group work during the workshop, we asked stakeholders
/media/loftslag/Kok_et_al._TFSC_published_2011.pdf
of the oceans. Ecological Economics
31:171-188.
Crona, B., and K. Hubacek. 2010. The right
connections: how do social networks lubricate the
machinery of natural resource governance? Ecology
and Society 15(4): 18. [online] URL: http://www.e
cologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art18/.
De Blaeij, A. T., N. Polman, and S. Reinhard. 2011.
Economic governance to expand commercial
wetlands: within- and cross
/media/loftslag/Kok_and_Veldkamp_editorial_ES-2011-4160.pdf
) Establish
scenario team
and scenario
panel
(2) Team
proposes goals
and outline
(3) Panel drafts
narrative
storylines
(6) Panel revises
storylines
(5) Modelling
groups quantify
scenarios
(4) Team
quantifies driving
forces
(8) General
review of
scenarios
(9) Team &
Panel make final
revision of
scenarios
(10) Publication
and distribution
(7) Repeat step 4-6
Story-And-Simulation approach
/media/loftslag/Kok_2-scenarios-lecture-2.pdf