Research Symposium

22nd annual Undergraduate Research Symposium

Isabella McLain she, her, hers Poster Session 2: 10:00 - 10:45/Poster #44


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BIO


At Florida State University I have become most interested in sustainable development and means of further integrating climate change mitigation and adaptation into the field of environmental planning in an innovative and introspective way. As a renaissance woman with an unquenchable thirst for answers, I enjoy integrating all branches of knowledge to design a systematic solution for climate change that is as multifaceted and as complex as the issue itself. Sustainable environmental development was a concept introduced to me at Florida State University and it immediately captured my interest because it directly addresses how humans interact and influence their environment. I am an engaged student committed to offering a unique perspective on creative solutions that have several sustainable outcomes achievable through the overlap and intersectionality of various disciplines. Collaboration and integration of knowledge fuels my forward-thinking mind.

Evaluating Knowledge Products for Sustainability, Resilience, and Climate Change Response Efforts

Authors: Isabella McLain, Dr. Kassie Ernst
Student Major: Environment & Society
Mentor: Dr. Kassie Ernst
Mentor's Department: Grand Challenges Scholars Program Director, Engineering LLC at FSU Faculty Director & Teaching Faculty
Mentor's College: FAMU-FSU College of Engineering
Co-Presenters: Isabella McLain, Nia Ogletree, Giola Cancilla, and Sophie Pineau

Abstract


This research evaluates decision-support tools that are built for decision-making towards sustainability in the context of climate change. We seek to understand how these tools are applied in different contexts by analyzing six decision-support tools built for ecosystem-based management processes. We collected data, reviewed research studies, and analyzed their methods using the KnoPE (Knowledge Product Evaluation) Framework, a four-dimensional analytical system that organizes elements, assesses scales, assesses alignment to a theory of change, and analyzes the use of a decision-support tool. We surveyed each decision-support tool from the perspective of decision-makers unrelated to the development of the tool to gather information on how they are and might be used in secondary circumstances. Our results help identify opportunities and challenges to creating tools that are easily accessed and understood to make decision-making in the context of climate change easier to achieve.
We hope that our insights help bring science to decision-makers while also elevating the community voice. Policymakers need guidance to plan for the impacts of climate change in a time when unprecedented natural disasters and environmental hazards are rising. Combined best practices for the adoption and diffusion of such tools include the creation or transformation of web-based databases to include knowledge products that have been evaluated by the KnoPE Framework and increased involvement of stakeholders alongside public participation. Further evaluation of decision-support tools will provide vital, organized information that will support their translation into decision-making processes to make these processes more action-oriented, science-informed, and considerate of a changing climate.

Keywords: Sustainability, Climate Change, Mitigation, Resilience, Framework