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Visualising the invisible: collaborative approaches to local-level resilient development in the Pacific Islands region

McNaught Rebecca , McGregor Kalara , Kensen Matthew. 2022. Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance.
Visualising the invisible: collaborative approaches to local-level resilient development in the Pacific Islands region
ARTICLE, (2022 ) - PUBLISHEDVERSION - English (en-GB)
Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance
OPENACCESS - © 2022 Rebecca McNaught, Kalara McGregor, Matthew Kensen, Rob Hales and Johanna Nalau. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license. .
Audience : RESEARCHERS, STUDENTS
Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance
Subject
Collaborative governance, Pacific, disaster, climate change, local governance, resilient development
Domains
Sciences Sociales, Sciences de l'environnement, Sciences humaines
Description

The Pacific Islands region has made strong progress on the integration of climate change, disaster management and development frameworks, particularly via the Pacific Urban Agenda and the Framework for Resilient Development in the Pacific. These frameworks highlight the need for local- level collaboration in achieving ambitious pathways for climate- and disaster-resilient development. However, to date little research has investigated the role that local-level collaboration plays in implementation. Additionally, there is a lack of guidance on how to design and implement local-level collaboration that is informed by in-country practitioner experiences. This study addresses those gaps. Its findings indicate that in the Pacific collaborative attributes span individuals, institutions, collaborative arrangements, and broader governance systems. They also suggest that the skills needed to undertake collaboration well at the local level are, in part, already manifest in Pacific cultures as invisible skill sets. More can be done to make the invisible visible by documenting and developing the ‘soft skills’ that are necessary to achieve climate- and disaster-resilient development. This action could contribute to bridging the gap between ambition and reality.

Keywords
Language
English (en-GB)
Creators
McNaught Rebecca , McGregor Kalara , Kensen Matthew
Contributors
Sources
Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance, (26), 28-52
Coverage
Pacific
Name of newspaper
Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance