Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Bold leadership, radical action:What Bristol residents want on climate change.
This research set out to establish what ordinary people in Bristol think about climate change, how they talk about it, and how it affects their lives. We asked residents what they know about current local policies, and what they would or would not want to see if changes have to happen in the city. As a result, this report foregrounds the voices of Bristol residents. We hope it will be of use and interest to all those who live and work in the city, including those who took part and who asked to see the final report; to anyone involved in climate change communication in Bristol, whether in Bristol City Council, the Bristol Green Capital Partnership or other business and civil society organisations; and to Bristol climate change strategy leaders and policy makers, including the One City Environmental Sustainability Board and Bristol City Council and WECA mayors, councillors and officers. In February and March 2020, a team of eight researchers spoke to 333 residents across Bristol, covering both the centre and the outskirts and selecting as broad a range of people to talk to as possible. We were determined to hear the views of people who don’t often get heard by policy makers. Following lockdown, we created an online survey asking the same questions and promoted this through Bristol 24-7 and Bristol Post in June 2020. A further 1343 residents took part online, answering an additional question about whether Covid-19 had shifted their views on climate change in any way. Thanks to the huge volume of responses to our online survey, we collected a unique data set given its time of collection and breadth of participation. There is far more information there to unearth and share, and this report is the first of several that we hope to write. However, early analysis of the interviews and responses led to the following insights: • Bristol residents are concerned about climate change and this fear both motivates willingness to change and holds people back from action. • Transport is the biggest area of concern, talked about ...
Bold leadership, radical action:What Bristol residents want on climate change.
This research set out to establish what ordinary people in Bristol think about climate change, how they talk about it, and how it affects their lives. We asked residents what they know about current local policies, and what they would or would not want to see if changes have to happen in the city. As a result, this report foregrounds the voices of Bristol residents. We hope it will be of use and interest to all those who live and work in the city, including those who took part and who asked to see the final report; to anyone involved in climate change communication in Bristol, whether in Bristol City Council, the Bristol Green Capital Partnership or other business and civil society organisations; and to Bristol climate change strategy leaders and policy makers, including the One City Environmental Sustainability Board and Bristol City Council and WECA mayors, councillors and officers. In February and March 2020, a team of eight researchers spoke to 333 residents across Bristol, covering both the centre and the outskirts and selecting as broad a range of people to talk to as possible. We were determined to hear the views of people who don’t often get heard by policy makers. Following lockdown, we created an online survey asking the same questions and promoted this through Bristol 24-7 and Bristol Post in June 2020. A further 1343 residents took part online, answering an additional question about whether Covid-19 had shifted their views on climate change in any way. Thanks to the huge volume of responses to our online survey, we collected a unique data set given its time of collection and breadth of participation. There is far more information there to unearth and share, and this report is the first of several that we hope to write. However, early analysis of the interviews and responses led to the following insights: • Bristol residents are concerned about climate change and this fear both motivates willingness to change and holds people back from action. • Transport is the biggest area of concern, talked about ...
Bold leadership, radical action:What Bristol residents want on climate change.
Wilkinson, Hen (Autor:in) / Nicholls, Jack (Autor:in) / Melville, Emilia (Autor:in) / Evers, Noor (Autor:in) / Neale, Beth (Autor:in) / Stokes, Isabel (Autor:in) / Straatman, Camille (Autor:in)
01.11.2020
Wilkinson , H , Nicholls , J , Melville , E , Evers , N , Neale , B , Stokes , I & Straatman , C 2020 , Bold leadership, radical action : What Bristol residents want on climate change. Praxis (e)Press . < https://praxis-research.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Bristol-public-opinion-on-climate-change.pdf >
Buch
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
DDC:
710
Interlinking Bristol Based Models to Build Resilience to Climate Change
DOAJ | 2020
|Greenovation: Urban leadership on climate change
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2021
|Climate Change - Is the water industry bold enough to raise the sustainability bar?
Online Contents | 2007
Fitzgerald: Greenovation: Urban Leadership on Climate Change
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2021
|