I’d like to thank all the team who made the ten-day ‘Participatory 3D modelling (P3DM) for climate change’ engagement with Boe Boe community, Solomon Islands, such a successful event.
James Hardcastle
Source: EldisCommunity, 17 May 2011
Read more: Nature Conservancy's adaptation project in Choiseul, Solomon Islands
It   is the first time that such innovative, yet simple, mapping and   communication tools have been used in the context of climate change   adaptation.
The   team, led by Kenn Mondiai of Partners With Melanesians, and the  Solomon  Islands’ TNC staff and local partners, were able to hand over a   vibrant, illustrated, ‘living’ and accurately-scaled model of the   community customary lands and waters, at a ceremony involving Boe Boe   village and neighboring communities.
The   model took teams of students and volunteers 3 days to build, and then   community members added the detail – from their own houses, their   gardens, their route through the mangroves, forest paths, conservation   areas, and anything else they reckoned important to note.
At   the same time, climate vulnerability and adaptive capacity surveys  with  households, led by Esther Ririmae and Gideon Solo, and follow-up  work  by the team with community members on a range of key issues,  allowed the  modeling exercise to focus on community perspectives of  climate change  impacts, and the villagers’ collective ability to  respond to these and  other development pressures.
Of   real interest, digital and ‘scientific’ modeling provided by TNC GIS   folks (Nate Peterson, Seno Mauli) and Javier Leon of University of   Wollongong, was seamlessly integrated into the mapping exercise and gave   the community additional perspectives on their local knowledge, to aid   decision-making.
The   exercise has given all those involved, and all the partners in the   Australian Government / AusAID supported project ‘Building the   Resilience of Communities and their Ecosystems to the Impacts of Climate   Change’, a chance to explore how local communities can assess  potential  climate impacts, be aware of their own capacities and  vulnerabilities,  and make decisions going forward.
Please find the attached initial write-up of the activity in the 'files' section at this link http://community.eld...  , along with some resources on conducting P3DM. More detailed reports  will follow from Partners With Melanesians and other papers on the  lessons learned from the exercise.
The guru of P3DM, Giacomo Rambaldi, based at the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Co-operation (CTA) in the Netherlands, has worked with both Kenn and myself before on the tool, and has an online resource kit available at http://pgis-tk-en.cta.int
Next up is 3D modeling at the provincial scale in Manus!
The initiative has been implemented in the framework of the Australian Government / AusAID-funded project ‘Building the Resilience of Communities and their Ecosystems to the Impacts of Climate Change in the Pacific”.
The initiative has been implemented in the framework of the Australian Government / AusAID-funded project ‘Building the Resilience of Communities and their Ecosystems to the Impacts of Climate Change in the Pacific”.
James Hardcastle
Source: EldisCommunity, 17 May 2011
Read more: Nature Conservancy's adaptation project in Choiseul, Solomon Islands
 
 
 
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