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Tackling Wicked Problems with Transdisciplinary Participatory Modeling: A Case Study TemplateBy Hans-Peter Plag, April 27, 2021 IntroductionPurposeThe Case Study Template (CST) is designed for tackling wicked problems related to sustainability, mitigation of threats, and adaptation to changes. Wicked problems are social or cultural problems that are difficult or impossible to solve because of incomplete or contradictory knowledge, the number of people and opinions involved, the large economic burden associated with progress towards a solution, and the interconnected nature of these problems with other problems. Super wicked problems have four additional characteristics: (1) time is running out; (2) there is no central authority to address the problem; (3) those seeking to solve the problem are also causing it; (4) policies discount the future irrationally. Wicked and super-wicked problems can hardly be addressed in the framework of traditional discipline-based approaches, and a transdisciplinary approach is needed to tackle these problems. Tackling wicked problems requires a participatory transdisciplinary approach including imagination (Brown et al., 2005). For wicked problems is true what in general applies to any “Gestalt”: The whole is bigger than the sum of its parts. It will always be that way. Therefore, no matter how many disciplines and teaching modes are being integrated, there will always be “unknown” parts and emerging properties, which is a good thing. Trouble arises from an attempt to fit the whole into the sum of its parts. The CST therefore does not attempt to break down a wicked problem into parts or approach the problem with a combination of disciplines. The CST respects the integrity and wholeness of the problem and tackles it by perceiving its Gestalt through careful system mapping with a systems thinking mindset. BackgroundThe template is based on sustainablility science and utilizes the core concepts of adaptation science. Sustainability is an emergent property of a complex system. Two criteria need to guide human behaviour in order to maintain the health of the planetary life-support system and for sustainability to emerge: (1) humans need to consume flows in this life-support system while conserving the stocks (that is, live off the interest while conserving natural capital), and (2) increase society’s stocks (i.e., human resources, civil institutions) and limit the flow of material and energy as much as possible (Brown et al., 2005). Both are central aspects of a regenerative culture. A particular challenge to the quest for sustainability arises from the need to create transformation knowledge guiding the development of interventions to make progress towards sustainability as the emerging property of the system that represents human communities embedded in their environment. Science needs to support society and interact with societal agents in efforts to work out this transformation knowledge. Reaching societal goals such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations presents policy makers with a complexity individually and through many interconnections. At the same time, the unsustainability of the current global trajectories of society and the Earth's life-support system introduces an unparalleled urgency to develop the necessary transformation knowledge. A major gap exists in the absence of an epistemology for the creation of transformation knowledge. While there are increasingly efforts to carry out transformation research in “real-world laboratories,” there is no thorough epistemological approach available for this new type of research. Because of its transformational and transdisciplinary character, sustainability science differs from traditional modes of knowledge production. Sustainability science links system knowledge and goal knowledge through transformation knowledge (Fig. 1). System knowledge informs about what might happen, the possible threats and hazards, and the past, current and potential future system trajectories. Natural sciences have focused on system knowledge and created a broad basis of that knowledge. Goal knowledge describes what we want to happen and what desirable futures we want to realize. Transformation knowledge identifies the interventions required to change the system trajectory and to facilitate pathways to desirable futures. Over the last few decades, social sciences have developed both the epistemology and methodology for the creation of goal knowledge. The elaborate process that led to the agreement on the seventeen SDGs exemplifies the level of goal knowledge that can be reached today, and a transition to global governance by goal-setting appears feasible. What is currently lacking is a fully developed transformation science that links the system and goal knowledge through the disturbances and interventions needed to ensure a progress towards desirable futures. Transformation science as part of sustainability science focuses on the identification of disturbances and interventions that can divert the Earth's life-support system from its current trajectory out of the “safe operating space for humanity” onto a trajectory towards desirable futures closer to the agreed-upon goals expressed in the SDGs. However, the epistemological basis for the creation of transformation knowledge has been neglected to a large extent. A major unsolved problem in the epistemology of sustainability science is therefore the understanding of how transformation knowledge can be generated, tested, and validated. This raises important epistemological questions: How is knowledge for transformation produced? What is the role of experimental interventions in producing transformation knowledge? What theories can support knowledge production for transformational sustainability? Developing the interventions to change the system trajectory in a desirable way is an iterative process (Fig. 2). Any intervention through policies, organizational changes, and technologies needs to be validated as far as possible prior to implementation, which poses epistemic challenges due to the fact that a priori validation is impossible: only during implementation can the impacts be monitored and there is no chance to go back in time and try another intervention. Model simulations can be used to explore possible futures under different scenarios for drivers, an approach used, e.g., for the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment or the assessment of future climate change. The iterative nature of implementing transformation (Fig. 2) requires detailed monitoring of the complex system trajectory after interventions in order to ensure that the resulting trajectory brings the system closer to the desired future and accepted goals and to detect in a timely manner the need for further interventions. The CST has a living systems thinking perspective of the world. The very common event-oriented perspective focuses on symptoms and aims to reduce the direct causes for these symptoms. By doing so, the problem-solving remains at a superficial level that links apparent causes to symptoms without understanding the fundamental casual loops that can only be captured in a systems thinking perspective. The CST guides the investigations from the common superficial level into the fundamental level where root causes can be discovered and addressed. The CST can be used for case studies carried out by individuals or groups. A case study can be combined with a virtual (simulated) or actual participatory modeling effort. In some cases, participatory modeling utilizing role-playing can substitute for one that engages the societal agents of the wicked problem considered. The Case Study TemplateObjective of the Case StudyThe goal of a case study is to research a wicked problem and to develop options that would address the problem in the context of mitigation and adaptation science (Figure 3). The CST ensures that the five main areas of adaptation science as defined in Moss et al. (2013) (i.e., the hazards, the fragilities, foresight, decision making, and options) are reflected in the structure of the case study report, and that the case study takes a systems thinking approach.
Case Study Outcomes and ReadershipIn most cases, the cases study outcome consists of a detailed case study report and a presentation of the main aspects of the cases study. In more advance case studies, it is also helpful to prepare one-page summaries as well as a video giving an overview of the case study. In all case studies, the case study report should be written for an non-expert audience in support of decision making by a specific stakeholder group engaged in tackling a real-world wicked problem. This implies that the case study paper is written in a way that a non-expert can understand the text. Case Study ReportThe case study report has nine sections reflecting the seven boxes in Figure 3 and in addition providing a summary of the conclusions and specific recommendations. After a brief introduction giving a general description of the issue considered and why this issue has to be considered as a wicked or superwicked problem, the next section provides an analysis of the societal context and the decision space, including a mapping of stakeholders and a summary of relevant regulations, rules and norms. In most cases, this section discusses role playing exercises to highlight the interests of the most relevant stakeholder groups or efforts in participatory modeling. This section also includes a shared goal statement describing the future the stakeholders would like to create. The next section provides a detailed description of the wicked problem posed by the goal statement resulting from the analysis of the decision space and the role playing. This section includes a conceptual model representing this problem, which is designed to deliver answers to the core questions. This conceptual model identifies the relevant flows and the stocks, and it includes the relevant decision space appropriately. A figure will represent the conceptual model as a causal loop diagram that can be translated into a stock and flow model. The subsequently four sections consider the system model developed in the previous section to understand the system fragilities and the hazards the system may be explosed to, exploring the spectrum of possible futures, and develop interventions to direct the system towards a desirable future consistent with the goal statemnt. The last two sections summarize the discussion and main conclusions and make specific recommendations on how to address the issue and make progress towards a desirable future. The sections present the following information, with appropriate attention to detail throughout and the appropriate bibliography. In detail, the report section have the following contents:
Format: The case study report has to be developed using the Case Study Tool. This tool provides separate boxes for each section and allows to give each section a meaningful headline. At the end, the bibliography is included in the box with the heading "References". For the format of references, see below the section on References. Figures and Tables: Figures and tables are uploaded using the respective functions provided by the tool. Figures and table are numbered and must be referenced in the test. Figures must have a caption including the source of the figure. Tables also have a caption. If the table comes from a source, the source needs to be cited in the caption. Make sure that each caption explains the figure or table sufficiently but does not add significant text. Units: All units must be System International units (e.g., km instead of miles; mm, cm, m instead inches and feet; degrees Celsius instead of Fahrenheid; g and kg, instead of pounds). References: Citations and Reference should follow the documentation style defined by the Council of Scientific Editors, known as the CSE style. Citations and references should use the author-year style. ReferencesBrown, V. A., Grootjans, J., Ritchie, J., Townsend, M., Verrinder, G.(eds.), 2005. Sustainability and Health: Supporting Global Ecological Integrity in Public Health. Earthscan, UK. Moss, R. H., Meehl, G. A., Lemos, M. C., Smith, J. B., Arnold, J. R., Behar, D., Brasseur, G. P., Broomell, S. B., Busalacchi, A. J., Dessai, S., Ebi, K. L., Edmonds, J. A., Furlow, J., Goddard, L., Hartmann, H. C., Hurrell, J. W., Katzenberger, J. W., Liverman, D. M., Mote, P. W., Moser, S. C., Kumar, A., Pulwarty, R. S., Seyller, E. A., Turner II, B. L., Washington, W. M., Wilbanks, T. J., 2013. Climate Change - Hell, High Water: Practice-Relevant Adaptation Science. Science, 342, 696-698, DOI: 10.1126/science.1239569. Plag, H.-P., Jules-Plag, S., 2018. A Goal-Based Approach to the Identification of Essential Transformation Variables in Support of the Implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. International Journal of Digital Earth, DOI: 10.1080/17538947.2018.1561761 (html). |