About this Research Topic
However, public participation is not a panacea to cure all climate governance woes. Public participation does not yet play a major role in private or public climate policymaking, nor has its most appropriate role in climate policymaking been determined. Further, evidence-based best practices for conducting public participation activities have yet to be systematically synthesized. Therefore, this research topic aims to generate a repository of actionable knowledge for designing, conducting, and evaluating public participation related to climate change decision-making to move public participation from a murky ideal to an effective tool.
The scope of this research topic includes but is not limited to case studies, innovations, empirical reflections, and methodological advancements that capture how public participation in climate change decision-making is and can be designed, implemented, and evaluated in practice. We encourage all authors to be explicit about their work’s context and the transferability of their findings and reasoning across other contexts. We encourage any article type on or related to the following themes:
● Case studies that detail and analyze specific public participation activities related to climate change decision-making.
● Theoretical works or methodological studies that address issues of transferring public participation practices across contexts.
● Empirical studies or practical reflections on tailoring public participation activities to specific climate-related topics or audiences.
● Empirical studies or practical reflections on designing public participation for climate change-related topics.
● Empirical studies or practical reflections on effectively using the outputs of public participation on climate-related topics.
● Methodological advancements for evaluating the success, limitations, and values of public participation.
● Innovations for including public participation in governance systems for effective climate-related decision-making.
Keywords: Public engagement, climate change, climate-related decision-making, public engagement in governance systems
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.