https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/182107/

Youth co-authorship as public engagement with geoengineering

Lynda Dunlop, Elizabeth Rushton, Lucy Atkinson, Eef Cornelissen, Jelle de
Schrijver, Tetiana Stadnyk, Joshua Stubbs, Chrissy Su, Maria Gertrudis
Wilhelmina Turkenburg, Veneu Fernanda, Celena Blake, Saul Calvert,
Clémentine Dècle, Kirndeep Dhassi, Rosalind Edwards, Greta Malaj, Jovana
Mirjanić, William Saunders, Yara Sinkovec, Suzan Vellekoop, Xinyue Yuan

Abstract

Large-scale intervention in the Earth’s climate system (‘geoengineering’ or
‘climate engineering’) is increasingly present in discussions about
possible responses to climate change. Research has tended to focus on the
acceptability of geoengineering proposals to adults, with youth
perspectives under-represented despite the intergenerational consequences
of policy in this field. We report on a novel participatory approach to
research and practice, resulting in the co-creation of a youth guide and
policy brief by participants (aged 17-26) and facilitators. Findings fall
into two categories: those pertaining to youth priorities for
geoengineering and those in relation to authorial responsibility as an
approach to engagement and advancing youth voices. We argue that
co-creative and participatory approaches avoid polarisation and build
reciprocity into the research process, promoting rational discourse about
geoengineering and climate change and its intersection with ethics,
politics and society. The model is potentially valuable for engaging youth
at the early stages of technoscientific innovations. Tentative conclusions
from youth participants are that mitigation efforts must be prioritised,
i.e. action is needed now to mitigate and adapt to climate change, and
there is a need for proactive international cooperation on the governance
of geoengineering and for investment in research to understand potential
environmental and social consequences of geoengineering for people at
different temporal and spatial scales. Greater public dialogue on
geoengineering and its governance is needed, particularly involving young
people. The youth guide and policy brief co-authored by participants and
facilitators, and the dialogic methods used in their production, can
contribute to this dialogue.

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