ABSTRACT

Supporters of environmental well-being and climate resilience are awakening and mobilizing – cities, states, business, academia, community-based organizations, and the military. They understand the imminent and long-term risks of climate deterioration and they are creating new structures beyond the top-down government policy efforts of the past.

This highly practical book provides a clear insight into these collaborative solutions by real organizations in real time. It demonstrates how people from disparate fields and stakeholders cooperate to address climate issues at ground level and reveals how this can be undertaken effectively. Through case studies of key organizations such as the NYC Sustainability Office, Detroiters Working for Environmental Justice, IBM, and West Point Military Academy, readers will understand each party’s role in a cooperative enterprise and the means by which they support climate resiliency, their institutional goals, and their communities.

Of particular value, the book illustrates the co-benefits of multi-party resilience planning: faster approval times; reduced litigation; ability to monetize benefits such as positive health outcomes; the economic benefits of cooperation (for example, capacity building through financing climate planning and resilience across public, private, and other sources of funding); and developing a shared perspective. The book will be of great interest to business managers, policymakers, and community leaders involved in combating climate change, and researchers and students of business, public affairs, policy, environment, climate, and urban studies.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|14 pages

Communities

Teaming up with companies, cities, states, academia (The RAFT)

chapter Chapter 3|11 pages

Climate change and national security

Opportunities for learning and cooperation

chapter Chapter 4|11 pages

Equity

Climate justice in Detroit

chapter Chapter 5|16 pages

Business

Building climate-resilient supply chains (IBM supply chain)

chapter Chapter 6|14 pages

Regional deals, international players

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion