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Co-designing in Tandem: case study journeys to inspire and guide climate services

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Journal article

Co-designing in Tandem: case study journeys to inspire and guide climate services

This study tests, empirically validates and refines the Tandem framework for co-designing climate services to enhance its applicability and effectiveness.

Sukaina Bharwani, Åsa Gerger Swartling, Karin André, Tania Santos, Albert Salamanca, Natalia Biskupska, Takeshi Takama, Linn Järnberg, Angela Liu / Published on 6 August 2024

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Citation

Bharwani, S., Gerger Swartling, Å., André, K., Santos Santos, T. F., Salamanca, A., Biskupska, N., Takama, T., Järnberg, L. & Liu, A. (2024). Co-designing in Tandem: Case study journeys to inspire and guide climate services. Climate Services, 35, 100503. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cliser.2024.100503.

Intended as an inspirational guide for “good practice”, Tandem is practical and non-prescriptive and is designed to be tailored to context. The authors apply Tandem in three different geographic and socioeconomic settings: a rural community in Indonesia, where smallholder farmers are confronting climate impacts on agriculture; two cities in Sweden, where planners are addressing climate-related flooding and heat stress and communities and institutions in a Colombian river basin, where climate change is leading to water scarcity, raising questions about equitable use.

The authors find that Tandem was effective in these settings in moving from “useful” to “usable” information by building trust, increasing institutional embedding through strengthened relationships and networks, improving climate information uptake and use, increasing capacity, confidence and a shared understanding of climate information by users, and the decision context by providers and serving as a non-prescriptive guide for users, intermediaries and providers to co-design and structure an effective process for collaborative learning and action.

They use insights from these case studies to enhance the original framework, enabling it to (1) scope and review climate and non-climate vulnerability and risks; (2) incorporate gender, social equity and power considerations; (3) acknowledge the value of local and traditional ecological knowledge; (4) co-explore horizontal and vertical governance at appropriate decision-making scales; and (5) provide flexible starting points, with early identification of impact indicators.

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SEI authors

Sukaina Bharwani

Senior Research Fellow and weADAPT Director

SEI Oxford

Åsa Gerger Swartling
Åsa Gerger Swartling

Head of Knowledge Management, Senior Research Fellow

Global Operations

SEI Headquarters

Karin André
Karin André

Team Leader: Cities, Communities and Consumption; Senior Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

Tania Santos

Research Fellow

SEI Latin America

Albert Salamanca
Albert Salamanca

Senior Research Fellow

SEI Asia

Natalia Biskupska

Manager, Programme Operations

SEI Asia

Profile picture of Takeshi Takama
Takeshi Takama

SEI Affiliated Researcher

SEI Asia

Linn Järnberg
Linn Järnberg

Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

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