Mapping ambient vulnerabilities: Air-energy-climate interrelations in the urban environment and implications for cross-sectoral governance

Lead Research Organisation: University of Liverpool
Department Name: Geography and Planning

Abstract

From its temperature and humidity, to its toxicty, our immediate ambient environment is essential to health, comfort, and wellbeing, determining the fulfilment of a person's most fundamental needs. The ambient environment is therefore also integral to several of the most pressing urban challenges and social justice questions facing cities globally, including poor air quality (both indoor and outdoor), energy poverty, and urban or climate-related heat, as reflected in the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals. Yet, whilst in the physical sciences sophisticated models are used to understand and predict the ambient environment for global systems (for example, the International Panel on Climate Change), there is no overarching framework which considers the differential implications for specific populations or places in cities. Instead complex and interconnected vulnerabilities are often dealt with in separate sectors and disciplines, limiting the ability of policymakers and practitioners to deal with the issues effectively.

In response, this fellowship develop the new concept of ambient vulnerabilities, to provide timely evidence of how air, climate and energy vulnerabilities accumulate in cities, and the uneven impact that this has on different people and places. Cutting-edge Geographic Data Science approaches, that bring geography into conversation with data science (and vice versa), will be underpinned by extensive stakeholder collaboration. Ambient vulnerabilities will be defined, analysed, and mapped for the first time - whether in the home, neighbourhood, or during a journey through the city. Innovatively, analysis will focus on two scales: (i) analyses comparing ambient vulnerability in neighbourhoods across cities in England and (ii) detailed analyses of the urban laboratory of Liverpool City Region Combined Authority. In doing so, the fellowship will generate new understanding of poor-quality urban environments and what it means to live within them. It will bring together disparate fields to tackle pressing urban problems, helping to shape a cross-sectoral policy approach to tackling ambient urban challenges effectively. The fellowship's framing and findings are also highly applicable to other contexts experiencing similar global challenges.

To succeed, a multi-disciplinary team will be assembled. As project collaborator, the leading charity National Energy Action (Energy policy, health) will support and advise on policy-focused fellowship activities. Four partner organisations that will provide subject-specific expertise and novel datasets at the national and local scale: the Heseltine Institute for Public Policy, Practice and Place (Urban policy, climate change); Met Office (Climate, air quality); Liverpool City Council Housing Department (Local: Housing, health); and Merseyside Fire and Rescue Service (Local: Indoor air quality, vulnerable populations). Subsequently, the fellowship will open new avenues for tackling ambient vulnerabilities.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Partnership with GISRUK (Geographical Information Science Research UK) 
Organisation GISRUK
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution - Caitlin Robinson is a member of the national steering committee of GISRUK - Contributes to decisions about how the national committee carries out activities to further GIS research in the UK - Caitlin Robinson was co-chair of GISRK conference (April 2023) (see alternative entry in Research Fish)
Collaborator Contribution NA
Impact - Hosting of major national GIS conference at University of Liverpool in 2022, co-chaired by Caitlin Robinson. Conference engaged academics and industry from across a variety of disciplines (e.g. geography, civil engineer, computer science, data science, urban planning) and industries (GIS, data science).
Start Year 2021
 
Description Partnership with Liverpool City Council Housing 
Organisation Liverpool City Council
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution - Caitlin Robinson advised Liverpool City Council Private Rental Housing team when making their renewed bid for a Selective Licensing Scheme. Provided advice about evidence to underpin the renewal - in particular spatial datasets.
Collaborator Contribution - Discussions with Liverpool City Council Private Rental Housing team about project design
Impact Not applicable as project still in early stages
Start Year 2021
 
Description Partnership with National Energy Action 
Organisation National Energy Action
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution - Costed collaborator as part of UKRI FLF project - Facilitated introductions to other researchers of relevance to NEA networks - Established NEA policy researchers as visiting researchers at university institution - Contributed analysis to NEA-led evaluation of Warm Homes Fund, a £150m fund designed to support local authorities, registered social landlords and other organisations working in partnership with them, to address some of the issues affecting fuel poor households
Collaborator Contribution - Advice about how the research design can be tailored to have maximum benefit for policy and practice - Drafted Call for Evidence to be distributed to NEA networks
Impact Not applicable at early stages of project
Start Year 2021
 
Description Partnership with Quantitative Methods Research Group of the Royal Geographical Society 
Organisation Royal Geographical Society
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution - Caitlin Robinson is the Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Officer for the QMRG - Led the design and administration for scholarships for underrepresented groups to attend a national conference in the field (GISRUK) - Coordinated EDI-related activities of the group
Collaborator Contribution NA
Impact Not applicable
Start Year 2021