key: cord-0939481-gqv58f4v authors: Daniels, Tom; Chan, Jeffrey K.H.; Kankam, Stephen; Murphy, Michael; Day, Don; Fürst, Christine; Inkoom, Justice Nana; Koo, Hongmi title: Four shareworthy SEPR scenario ideas date: 2021-02-25 journal: Socio Ecol Pract Res DOI: 10.1007/s42532-020-00072-1 sha: cd3e51ef3064fc790094d99a85fbbec84cef0bef doc_id: 939481 cord_uid: gqv58f4v In this communication article, we share our scenario ideas at the request of the journal editor. These are (1) a scenario for building sustainable suburbs; (2) a counterfactual scenario for coping with the super wicked COVID problem; (3) envisioning alternative futures of cultural ecosystem services supplies in Southwestern Ghana; and (4) a path toward writing successful scenarios. The ideas will be fully developed in due course into scholarly articles for the journal. Between September 15 and October 15, 2020, the editor in chief of Socio-Ecological Practice Research (SEPR) Wei-Ning Xiang selected five prospectuses out of the twelve submitted for the special theme issue, Our alternative futures in the 2020s and beyond: Scenarios of socio-ecological practice in an uncertain world. The selection is both a recognition and an admiration. It recognizes the painstaking attentiveness the authors gave to the dual ambition outlined in the Call for prospectus for scenario composition (Xiang 2020, p.297): (1) to foresee alternative futures of socio-ecological practice in the 2020s and beyond; and (2) to envision, under each alternative future, the correspondingly coping strategies for socioecological practitioners and scholars. It admires the triple-I qualities the authors creatively built into these scenario ideas: informative, inspirational, and interesting. Considering the amount of time the article development and editorial process will take, the editor in chief publishes four of these ideas in this communication article so that, in a timely fashion, these gemstones of creative, forward thinking can reach out to the journal community of international scholars and practitioners. Publishing these ideas also serves two other purposes: to recognize their scholarly values and to register and thus protect authors' intellectual property rights of their scenario ideas before the full papers are developed. These scenario ideas are presented respectively and independently by their authors in the following four sections (Sects. 2-5). The authors are as such solely and only responsible for the content accuracy in their own sections. All the authors, however, approved the theme and layout of the article and green-light the publication of this communication article. The orders in which sections are arranged and authors listed are determined by the editor in chief, so is designation of the corresponding author of the article. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, some urban inhabitants in the USA are moving to suburbs to avoid densely settled places, to find lower cost housing now that much work is being done remotely, and to have better access to green space (see, for example, Bortz 2020; Capps et al. 2020; Lerner 2020; Matsuda 2020) . If this wave of migration continues, US cities are unlikely to add more population than suburbs in the decade of the 2020s and perhaps beyond. For planners, developers, elected officials, businesspeople, environmentalists, and concerned citizens, this presents a unique challenge and one-off opportunity to make the suburbs more environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable while accommodating the influx of new settlers. To facilitate their strategic thinking for implementing greater sustainability, I envision two alternative suburban futures. Under a business-as-usual scenario of the typical American suburban settlement pattern, sprawling low-density development and the separation of land uses would continue. With more people moving to suburbs or even exurbs, the USA would see greater reliance on cars, more upward pressure on greenhouse gas emissions, higher infrastructure and health costs, accelerated loss of open space, and general environmental degradation along with more social isolation. Under a sustainable suburb scenario, in sharp contrast to the business-as-usual scenario, American suburbs could become ecologically more resilient, economically more vibrant, and socially more equitable through creative planning, design, and redevelopment while embracing new inhabitants. Such a scenario would feature higher density development, a greater use of public transit, less driving, more walking, and more people living in mixed-use, multifamily developments. Envisioning an alternative future of sustainable suburbs is uplifting. But it also prompts a deep appreciation of the challenges people would face and the opportunities that exist. The obstacles include, but are not limited to, (1) the high cost of new infrastructure, especially transit; (2) the Not-In-My-Backyard (NIMBY) sentiment against development of what could be perceived as LULU (Locally Unwanted Land Uses) 2 ; and (3) densifying existing development. Opportunities reflect taking advantage of trends in more people working remotely, more on-line shopping, a greater desire for green space, and the nation's growing social diversity. I envision and juxtapose these two alternative suburban scenarios with the hope that together they provide a way to engage suburban communities across the USA about their futures and to analyze uncertainties within the planning and design process. In particular, I hope that the sustainable suburb scenario will help planners, developers, elected officials, businesspeople, environmentalists, and concerned citizens to determine whether a proposed development or infrastructure project adds to or detracts from progress toward greater environmental, social, and economic sustainability. with the super wicked COVID problem by Jeffrey Chan 3 In the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, large-scale blanket responses have become the status quo. Entire cities (and regions) have been locked down in many places. This has been described as a form of "overkill" even by their own proponents (Cadell 2020)-tantamount to detonating "a social nuclear weapon" (Christakis 2020, p. 10). Responses of this kind offer a temporary halt to disease transmission but at the expense of incurring a devastating fallout on, inter alia, businesses, jobs, education, and mental health. Indeed, the crisis the COVID-19 pandemic created is a super wicked problem (Xiang 2021 the COVID-19 pandemic drags on, the harder it becomes to address the many undesirable impacts of this problem. In sharp contrast to the prevalent blanket approach, herein I envision an adroit alternative, a counterfactual scenario, 5 of coping with the super wicked COVID problem. Adroitness in this context is the practical artfulness and tactical resourcefulness of achieving goals in the face of a calamityinduced wicked problem. "Four ounces (are used) to deflect a thousand pounds" (四 两拨千斤) is a Chinese idiom and an aphorism that underlies the philosophy of Tai-Chi. In a head-to-head fashion, a mass of four ounces would literally be overwhelmed by the force of a thousand pounds. But as the Tai-Chi master Cheng Man-ch'ing [郑曼青 (1902-1975) ] points out sagely, one can offset a buffalo of thousand pounds with a rope of four ounces-when tied to a nose ring, the rope allows one to lead and control the buffalo at will and with ease (Cheng 1985, p.93) . This is possible because, in the words of American environmental scientist Donella Meadows (1941 Meadows ( -2001 Meadows ( ) (2008 , the rope is strategically placed at a leverage point in this disproportionate situation: where a small change in one point can lead to a large shift in the behavior of the entire system. In composing an adroit scenario of coping with the super wicked COVID problem, I am guided by the following four possibility questions: 1. Are we able to find the leverage point(s) in the super wicked problem the pandemic triggered? 2. If so, then what is the metaphorical four-ounce rope that can be tied to the nose ring of this thousand-pound beast? 6 In other words, what is the adroitness exemplified? 3. Are we then able to tame-"to better control" (Chan 2016, p. 123 )-this monster for our well-being by adroitness throughout the 2020s and beyond? 4. What might the world look like had we achieved all the above possibilities? I will conduct a systematic exposition on adroitness and demonstrate its role in our effort to achieve the first three possibilities the alternative Tai-Chi response approach offers. Kankam, Hongmi Koo, Justice Nana Inkoom, and Christine Fürst 7 What could the future supplies of cultural ecosystem services (CES) in our region look like in the 2020s and beyond? What would each of the alternative futures mean to us? How could we prepare for them? Asked many concerned farmers, landowners, land-use planners, elected government officials, as well as academics in Southwestern Ghana (Fig. 1) . Their concerns are legitimate. Along with its offshore oil and gas development, the region has been experiencing rapid land-use and land-cover changes and enduring their impacts on CES supplies. In this agricultural and biodiverse region, CES include physical and mental health benefits, aesthetic enjoyment, recreation, and spiritual experiences. These services also evoke a strong sense of attachment among the local people to their land and their rich cultural heritage. As such, sustainable CES supplies are essential to the wellbeing of the people in the region. From 2019 to 2021, we are commissioned by the United States Forest Service (USFS) and Hen Mpoano (a Ghanaian Non-Governmental Organization, www.henmp oano.org) to investigate, inter alia, the above three CES questions as part of a collaborative initiative to conserve the Greater Amanzule Wetlands (GAW) in the region (see Fig. 1 ). To this end, we explored alternative futures of CES supplies under an array of land-use planning scenarios. The scenario themes range from business-as-usual, mangrove afforestation, to market-driven growth, and green network in which an "eco-corridor" connects upland and coastal forests through native tree planting. The scenario building process is participatory and collaborative, blending scientific knowledge with local, tacit knowledge (Koo et al. 2018, pp. 5-27) . We worked closely with a diverse group of local people-regional land-use planners, farmers, landowners, professionals of non-governmental organizations, elected government officials, and academics-throughout the entire process. As such, these participants, acting both as scenarists and as scenario users, became the co-owners of the products of this exercise-the scenarios and the impact assessment results (Adams et al. 2016, p. 16 ). The collective learning experience during the scenario building process provides many benefits to all the participants, including ourselves. It enables a productive exploration of the three CES questions the people in the region care about; it offers a unique opportunity to nurture the mind, challenge ideologies, share ideas, inspire creativity, and re-enforce ecological ethics (Xiang and Clarke 2003, pp. 889-890) . All of these, along with the tangible products of the scenario building process, will undoubtedly benefit the socioecological practice in the region and beyond. Conventional "solutions" do not solve contemporary problems. To be successful in informing or even influencing socio-ecological practice, future scenarios must be creative, bold, and comprehensible. To write such scenarios, profound changes are needed in the way they are conceived and communicated. A successful scenario must be creative-both informative and visionary. Creative thinking is the key to making novel, insightful knowledge useful-relevant, actionable, and efficacious; and to making it useful systemically-in a way that is integrative as opposed to disciplinary. A successful scenario must be bold. It must break from the status quo and overcome the conventions that have become obstacles to societal progress. Being innovative in this way requires the scenarists to accept certain visibility and exposure to criticism, which also creates opportunities for new collaboration and insight if concepts are evaluated from a broad range of disciplinary perspectives. A successful scenario must also be comprehensible enough (i.e., conveyed in accessible, compelling language) to communicate its message effectively with scenario users and engage their broad support. We herein outline a path-a scenario-to writing successful scenarios that embodies these virtues. Resolution to problems will depend as much on the path chosen to understand and resolve them as on the actions to be taken. Underlying this path is the idea of a co-writing process. The researchers and practitioners form a joint team of scenarists and engage in a collaborative process of formulating creative, bold, and comprehensible scenarios. In such a process, researchers are encouraged to speculate lucidly from their position of expertise, outside the box of academic conventions; they also are compelled to avoid the less accessible language of science in communicating ideas. Practitioners are likewise inspired to free themselves from the conventions of professional expectations and avoid the often bureaucratic language of practice. The path we envision is a shared process of formulating and communicating bold, innovative ideas. More specifically, it first (1) enables the creation of an effective collaboration among participants from a diverse array of disciplinary perspectives; then (2) guides an integrated approach to defining the problem areas and their systemically linked relationships; and finally, (3) facilitates the shared learning required for the development of an increasingly integrated understanding of the interrelated components of the system in which the problem lies and how it might be altered to bring about possible resolution(s). Admittedly, it is neither a trivial nor easy task to change the way researchers and practitioners approach the creation and communication of scenarios. On the path we propose toward virtuous scenarios, there are obstacles to be overcome. For example, creative thinking often runs counter to prevailing social norms in the research and practice communities; it may also pose a perceived threat to established credibility in research and to professional expectations in practice. We hope our proposed path or scenario, along with the actions we suggest, will facilitate the real-world socio-ecological researchers and practitioners to overcome these obstacles and bring about positive, sustainable change in the world. The four scenario ideas showcased above are tersely cogent, crystalizing creative yet substantive thoughts that emerged from their authors' experiences, observations, and reflections. The editor in chief, along with our rapidly growing SEPR community of international scholars and practitioners, looks forward in due course to reading articles in which these ideas are fully developed. Until then, let's celebrate these fresh ideas in the very spirit American author Napoleon Hill cherished in 1937 that every human achievement has its beginning in an idea (Hill 1937, p. xi). 9 Tom Daniels is the Crossways Professor of City and Regional Planning at the University of Pennsylvania, USA, where he directs the concentration in Land Use Planning and Environmental Planning. He is the author of The Environmental Planning Handbook (American Planning Association, 2014) and When City and Country Collide: Managing Growth in the Metropolitan Fringe (Island Press, 1999) . Jeffrey K.H. Chan is an assistant professor at Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD), Singapore. His research focuses on design ethics and cities. He is the author of two books, Urban Ethics in the Anthropocene (2019) and Sharing by Design (2020). Stephen Kankam is a PhD candidate at the Institute of Geosciences and Geography, Martin Luther Universität, Germany. He is the Deputy Director of Hen Mpoano (www.henmp oano.org), an NGO in Ghana, where his work involves supporting governments, private sectors, and the civil society in coastal and marine ecosystem governance through capacity building and research. 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The Real Deal Thinking in systems: a primer Dilemmas in a general theory of planning Working with wicked problems in socio-ecological systems: awareness, acceptance, and adaptation Ecopracticology: the study of socio-ecological practice Envisioning alternative futures of socio-ecological practice: navigating an uncertain world with a compass of scenarios Re-examination research via the COVID glasses: an intellectual movement emerging for the better The use of scenarios in land-use planning Counterfactual experiments are crucial but easy to misunderstand: with COVID-19, as with climate, we need to explore a variety of possible futures in order to set policy Michael Murphy is a professor emeritus of landscape architecture at Texas A&M University, USA. His research and practice activities have focused on collaborative process for the resolution of large-scale environmental planning, conservation, and urban design projects. He is the author of Landscape Architecture Theory: An Ecological Approach.Don Day (Formerly with IBM) is now a DITA and XML consultant with Learning by Wrote (http://www.learn ingby wrote .com/), based in Mason, Texas, USA. Don consults on content design and engineering and is a regular public speaker and thought leader.Christine Fürst is a professor of sustainable landscape development at the Martin Luther Universität, Germany. Her research focuses on integrative landscape modeling, ecosystem services assessment, land-use impact assessment, and participatory urban and regional spatial planning. She has extensive research experience on projects in Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin-America.Justice Nana Inkoom is a research program manager at Hen Mpoano, where his focus has been on the science and praxis of quantitative landscape pattern analysis, spatial planning, and landscape governance. His scientific research expertise includes GIS and remote sensing applications, spatial modelling and development and applications of landscape metrics.Hongmi Koo is a researcher at the Institute of Geosciences and Geography, Martin Luther Universität, Germany. She is specialized in land-use modeling, scenario development, and ecosystem service assessment and currently working on international research consortium projects between Germany and countries in Asia and Latin America.