Identifying mutually beneficial objectives for researchers and practitioners engaged in climate adaptation efforts can often be a challenge. Differences can occur in terms of motivations, objectives, scale, and decision-making authority.Drawing on the experience of researchers and practitioners involved in a climate adaptation project focused on cities in the Great Lakes region, this paper provides an overview of the relationship between the University of Michigan's Graham Sustainability Institute and the City of Ann Arbor, Michigan. Utilizing a thick description 4 Michigan Journal of Sustainability for reviewing participant experience, this paper offers analysis of the effectiveness of two approaches to translational research: the boundary chain model and integrated assessment model. The paper also discusses the application of these translational research approaches and an iterative engagement process for enhancing the city's climate resiliency while strengthening the university's research and outreach efforts.The deployment of these translational research models, coupled with numerous points of engagement between key university and city actors, has helped both entities emerge as national leaders in sustainability. Transferable lessons discussed include taking time to build trust among participants, the importance of proximity for being responsive, and utilizing organizational structures for supporting collaboration.
Across the Great Lakes region, climate variability and change pose major risks to public finances, urban economies, health, safety, and quality of life. The negative impacts of climate change will be unevenly and unequally distributed across the region and across communities; thus, solutions must take into account socioeconomic differences, variations in the vulnerability of different populations, and the distribution of available resources. To craft smart responses, cities require placebased information that accounts for both climate variability and climate change, as well as the geographic, social, environmental, and economic conditions contributing to vulnerabilities. Working with mid-sized cities across the region, the Great Lakes Adaptation Assessment for Cities (GLAA-C), an integrated assessment of the University of Michigan Graham Sustainability Institute (Graham), piloted an approach to address these climate risks and deliver locally relevant climate adaptation resources and strategies. Over the course of the three-year GLAA-C project, Graham staff worked closely with six cities with climatic, social, and economic diversity: Toledo and Dayton, Ohio; Kingston and Thunder Bay, Ontario; and Flint 30
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