Podcast: Public Participation and Climate Adaptation in China

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Podcast: Public Participation and Climate Adaptation in China

Text reads "Public Participation and Climate Adaptation in China" against a picture of a flooded city

In episode 246 of America Adapts, host Doug Parsons hosts Dr. Shiran Victoria Shen, assistant professor at Washington University in St. Louis, for a closer look at how climate adaptation actually emerges in China. Drawing on her research after the devastating 2021 Henan flood, Shen shows how public demand for adaptation surged—not through climate change language, but through calls for safety, infrastructure, and risk reduction, often using formal government channels. The conversation highlights adaptation as a lived governance issue rather than an ideological one, and surfaces practical lessons about public participation, the limits of top-down approaches, and what governments everywhere tend to respond to when climate risk becomes impossible to ignore.  

Transcript of interview available at America Adapts.

Listen to the episode now.

 

Key Themes Covered in This Episode:

  • how public demand for climate adaptation emerges after extreme disasters
  • why people often ask for adaptation without using “climate change” language
  • the 2021 Henan flood as a national turning point for adaptation awareness in China
  • public participation and formal governance channels, including the Local Leaders’ Message Board
  • differences between adaptation and mitigation from a governance perspective
  • the limits of top-down adaptation and where citizen influence realistically ends
  • what adaptation in China reveals about public engagement globally
  • lessons for policymakers, planners, and communicators working outside the U.S.

 

Links & Resources from This Episode