Work was conducted via 5 work packages (WPs), of which WP1 was devoted to the management of the project and WP2 to maximise the two-way transfer of knowledge between the fellow and the host.
WP3 was devoted to data collection and analysis in both the principal case study (Piemonte Region, Italy) and in the shadow case studies. Initially, the project only included Austria as a shadow case study, but its scope was broadened to also include Portugal and the United Kingdom thanks to the collaboration established with another MSCA fellow based at Wageningen University. WP4 developed a framework for interrogating how considerations of distributive, corrective, and procedural justice inform the emerging policy and practice of planned relocation in Europe and was applied to the four case studies. WP4 further contributed to the literature on transformational adaptation by discussing challenges for adaptation research and practice to include considerations of values in radical adaptation measures (e.g. planned relocation). Finally, WP5 implemented a diverse set of activities to ensure project’s outcomes were effectively disseminated, exploited and communicated during the whole duration of the project.
Key results achieved by ITHACA include:
• 2 first authored papers to be submitted to high-impact open access journals: “Planning for just relocations in Europe in time of climate change: a comparative study” and “Taking values seriously for transformational climate change adaptation”.
• The development of a framework that identifies justice aspects pertinent to planning for and implementing relocation;
• A spatialised database on planned relocation interventions in Piemonte to feature in the Region’s open access Geoportal;
• The inclusion of a case study on planned relocation in Piemonte in the Climate-Adapt platform of the European Environmental Agency;
• A chapter on “Strategic relocation of communities, infrastructure and economic activities” in the Technical guide on sea level rise prepared under the UNFCCC Executive Committee of the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage;
• The organisation of a policy workshop on planned relocation in Torino (IT) bringing together around 200 participants, both in-person and on-line;
The results of ALTHEA were disseminated at three international conferences (2023 Adaptation Futures, Canada; 2024 Society for Risk Analysis -Europe, Greece; ECMN24 Environmental Changes and Migration: Bridging Disciplines for a New Research Agenda, Belgium). Furthermore, an ITHACA special session “Planning for the worst: European experiences of relocation in the context of flood risk” was organised at the 2023 Society for Risk Analysis -Europe Conference.
Communication activities included public in person events like a conference at the Science Museum in Trento, Italy (20/11/2023), where the researcher contextualised human mobility, including planned relocation, within climate negotiations, and a Facebook live event in the context of the “Bringing to light- Women Scientists for Climate” award, where the researcher presented the ITHACA project (10/02/2023).