Emerging Security Issues in the U.S. Coastal Zone Under a New Climate Regime - Workshop Delphi method discussion notes
The body of literature on environmental security has been recently invigorated by a growing interest in climate change and its ability to exacerbate existing security issues. The heightened research and policy attention resulted in new studies on climate security and other socioecological problems such as migration, environmental degradation, and political instability. However, very few studies explore security issues solely in the coastal zone, which is becoming an epicenter of compounding impacts from sea level rise, more frequent and severe storm surges, changes in precipitation patterns, and extreme heat events. This exploratory research aims to identify priority concerns and system interdependencies that may undermine human, environmental, and national security in this unique setting. The project elicited expert opinions during a workshop using a pre-event semi-structured survey and the Delphi method. The workshop participants (n=18) were recruited based on their expertise in coastal resilience and related fields. This dataset contains anonymized and synthesized notes from the two rounds of Delphi method discussions. The results show the participants' consensus about the U.S. coastal security geographic hotspots, coastal stressors most likely leading to security problems, human system aspects with the greatest insecurity risk, security type most affected, specific most pressing coastal security issues, and related uncertainties.