Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks’ (SAON) Roadmap for Arctic Observing and Data Systems (ROADS)

Arctic observing and data systems have been widely recognized as critical infrastructures to support decision making and understanding across sectors in the Arctic and globally. Yet due to broad and persistent issues related to coordination, deployment infrastructure and technology gaps, the Arctic...

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Main Authors: Starkweather, Sandy, Larsen, Jan R., Kruemmel, Eva, Eicken, Hajo, Arthurs, David, Bradley, Alice C., Carlo, Nikoosh, Christensen, Tom, Daniel, Raychelle, Danielsen, Finn, Kalhok, Sarah, Karcher, Michael, Johansson, Margareta, Jóhannsson, Halldór, Kodama, Yuji, Lund, Sten, Murray, Maribeth S., Petäjä, Tuukka, Pulsifer, Peter L., Sandven, Stein, Sankar, Ravi D., Strahlendorff, Mikko, Wilkinson, Jeremy
Other Authors: Ilmatieteen laitos, Finnish Meteorological Institute
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Artic Institute of North America 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/353465
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spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/353465 2023-08-20T04:02:43+02:00 Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks’ (SAON) Roadmap for Arctic Observing and Data Systems (ROADS) Starkweather, Sandy Larsen, Jan R. Kruemmel, Eva Eicken, Hajo Arthurs, David Bradley, Alice C. Carlo, Nikoosh Christensen, Tom Daniel, Raychelle Danielsen, Finn Kalhok, Sarah Karcher, Michael Johansson, Margareta Jóhannsson, Halldór Kodama, Yuji Lund, Sten Murray, Maribeth S. Petäjä, Tuukka Pulsifer, Peter L. Sandven, Stein Sankar, Ravi D. Strahlendorff, Mikko Wilkinson, Jeremy Ilmatieteen laitos Finnish Meteorological Institute 2023-01-23T13:13:12Z 56-68 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/353465 eng eng Artic Institute of North America 10.14430/arctic74330 Arctic 0004-0843 1923-1245 5 74 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/353465 URN:NBN:fi-fe202301235260 arctic region data systems partnership climate changes roads indigenous peoples infrastructures strategies success road building arktinen alue tietojärjestelmät kumppanuus ilmastonmuutokset tiet alkuperäiskansat infrastruktuurit strategiat menestyminen tierakennus A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä A1 Journal article (refereed), original research 2023 ftunivhelsihelda 2023-07-28T06:30:05Z Arctic observing and data systems have been widely recognized as critical infrastructures to support decision making and understanding across sectors in the Arctic and globally. Yet due to broad and persistent issues related to coordination, deployment infrastructure and technology gaps, the Arctic remains among the most poorly observed regions on the planet from the standpoint of conventional observing systems. Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks (SAON) was initiated in 2011 to address the persistent shortcomings in the coordination of Arctic observations that are maintained by its many national and organizational partners. SAON set forth a bold vision in its 2018–28 strategic plan to develop a roadmap for Arctic observing and data systems (ROADS) to specifically address a key gap in coordination efforts—the current lack of a systematic planning mechanism to develop and link observing and data system requirements and implementation strategies in the Arctic region. This coordination gap has hampered partnership development and investments toward improved observing and data systems. ROADS seeks to address this shortcoming through generating a systems-level view of observing requirements and implementation strategies across SAON’s many partners through its roadmap. A critical success factor for ROADS is equitable participation of Arctic Indigenous Peoples in the design and development process, starting at the process design stage to build needed equity. ROADS is both a comprehensive concept, building from a societal benefit assessment approach, and one that can proceed step-wise so that the most imperative Arctic observations—here described as shared Arctic variables (SAVs)—can be rapidly improved. SAVs will be identified through rigorous assessment at the beginning of the ROADS process, with an emphasis in that assessment on increasing shared benefit of proposed system improvements across a range of partnerships from local to global scales. The success of the ROADS process will ultimately be measured by the ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Arktinen alue Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks Helsingfors Universitet: HELDA – Helsingin yliopiston digitaalinen arkisto Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Helsingfors Universitet: HELDA – Helsingin yliopiston digitaalinen arkisto
op_collection_id ftunivhelsihelda
language English
topic arctic region
data systems
partnership
climate changes
roads
indigenous peoples
infrastructures
strategies
success
road building
arktinen alue
tietojärjestelmät
kumppanuus
ilmastonmuutokset
tiet
alkuperäiskansat
infrastruktuurit
strategiat
menestyminen
tierakennus
spellingShingle arctic region
data systems
partnership
climate changes
roads
indigenous peoples
infrastructures
strategies
success
road building
arktinen alue
tietojärjestelmät
kumppanuus
ilmastonmuutokset
tiet
alkuperäiskansat
infrastruktuurit
strategiat
menestyminen
tierakennus
Starkweather, Sandy
Larsen, Jan R.
Kruemmel, Eva
Eicken, Hajo
Arthurs, David
Bradley, Alice C.
Carlo, Nikoosh
Christensen, Tom
Daniel, Raychelle
Danielsen, Finn
Kalhok, Sarah
Karcher, Michael
Johansson, Margareta
Jóhannsson, Halldór
Kodama, Yuji
Lund, Sten
Murray, Maribeth S.
Petäjä, Tuukka
Pulsifer, Peter L.
Sandven, Stein
Sankar, Ravi D.
Strahlendorff, Mikko
Wilkinson, Jeremy
Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks’ (SAON) Roadmap for Arctic Observing and Data Systems (ROADS)
topic_facet arctic region
data systems
partnership
climate changes
roads
indigenous peoples
infrastructures
strategies
success
road building
arktinen alue
tietojärjestelmät
kumppanuus
ilmastonmuutokset
tiet
alkuperäiskansat
infrastruktuurit
strategiat
menestyminen
tierakennus
description Arctic observing and data systems have been widely recognized as critical infrastructures to support decision making and understanding across sectors in the Arctic and globally. Yet due to broad and persistent issues related to coordination, deployment infrastructure and technology gaps, the Arctic remains among the most poorly observed regions on the planet from the standpoint of conventional observing systems. Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks (SAON) was initiated in 2011 to address the persistent shortcomings in the coordination of Arctic observations that are maintained by its many national and organizational partners. SAON set forth a bold vision in its 2018–28 strategic plan to develop a roadmap for Arctic observing and data systems (ROADS) to specifically address a key gap in coordination efforts—the current lack of a systematic planning mechanism to develop and link observing and data system requirements and implementation strategies in the Arctic region. This coordination gap has hampered partnership development and investments toward improved observing and data systems. ROADS seeks to address this shortcoming through generating a systems-level view of observing requirements and implementation strategies across SAON’s many partners through its roadmap. A critical success factor for ROADS is equitable participation of Arctic Indigenous Peoples in the design and development process, starting at the process design stage to build needed equity. ROADS is both a comprehensive concept, building from a societal benefit assessment approach, and one that can proceed step-wise so that the most imperative Arctic observations—here described as shared Arctic variables (SAVs)—can be rapidly improved. SAVs will be identified through rigorous assessment at the beginning of the ROADS process, with an emphasis in that assessment on increasing shared benefit of proposed system improvements across a range of partnerships from local to global scales. The success of the ROADS process will ultimately be measured by the ...
author2 Ilmatieteen laitos
Finnish Meteorological Institute
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Starkweather, Sandy
Larsen, Jan R.
Kruemmel, Eva
Eicken, Hajo
Arthurs, David
Bradley, Alice C.
Carlo, Nikoosh
Christensen, Tom
Daniel, Raychelle
Danielsen, Finn
Kalhok, Sarah
Karcher, Michael
Johansson, Margareta
Jóhannsson, Halldór
Kodama, Yuji
Lund, Sten
Murray, Maribeth S.
Petäjä, Tuukka
Pulsifer, Peter L.
Sandven, Stein
Sankar, Ravi D.
Strahlendorff, Mikko
Wilkinson, Jeremy
author_facet Starkweather, Sandy
Larsen, Jan R.
Kruemmel, Eva
Eicken, Hajo
Arthurs, David
Bradley, Alice C.
Carlo, Nikoosh
Christensen, Tom
Daniel, Raychelle
Danielsen, Finn
Kalhok, Sarah
Karcher, Michael
Johansson, Margareta
Jóhannsson, Halldór
Kodama, Yuji
Lund, Sten
Murray, Maribeth S.
Petäjä, Tuukka
Pulsifer, Peter L.
Sandven, Stein
Sankar, Ravi D.
Strahlendorff, Mikko
Wilkinson, Jeremy
author_sort Starkweather, Sandy
title Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks’ (SAON) Roadmap for Arctic Observing and Data Systems (ROADS)
title_short Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks’ (SAON) Roadmap for Arctic Observing and Data Systems (ROADS)
title_full Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks’ (SAON) Roadmap for Arctic Observing and Data Systems (ROADS)
title_fullStr Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks’ (SAON) Roadmap for Arctic Observing and Data Systems (ROADS)
title_full_unstemmed Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks’ (SAON) Roadmap for Arctic Observing and Data Systems (ROADS)
title_sort sustaining arctic observing networks’ (saon) roadmap for arctic observing and data systems (roads)
publisher Artic Institute of North America
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/353465
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic
Arktinen alue
Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Arktinen alue
Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks
op_relation 10.14430/arctic74330
Arctic
0004-0843
1923-1245
5
74
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/353465
URN:NBN:fi-fe202301235260
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