Bazely, DawnKlenk, Nicole LisaPerkins, Patricia E. (Ellie)Duailibi, Miriam2014-08-122014-08-122014-05-12http://hdl.handle.net/10315/27721Poster presented at the Adaptation Futures Conference, the Third International Climate Change Adaptation Conference, Fortaleza CearĂ¡, Brazil, May 12-16,2014. http://adaptationfutures2014.ccst.inpe.brPoster presented at the Adaptation Futures Conference, the Third International Climate Change Adaptation Conference, Fortaleza CearĂ¡, Brazil, May 12-16,2014. http://adaptationfutures2014.ccst.inpe.br In April 2009, we held an international conference at York University, Toronto, Canada. Activists and academics who work with NGOs from the Global South and North came together to discuss adaptation to climate change. Most significantly, the Canadian perspective was entirely presented by First Nations and Inuit, which was and is highly unusual at conferences of this kind that are held in the south of Canada. This conference triggered and reinforced a cascade of diverse activities and research that has followed many intertwining pathways that diverged, crossed and reconnected over time. Several key factors have emerged from both the field experiences shared at the conference, and the related research, indicating that the adaptive capacity of disenfranchised peoples in Brazil, India, South Africa, Canada and beyond, is enhanced by diverse kinds of shared knowledge.enAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 CanadaKnowledgeClimate ChangeNutrientStrengthening Resilience by thinking of Knowledge as a Nutrient that connects the personal to global thinkingPosterClimate ChangeClimate AdaptationClimate AdaptationResilienceKnowledge NetworksKnowledge Ecosystem