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Leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition: the case of Cape Town, South Africa

Despite the success of the Paris Agreement on achieving a global compact between nations to act on climate change, cities have emerged as interesting locations for studying climate leadership due to the failure at the national scale to translate adequate climate actions to meet the goals set. Cities...

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Main Author: Hess, Gonzalo
Other Authors: Taylor, Anna
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hess, Gonzalo
author2 Taylor, Anna
author_browse Hess, Gonzalo
Taylor, Anna
author_facet Taylor, Anna
Hess, Gonzalo
author_sort Hess, Gonzalo
collection Thesis
description Despite the success of the Paris Agreement on achieving a global compact between nations to act on climate change, cities have emerged as interesting locations for studying climate leadership due to the failure at the national scale to translate adequate climate actions to meet the goals set. Cities have served as important agents in governance interventions, experiments, and networks, leading the way in resilient, low-carbon, and sustainable urban development, and driving innovative climate governance that spurs climate action. Understanding how to effectively lead the urban climate transition poses a significant challenge due to the involvement of diverse public and private actors who need to engage in collaborative climate action. Additionally, there is a lack of practical knowledge regarding how city actors implement climate leadership, highlighting a research gap in this area. This study examines the leadership strategies and mechanisms present in Cape Town, a city in South Africa with a strong track-record in climate action planning, focusing on co-creational leadership. It contributes to knowledge of urban public leadership by analysing the strategies employed by governing actors to facilitate the transition toward climate-resilient and low-carbon development in Cape Town, South Africa. This qualitative study employed an abductive logic and a single case study approach focused on the City of Cape Town. Semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders were used to explore their challenges, dilemmas, and coping strategies in promoting the urban climate transition. Thematic analysis using NVivo software was employed for data analysis to identify co-creational leadership strategies through iterative coding. Findings indicate that actors involved in pursuing Cape Town's climate goals, whether working in local government entities, private businesses, or international networks, must address specific challenges related to political will, legislation, budgeting, and communication matters to effectively implement the climate action plan and facilitate a successful transition. The dissertation concludes that Cape Town's urban climate transition context reveals collaborative leadership strategies, diverse actor involvement, and institutional constraints. Context-specific leadership and adaptability are pivotal for sustainable urban development. Cape Town's experiences offer crucial lessons for global cities facing climate challenges, emphasizing the significance of tailored approaches. These insights serve as a guide for cities worldwide in driving transformative change towards sustainability within their unique contexts
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:52.713Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41999 Leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition: the case of Cape Town, South Africa Hess, Gonzalo Taylor, Anna Urban Climate Governance Co-creational leadership Urban Climate Transition Climate Innovations Thematic Analysis Despite the success of the Paris Agreement on achieving a global compact between nations to act on climate change, cities have emerged as interesting locations for studying climate leadership due to the failure at the national scale to translate adequate climate actions to meet the goals set. Cities have served as important agents in governance interventions, experiments, and networks, leading the way in resilient, low-carbon, and sustainable urban development, and driving innovative climate governance that spurs climate action. Understanding how to effectively lead the urban climate transition poses a significant challenge due to the involvement of diverse public and private actors who need to engage in collaborative climate action. Additionally, there is a lack of practical knowledge regarding how city actors implement climate leadership, highlighting a research gap in this area. This study examines the leadership strategies and mechanisms present in Cape Town, a city in South Africa with a strong track-record in climate action planning, focusing on co-creational leadership. It contributes to knowledge of urban public leadership by analysing the strategies employed by governing actors to facilitate the transition toward climate-resilient and low-carbon development in Cape Town, South Africa. This qualitative study employed an abductive logic and a single case study approach focused on the City of Cape Town. Semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders were used to explore their challenges, dilemmas, and coping strategies in promoting the urban climate transition. Thematic analysis using NVivo software was employed for data analysis to identify co-creational leadership strategies through iterative coding. Findings indicate that actors involved in pursuing Cape Town's climate goals, whether working in local government entities, private businesses, or international networks, must address specific challenges related to political will, legislation, budgeting, and communication matters to effectively implement the climate action plan and facilitate a successful transition. The dissertation concludes that Cape Town's urban climate transition context reveals collaborative leadership strategies, diverse actor involvement, and institutional constraints. Context-specific leadership and adaptability are pivotal for sustainable urban development. Cape Town's experiences offer crucial lessons for global cities facing climate challenges, emphasizing the significance of tailored approaches. These insights serve as a guide for cities worldwide in driving transformative change towards sustainability within their unique contexts 2025-10-10T08:00:23Z 2025-10-10T08:00:23Z 2025 2025-10-10T07:36:35Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41999 en eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science Universiy of Cape Town
spellingShingle Urban Climate Governance
Co-creational leadership
Urban Climate Transition
Climate Innovations
Thematic Analysis
Hess, Gonzalo
Leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition: the case of Cape Town, South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition: the case of Cape Town, South Africa
title_full Leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition: the case of Cape Town, South Africa
title_fullStr Leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition: the case of Cape Town, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition: the case of Cape Town, South Africa
title_short Leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition: the case of Cape Town, South Africa
title_sort leadership strategies employed in the public sector for promoting urban climate transition the case of cape town south africa
topic Urban Climate Governance
Co-creational leadership
Urban Climate Transition
Climate Innovations
Thematic Analysis
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41999
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