A recent conference in Zamboanga linked the city's history as a hub of connections to the challenges of climate change. It highlighted the importance of collaboration between communities and academia for effective adaptation. It also showed how local knowledge can help address climate impacts.
Zamboanga City has long been recognized as a place of connections, not as a center drawing everything inward, but as a crossing point for people, goods, languages, and ideas. Situated at the edge of the Sulu Sea and Celebes Sea, it links Mindanao, the Sulu Archipelago, Borneo, and other regions. This layered history explains why Zamboanga resists simple narratives. For instance, Chavacano, a Spanish-based creole, formed through sustained contact between Spanish speakers, local populations, and migrants, especially around Fort Pilar.
Today, that openness faces pressure from climate change. The city sits on a coast shaped by monsoons, sea-level rise, and tectonic activity. Fishing communities track shifts in fish stocks, while coastal villages deal with erosion and flooding. Urban areas manage heat, water supply, and infrastructure stress.
Climate knowledge in Zamboanga has long been part of community practice: fishers read currents and winds, farmers adjust planting cycles, and elders recall past storms and dry years. The challenge is not choosing between community knowledge and scientific research, but creating space where they complement each other.
Recently, a conference was organized in Zamboanga hosted by Western Mindanao State University (WMSU), as part of the Program for Early Modern Southeast Asia (PEMSEA). It is supported by the Henry Luce Foundation and co-sponsored by institutions such as Zamboanga Peninsula Polytechnic State University, Zamboanga State College of Marine Science and Technology, Basilan State College, Sulu State College, Tawi-Tawi Regional Agriculture College, and Agusan del Sur State College of Agriculture and Technology. The Department of Science and Technology Region IX also provided support.
At the conference, Ka Aman Nuño of Barangay Taluksangay was recognized for his community-based work. Melanie Lear emphasized building relationships based on trust and time. As an archaeologist, Stephen B. Acabado, professor at the University of California-Los Angeles, stated that Zamboanga's history as a hub offers lessons in adaptation: flexibility and shared knowledge support continuity. Universities like WMSU can bridge local practices and national policies for livable climate futures.