Climate Change and the Industrial Revolution: Informing Policy through History, Memory, and Literature
Goodbody examines the literary work Pandaemonium and its role in a research project to promote debate on climate change.
Goodbody examines the literary work Pandaemonium and its role in a research project to promote debate on climate change.
Farjon et al. explore various narratives of nature and nature policies in the Netherlands.
Parrinello examines historical responses to Italian earthquakes.
Lakhani and de Smalen offer key messages for policymakers.
Taylor and Chappells examine changing material cultures of energy in Britain and Canada.
Jennifer Carlson examines the material and social dimensions of contemporary energy transitions in the village of Dobbe in the East Frisian Peninsula.
Jennifer Baka looks at energy cultivation and energy security in India through an analysis of two energy development programs.
In this article, Sarah Strauss and Carrick Eggleston track the transition to renewable energy in the village of Auroville in South India.
Oomen argues that science has an important role in climate communication as a common ground and honest broker.
Brill explores the relationship between “Science” and “the sciences”, and the political potential of the two, in the context of research cooperations involving indigenous groups.