“How Computer and Board Games Mediate Climate Change”
Lunchtime Colloquium at the Rachel Carson Center with Péter Makai.
Lunchtime Colloquium at the Rachel Carson Center with Péter Makai.
Michael Toman discusses values, costs, and benefits in the economics of climate change, and sketches ways in which technical economic analyses could be integrated with public dialogue.
Episode 6 of Crosscurrents features talks and short interviews from the Climate Change and Energy Futures workshop. The 2018 workshop imagined futures related to climate change and energy, with attention to the social values that underlie decision-making in a carbon-constrained world.
The essays in this collection explore how masculine roles, identities, and practices shape human relationships with the more-than-human world.
In this article Marc D. Davidson argues that governments are justified in addressing the potential for human induced climate damages on the basis of future generations’ rights to bodily integrity and personal property.
In Stolen Future, Broken Present, David A. Collings investigates the relationship between our present impact on the Earth and our perception of the future. He argues that an understanding of our infinite responsibility for ecological disaster could avoid the strange incoherence felt by many in everyday life.
The Climate History Network (CHN) is an organization of scholars who reconstruct past climate changes and, often, identify how those changes affected human history.
Kleemann argues that interdisciplinarity is key to successfully tackling climate change.
This article discusses sea farming and feminist environmental humanities.
A book by Christina Gerhardt that weaves together essays, maps, art, and poetry to show us—and make us see—island nations in a warming world.