Living in Denial: Climate Change, Emotions and Everyday Life - By Kari Marie Norgaard

2012 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-170
Author(s):  
Ruth Greenspan Bell
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 239386172110146
Author(s):  
Susan Visvanathan

This article attempts to understand the way in which climate change affects the once dry cold desert of Ladakh and how local communities have adapted to these changes by becoming excellent organic gardeners. The contributions of Sonam Wangchuk and his work with regard to water harvesting and alternative education have been recognised by the Ramon Magsaysay Committee for 2018. This will propel Sonam to complete his life mission, which is the construction of a whole new township in Phey, to relieve Leh of the overload it now experiences. The article provides a background to the work of Sonam and his wife Rebecca Norman in the details of everyday life and work, which they bring to their school, SECMOL.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miriam Brandt ◽  
Quentin John Groom ◽  
Alexandra Magro ◽  
Dule Misevic ◽  
Claire Louisa Narraway ◽  
...  

Evolutionary understanding is central to biology as a whole. It is also an essential prerequisite to understanding issues in everyday life, such as advances in medicine and global challenges like climate change. Yet, evolution is generally poorly understood by civil society and many misconceptions exist. Citizen science, which has been increasing in popularity as a means to gather new data and promote scientific literacy, is one strategy through which people can learn about evolution. Despite the potential for citizen science to promote evolution learning opportunities, very few citizen science projects exist to improve scientific literacy in evolution. In this paper, we make the case for incorporating evolution education into citizen science, define key learning goals in the context of evolution, and suggest opportunities for designing and evaluating citizen science projects in order to promote scientific literacy in evolution.


Author(s):  
Bernard L. Herman

Through the lens of Henry Norwood’s A Voyage to Virginia, a harrowing account of a royalist exile’s 1649–1650 journey from Oliver Cromwell’s England to British America, this chapter explores the interplay of material culture and cognition. The coevolution of things and people, however, is not just about “how” we know and evolve with and through things but also about aesthetics and affect in everyday life. Norwood punctuates the account of his journey with recitations of the foods he encountered, their preparations, and their consumption, and through that framing device reveals a deeper engagement with civil discourse. Recuperating Norwood’s natural, cultural, and culinary contexts reveals social ecologies that range from how individuals and communities addressed factors as diverse as climate change, ennobled governance, and global sensus communis through objects as plain as a mussel shell spoon, a well-ordered table, or a pot of oyster and turkey stew.


2020 ◽  
pp. 201-214
Author(s):  
Melissa Checker

After summarizing the book’s main points and contributions, the concluding chapter proposes a way forward for achieving more just forms of sustainability. First, it reviews the three forms of environmental gentrification: green, industrial, and brown. Second, it recaps the book’s arguments about the paradoxes of nonprofit funding structures and participatory politics. Finally, it returns to post-Hurricane Sandy coalition-building. While this moment of middle-class precarity, political divisiveness and climate insecurity is giving rise to polarizing rhetoric and xenophobia, in everyday life, the increasing effects of climate change are also fostering new and surprisingly diverse political formations and solidarities. Rather than superficial and short-sighted sustainability initiatives, it is these kinds of coalitions, borne of crisis, that lie at the heart of our collective future.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chloe Lucas ◽  
Peat Leith ◽  
Aidan Davison

2014 ◽  
Vol 36 (9) ◽  
pp. 1491-1509 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenny Byrne ◽  
Malin Ideland ◽  
Claes Malmberg ◽  
Marcus Grace

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beth Gharrity Gardner ◽  
Michael Neuber

In upending much of what is usually taken for granted about politics in everyday life, the Covid-19 pandemic is re-animating several puzzles in the study of protest participation. Here we conduct a case study of Fridays for Future (FFF) global climate strike mobilization in Berlin to shed light on the profile of activists who sustained protest mobilization in pandemic contexts. Comparing data from field surveys of protesters at the September 2020 global climate strike with data collected at the pre-pandemic strikes in September and November 2019, we examine the profile of FFF demonstrators along multiple dimensions, including socio-demographics, motivations, political engagement, and institutional trust. Our preliminary results suggest that younger, more politically engaged, and less politically-cynical climate activists joined the street protest under pandemic conditions. Beyond the large turnout of the already-committed, findings also suggest that protesters were more confident in the ability of action and policy to make a difference with climate change but also galvanized by the loss of attention to the issue in the wake of Covid-19.


Időjárás ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 541-560
Author(s):  
Aleksandar Valjarević ◽  
Miško Milanović ◽  
Jelena Golijanin ◽  
Miroljub Milinčić ◽  
Tin Lukić

In the last decades, knowledge about the climate has increased significantly. Climate change today is the subject of many sciences, including meteorology, climatology, geology, geography, geophysics, astronomy, etc. The present predictions with updated meteorological data and with data of the number of particles of CO2 in the troposphere may give satisfying results. Forecasting for industrial grains such as maize, soybean, and wheat will be essential for industry and everyday life. Within the last agreement of climate change in Paris, global temperatures will continuously be increasing by 2100. In this research, we used a synthetic grid with agroclimatological data which comprises predictions until 2100. These data were found in the sub-section called World Clim Version 1 or in the CMIP5 database. After numerical and geospatial GIS analysis, we got the following predictions: (i) slight- no temperature changes or changes including the increase of temperature by 0.5 °C, (ii) moderate- temperature increases by 2.0 °C, (iii) severe- temperature increases by 5.0 °C, and (iv) incredible- temperature increases to extreme values, incase of which the survival of plants will be endangered.


Author(s):  
Sahra Stensgaard Jakobsen

Denne artikel undersøger, på baggrund af et feltarbejde blandt unge klimaak- tivister på den københavnske vestegn, hvorledes aktivisterne forholdt sig til de moralske og eksistentielle aspekter af de såkaldt menneskeskabte klimaforan- dringer. Artiklen beskriver og analyserer aktivisternes forståelse af begreberne „natur“, „miljø“ og „klima“ som udtryk for et komplekst og situationelt natursyn, der strækker sig som et kontinuum mellem den selvberoende natur og den men- neskeskabte natur som yderpoler, og med klimaet som omfattende hele spændet. Begreberne og de medfølgende natursyn bliver belyst som narrativer, der praktise- res blandt de unge i den modernistiske og planlagte by, Albertslund. I accept af de menneskeskabte klimaforandringer som et faktum udvider aktivisterne deres allerede indlejrede, miljøbevidste normer og praksisser til en egentlig økologisk kosmologi, der henviser til naturen som en fuldstændigt integreret cyklus af levende væseners, herunder menneskers, og fysiske mekanismers reciprokke forhold af påvirkninger og stofudvekslinger. Konsekvensen af dette er, at skel- let mellem natur og kultur bliver irrelevant, og naturen bliver derved potentielt farlig for mennesker.Søgeord: klimaforandringer, kosmologi, natursyn, aktivister, natur-kultur-dikotomi, cyklus.English: In Albertslund Everything is Man-made, Even Nature. An Anthropological Study of Climate Activists’ Comprehensive Idea of Nature This article inquires into how young climate activists in a Copenhagen suburb came to terms with the moral and existential issues raised by their changing perceptions of their own agency in climate change. The article describes and analyzes how they perceive of “nature”, “environment” and “climate” and how their perceptions are inscribed in narratives of everyday life in planned suburban surroundings. As they became convinced of their own part in climate change, they expanded already embodied environmental norms and practises into articulated climate awareness and an organic cosmology. Within this organic cosmology “environment” and “climate” are regarded as systems of inter-dependent cycles including human beings, and this model of the world is easily transformed into changed social practices, such as saving energy. When transformed into climate awareness these cycles include the entire globe. In addition to this cyclic perception of “environment” and “climate”, the activists practice a perception of “nature” in a dichotomous relation to “culture”. This perception enabled them to act in a moral way on behalf of “nature”, even though it was logically inconsistent with the cyclic perception of “environment”. I argue that these perceptions of “nature”, “environment” and “climate” formed a continuum, and that the activists practised them in various ways, dependent on context. The article accounts for their capacity to act on the threats they saw in climate changes.Keywords: Climate change, cosmology, perceptions of nature, activists, nature- culture dichotomy, cycle 


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