greenhouse gas removal
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2021 ◽  
pp. 146879412110634
Author(s):  
Rebecca Willis ◽  
Andy Yuille ◽  
Peter Bryant ◽  
Duncan McLaren ◽  
Nils Markusson

Researchers using deliberative techniques tend to favour in-person processes. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has added urgency to the question of whether meaningful deliberative research is possible in an online setting. This paper considers the reasons for taking deliberation online, including bringing people together more easily; convening international events; and reducing the environmental impact of research. It reports on four case studies: a set of stakeholder workshops considering greenhouse gas removal technologies, convened online in 2019, and online research workshops investigating local climate strategies; as well as two in-person processes which moved online due to COVID-19: Climate Assembly UK, a Citizens’ Assembly on climate change, and the Lancaster Citizens’ Jury on Climate Change. It sets out learnings from these processes, concluding that deliberation online is substantively different from in-person meetings, but can meet the requirements of deliberative research, and can be a rewarding and useful process for participants and researchers alike.


2021 ◽  
Vol 71 ◽  
pp. 102369
Author(s):  
Diarmaid S. Clery ◽  
Naomi E. Vaughan ◽  
Johanna Forster ◽  
Irene Lorenzoni ◽  
Clair A. Gough ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Hall ◽  
Mark Davis

The grand scale of GGR deployment now necessary to avoid dangerous climate change warrants the use of grand interpretive theories of how the global economy operates. We argue that critical social science should be able to name the global economy as “capitalism”; and instead of speaking about “transforming the global economy” as a necessary precondition for limiting climate change, instead speak about transforming, or even transcending, capitalism. We propose three principles are helpful for critical social science researchers willing to name and analyse the structural features of capitalism and their relation to greenhouse gas removal technology, policy, and governance. These principles are: (1) Greenhouse Gas Removal technologies are likely to emerge within capitalism, which is crisis prone, growth dependent, market expanding, We use a broad Marxist corpus to justify this principle. (2) There are different varieties of capitalism and this will affect the feasibility of different GGR policies and supports in different nations. We draw on varieties of capitalism and comparative political economy literature to justify this principle. (3) Capitalism is more than an economic system, it is ideologically and culturally maintained. Globally-significant issues such as fundamentalism, institutional mistrust, precarity, and populism, cannot be divorced from our thinking about globally significant deployment of greenhouse gas removal technologies. We use a broad Critical Theory body of work to explore the ideational project of maintaining capitalism and its relation to GGR governance and policy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 294 ◽  
pp. 113039
Author(s):  
Jude O. Asibor ◽  
Peter T. Clough ◽  
Seyed Ali Nabavi ◽  
Vasilije Manovic

2021 ◽  
pp. 127764
Author(s):  
David Lefebvre ◽  
Adrian Williams ◽  
Guy J.D. Kirk ◽  
Jeroen Meersmans ◽  
Saran Sohi ◽  
...  

Anthropocene ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 100264
Author(s):  
Jack Longman ◽  
Martin R. Palmer ◽  
Thomas M. Gernon

2020 ◽  
Vol 112 ◽  
pp. 264-274
Author(s):  
Patricia O’Beirne ◽  
Francesca Battersby ◽  
Amy Mallett ◽  
Miriam Aczel ◽  
Karen Makuch ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 63 ◽  
pp. 102073 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johanna Forster ◽  
Naomi E. Vaughan ◽  
Clair Gough ◽  
Irene Lorenzoni ◽  
Jason Chilvers

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